COMPOSITE GASKET WITH NON-METALLIC INSERT
20230243426 · 2023-08-03
Assignee
Inventors
- Reid Moulton Meyer (Saint Simons Island, GA, US)
- Alfred Fitzgerald Waterland, III (Chesterfield, VA, US)
- Jeffery William Wilson (Colonial Heights, VA, US)
Cpc classification
F16J15/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/102
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16J15/104
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A composite gasket formed of a fluoropolymer and having a non-metallic fluoropolymer insert can be used in many applications. The non-metallic insert is corrosion resistant and can be formed into many different shapes and sizes as dictated by the particular application desired.
Claims
1. A gasket comprising: a unitary construction formed of a first fluoropolymer; and an insert embedded within and fully encased by the unitary construction, the insert formed of a second fluoropolymer, the second fluoropolymer being different from the first fluoropolymer in polymer type, density, or structure, or the second polymer including a filler material.
2. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the first fluoropolymer is PTFE, porous PTFE, expanded PTFE, filled PTFE, microcellular PTFE, or a mixture thereof.
3. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the second fluoropolymer is PTFE.
4. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the first fluoropolymer is expanded PTFE and the second fluoropolymer is PTFE.
5. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the insert has an inner diameter and an outer diameter and a non-uniform shape between the inner diameter and the outer diameter.
6. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the unitary construction has an annular, rectangular, square, or triangular shape.
7. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the unitary constructure has a non-annular shape.
8. The gasket of claim 1, wherein the unitary construction is a compressible PTFE sheath and the insert is thermally bonded within the unitary construction.
9. A gasket comprising: an insert formed of a first fluoropolymer; an outer layer formed of a second fluoropolymer, the outer layer encapsulates the insert, wherein the second fluoropolymer being different from the first fluoropolymer in polymer type, density, or structure, or the second polymer including a filler material.
10. The gasket of claim 9, wherein the insert is thermally bonded to the outer layer.
11. The gasket of claim 9, wherein the insert includes a filler formed of glass, silica, barium sulfate, silicon carbide, or a mixture thereof.
12. The gasket of claim 9, wherein the insert has a non-uniform cross-section.
13. The gasket of claim 9, wherein the first fluoropolymer is expanded PTFE and the second fluoropolymer is PTFE.
14. The gasket of claim 9, wherein the gasket has an annular, rectangular, square, or triangular shape.
15. The gasket of claim 9, wherein the first fluoropolymer is PTFE, porous PTFE, expanded PTFE, filled PTFE, microcellular PTFE, or a mixture thereof.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0019] The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
[0020] Before the present invention is described in further detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the particular embodiments described, and as such, may of course vary. It is also to be understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to be limiting, since the scope of the present invention will be limited only by the appended claims.
[0021] A number of materials are identified as suitable for various aspects of the invention. These materials are to be treated as exemplary and are not intended to limit the scope of the claims. Although any methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can also be used in the practice or testing of the present invention, a limited number of the exemplary methods and materials are described herein.
[0022] It must be noted that as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
[0023] The composite gaskets described herein focus on expanding the application/utility of composite gasket technology by incorporating mechanically, and chemically suitable shaped (flat, corrugated, etc.) non-metallic inserts, replacing the corrugated metal insert technology currently utilized in some commercially available gaskets.
[0024] Various non-metallic materials could be used as an insert in, for example, a restructured PTFE material. Restructured PTFE, also called filled PTFE, is made from 100% pure PTFE; however, during the manufacturing process, other materials (fillers) are added to the compound to provide additional structure and increase the mechanical properties of the finished product. These non-metallic materials can be machined or molded in various surface profiles, including with corrugations to act as a spring or a stress intensifier. Additionally, molded restructured PTFE materials have different mechanical properties which are advantageous for this composite gasket product/technology, as molding allows for design advantages that improve sealing performance of the insert substrate by affecting the geometry and multiple regions of density and with varying thicknesses. This improves stability and creep relaxation which is often a problem associated with virgin or restructured PTFE materials in standard sheet form according to ASTM F38 creep relaxation testing. Fillers can be used in the PTFE inserts as well. Fillers that are typically used include glass, silica, barium sulfate, and silicon carbide.
[0025] The insert should be different from the construction of the primary gasket material in order to provide the advantages resulting therefrom. The insert could be formed of a different polymer, it could have a different density or structure, it could have a filler. For example, the outer gasket material could be expanded PTFE, while the insert is higher density PTFE.
[0026] Non-metallic materials can be manufactured into many shapes which corrugated metal inserts cannot, thereby greatly expanding the potential shapes for the gaskets. For example, composite gaskets with corrugated or surface profiled non-metallic inserts could be manufactured as rectangular, square, triangular shapes, as well as many others, depending on the particular application. Again, this is not possible with metallic inserts, underscoring the need for a wider range of materials with a broader performance-affecting versatility.
[0027] If the non-metallic insert is PTFE-based, it has the advantageous ability to thermally bond to ePTFE outer layers in the gasket during the manufacturing process. If the correct non-metallic material is utilized, this insert can be as narrow as ⅛″ or can be much wider and extend to the OD of the finished product. This selection of very narrow or wide inserts cannot be achieved with the current metal insert technology.
[0028] Therefore, with a composite gasket with an encapsulated non-metallic insert, the user gets the following benefits over, for instance, a traditional gasket with a metal insert:
[0029] 1) Given ePTFE is broadly compatible with most chemical processes, the entire gasket can be compatible with the process and there is no need to worry about the degree of gasket compression, chemical attack or corrosion. This permits a genuine “universal” gasket, which eliminates the current requirement to ensure appropriate, chemically compatible metallic inserts, and the sometimes uncertainty regarding whether there is adequate compressive stress on the gasket in different applications/flanges/assembly practices to close the initial porosity of the ePTFE to prevent permeation.
[0030] 2) If the non-metallic material for the insert is PTFE based, during the manufacturing process, the outer layers of ePTFE of the gasket may thermally bond to the insert eliminating the insert floating, increasing it manufacturability, and forming a unitized and fully bonded gasket. Utilizing this composition allows the dimensions (cross-section, core thickness, overall height, etc.) to differ from metal inserts now allowing for insert encapsulation with fluoropolymer-based gaskets to be narrower than commercially available metal composite gaskets where centering of the insert is critical due to the narrow sealing areas on the flanges.
[0031] 3) With multiple insert construction options (flat, corrugated (machined or molded), wishbone, multiple-concentric, etc.) for the embedded insert; giving the gasket designer the ability to tailor the sealing solution to the end user's specific process revolutionizing the load concentration factors of the finished product, thus, optimizing the degree and location of load concentration within the gasket.
[0032] 4) The gasket with a non-metallic insert is now capable of operating at lower temperatures (to about −450° F.) as compared to current gaskets manufactured with metal (304 stainless steel, 316 stainless steel, etc.) inserts which are limited to about −330° F. This is very important in cryogenic services/applications, as current gasket construction is limited to lower temperature limit of the metallic inserts.
[0033] Implementation of the present invention can overcome a number of limiting applications with flat or corrugated, metal insert composite gaskets. Narrow flange sealing surfaces require a precisely located insert within the body/cross-section of a gasket. Use of a PTFE based insert that is thermally bonded to the ePTFE and “locked” in place inside the gasket allows for narrower gasket cross sections than can currently be manufactured with a metallic insert that is floating inside the gasket, as allowance must be made for the ePTFE containment of the insert at both the ID and OD of the gasket. Generally, about ⅜ inch width of ePTFE is required at both the ID and OD to secure the loose metallic insert. This is especially important in semi-conductor and food/pharma applications/equipment and equipment flanges with narrow sealing areas.
[0034] PTFE based inserts for gaskets can be made with the insert OD extending all of the way to the gasket OD. Thermally bonded, there is no need for adhesive or any foreign substance to keep the gasket “unitized”. Designing the gasket with the insert extending to the gasket OD allows for narrower gasket cross sections, and a stiff, rugged gasket OD that will not deform when lodged in between two flanges. This high purity, 100% PTFE construction is necessary for semi-conductor, and food/pharma applications.
[0035] The non-metallic inserts eliminate the need for exotic alloy, metallic inserts. Under low compressive loads caused either by poor flange design or improper flange assembly, the ePTFE is not fully densified/compressed, and allows certain chemicals to permeate or “wick” through the ePTFE. In these applications the insert must be chemically compatible with the process. Currently, there are no satisfactory commercial gasket products that provide reliable, long-term sealing of certain temperature and concentrations for HCl acid in FRP/plastic flanges, as rare and expensive metal inserts are required. The cost of these rare and expensive inserts is economically unfeasible. Additionally, there is no absolute means of confirming that there will be adequate compressive stress applied to every metal-insert gasket in many other chemical services and flange designs, and thus whether a chemically compatible metallic insert is required for long term performance.
[0036] Furthermore, Use of non-metallic inserts allow for more precise design of the insert in low bolt load flange applications.
[0037] A composite gasket with a PTFE based insert can feature a completely bonded construction, as the ePTFE outer layers of the gasket are thermally bonded to the PTFE based insert during the manufacturing process. This gasket is fused together with heat and controlled light/optimum pressure, eliminating the need to use adhesives on any component of the gasket. Since this gasket is fully fused together and manufactured from sheet materials, the finished gaskets thickness (0.093 in-0.250 in), dimensions (inner and outer diameter), and geometries (annular rings, squares/rectangles, ovals, obrounds, etc.) can be 100% customizable to meet the needs of user's applications.
[0038] The outer layers of the gasket could be made from micro-cellular or expanded PTFE. Expanded PTFE utilizes a proprietary manufacturing process to create biaxial-oriented (stretched both horizontally and vertically (x and y axis)) gaskets (or sheets) forming a matrix of aid voids and ePTFE fibrils. These air voids and fibers/fibrils are formed during the stretching process and create a more compressible material (because of the air voids) with significantly reduced creep/cold flow (material flowing outward) because of the high tensile strength ePTFE fibers/fibrils. The air voids make the outer layers of the gasket more compressible, allowing the gasket to easily deform/adapt to flange surface imperfections, which is ideal for sealing bolted flanged connections. This high compressibility/adaptability allows the gasket to provide a tighter (lower leakage) connection.
[0039] The embedded insert may be made from non-metallic materials, can be either extremely rigid or exhibit varying degrees of malleability providing a range of exceptional mechanical performance in high, medium or low gasket stress applications across a wide temperature range (about −450° F. to 600° F.), which can be selected/designed to exhibit minimal gasket creep/cold flow, differing degrees of material stability and mechanical properties, and varying degrees of gasket compression and stress/leakage performance of the resultant gasket.
[0040] If the insert material utilized is PTFE-based, these materials have similar temperature characteristics, they bond together during the bonding/fusing process creating a one-piece design. It is important to keep within the temperature limitations, so we do not damage any aspect of the gasket.
[0041] Turning now to the figures,
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[0044] In more detail, and as illustrated in
[0045] As noted above, an advantage of a non-metallic insert 20 is the ability to form inserts 20 of various shapes, thus permitting gaskets 10 to be formed of various shapes as dictated by the particular application.
EXAMPLE
[0046] A specific composite gasket, namely gaskets made with non-metallic inserts, were evaluated using the EN13555 leakage standard at 10 bar internal pressure, and their results were compared to a PITA® gasket made with a metal insert. For reference, the sealing performance was also compared to expanded PTFE sheet gaskets with no inserts. While the non-metallic insert gasket results were not an exact match to those of a PITA® gasket with a metal insert, they pass the leakage standard for use per the current revision of the TA Luft leakage standard. This requires the leak rate to be at or below 1E−3 mg/s/m at 4,350 psi gasket stress. However, the steel refinery's leakage requirements are governed by the leak rate detailed in a previous version of the TA Luft leakage standard; leak rate to be at or below 1E−1 mg/s/m at 4,350 psi gasket stress. All of the gaskets with non-metallic inserts meet the steel refinery leakage requirement and pass the current revision of the TA Luft standard; the only exception is the corrugated SiC Filled PTFE at ambient temperature. As can be seen, the expanded PTFE gasket without an insert requires the highest stress to achieve the required level of leakage and does not meet the stress/leakage requirements. This is one of the reasons that expanded PTFE gaskets with a suitable metallic or non-metallic insert are required. The results of the tests are shown graphically below.
[0047] While the leak rate for the PTFE inserts was slightly higher than for the metal inserts, the results are within an acceptable range. Given the vast advantages of the non-metallic inserts that have been demonstrated throughout this disclosure—including chemical compatibility, the ability to use many different shapes for both the inserts and the gaskets, and others—the slightly higher leak rate is not a drawback over the gaskets with the metallic inserts.
[0048] Numeric values and ranges are provided for various aspects of the implementations described above. These values and ranges are to be treated as examples only and are not intended to limit the scope of the claims.
[0049] While the invention has been described in conjunction with specific exemplary implementations, it is evident to those skilled in the art that many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent in light of the foregoing description. Accordingly, the invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications, and variations that fall within the scope and spirit of the appended claims.