Displacement and/or compaction device
11047102 · 2021-06-29
Inventors
Cpc classification
E02D3/10
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B10/44
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E02D3/054
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B7/26
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E02D3/08
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E02D3/054
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E21B10/44
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
A drill assembly that includes one drill and a displacement unit, where the drill is releasably or permanently attached to said displacement unit, such that: —the displacement unit includes a guide unit and a channel unit, where the channel unit includes a guide channel, and said guide unit includes one or more guides adapted to engage with said guide channel, such that said guide channel is a circumferential channel that follows a wave or wave like path; —the drill includes a drill bit and/or a drill flight attached to a central shaft, wherein the drill bit and/or drill flight co-terminate at a first terminal end of the drill; —said first terminal end is the terminal end of the drill that is configured to enter the ground first; and—the central shaft is a thin elongate member that extends between the longitudinally separated terminal ends of the drill.
Claims
1. A drill assembly that includes only one drill and a displacement unit, wherein: the displacement unit includes a guide unit and a channel unit, where the channel unit includes a guide channel, and said guide unit includes one or more guides adapted to engage with said guide channel, said guide channel being a circumferential channel that follows a wave or wave like path; the drill includes a drill bit and/or a drill flight attached to a central shaft, wherein the drill bit and/or drill flight co-terminate at a first terminal end of the drill; said first terminal end is the terminal end of the drill that is configured to enter the ground first; and the central shaft is a thin elongate member that extends between the longitudinally separated terminal ends of the drill; and the drill is releasably or permanently attached to the displacement unit such that when the drill is attached to, and engaged with, the displacement unit, in operation the drill oscillates along its longitudinal axis.
2. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, said drill is an auger.
3. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, said drill bit includes a bulb end.
4. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, said drill assembly includes a delivery tube which circumferentially surrounds a portion of the central shaft.
5. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the drill flight terminates at a flight termination point which is a separation distance (sd) from an outlet terminal end of the delivery tube.
6. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, a maximum outside diameter of the drill flight and/or drill bit (D) is greater than an outside diameter of the delivery tube (do).
7. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 6 wherein, the maximum outside diameter of the drill flight and/or drill bit (D) is at least 1.1x the outside diameter of the delivery tube (do).
8. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 7 wherein, the maximum outside diameter of the drill flight and/or drill bit (D) is at least 2x the outside diameter of the delivery tube (do).
9. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 8 wherein, the maximum outside diameter of the drill flight and/or drill bit (D) is between 2x and 10x the outside diameter of the delivery tube (do).
10. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 9 wherein, the maximum outside diameter of the drill flight and/or drill bit (D) is between 2x and 6x the outside diameter of the delivery tube (do).
11. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the delivery tube does not rotate with the drill.
12. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the drill assembly includes a hopper which is configured to hold additional material, such that said hopper is connected to the delivery tube in such a way as to allow the additional material to flow from the hopper and through the delivery tube when required.
13. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the delivery tube is connected to the central shaft by at least one shaft-tube attachment so that the delivery tube is configured to rotate with the central shaft.
14. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 13 wherein, the at least one shaft-tube attachment, in use, does not pass on any longitudinal motion of the drill to the delivery tube.
15. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 13 wherein, the at least one shaft-tube attachment is a rigid connection between the delivery tube and the central shaft so that, in use, any rotational and/or longitudinal motion of the central shaft is transmitted to the delivery tube.
16. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, in use, any longitudinal motion of the drill over a pre-set limit is passed on to the delivery tube.
17. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the delivery tube includes a tube cap, where the tube cap partially or completely blocks an outlet terminal end of said delivery tube, such that said tube cap is configured to release from the delivery tube when required.
18. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the drill includes a shaft flight that extends along a portion of the length of the central shaft that lies at least partially within the delivery tube.
19. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 4 wherein, the drill includes a tube plug which is attached to or forms part of the central shaft, said tube plug, in a first position, lies within the delivery tube and extends radially from the central shaft towards the delivery tube, such that said tube plug is dimensioned to effectively seal or block the delivery tube in said first position.
20. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 19 wherein, the tube plug is a clearance fit within the delivery tube.
21. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, the drill assembly includes only a single drill in the form of an auger such that, when engaged, the displacement unit imparts a vibration or longitudinal oscillation to the drill that is configured to modify the properties of material surrounding said drill.
22. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, the guide channel follows a smooth wave like path.
23. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, the guide channel is sinusoidal.
24. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, the guide channel is at least 1, and up to 100 (inclusive), wavelengths in length.
25. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 24 wherein, the number of wavelengths is between 1 and 10 inclusive.
26. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, the guide channel is made up of a plurality of partial waves or a superposition of waveforms.
27. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, the guide channel has a peak to trough distance of between 1 mm and 400 mm.
28. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 1 wherein, there is either a drill bit or a drill flight, but not both.
29. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 28 wherein, there is a drill flight.
30. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 29 wherein, the drill includes an alpha section which is a portion of the drill with a maximum cross sectional dimension greater than a maximum cross sectional dimension of the central shaft.
31. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 30 wherein, said alpha section is located within the portion of the drill that includes the drill flight.
32. The drill assembly as claimed in claim 30 wherein, the alpha section, in cross section, is circular, oval or elliptical, with the longest axis being the maximum cross sectional dimension.
33. A method of using a drill assembly claimed in claim 1 including a displacement device and a drill which includes the following steps: (i) insert drill into a ground surface; (ii) continue drilling until a required depth is reached then engage the displacement device to commence compacting/consolidating surrounding ground material; (iii) withdraw drill with displacement device operating.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) By way of example only, a preferred embodiment of the present invention is described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DEFINITIONS
(20) Aggregate: when used herein is construction aggregate above about 0.1 mm in size (including sand, stones, crushed rock, crushed concrete, slag, etc).
(21) Auger: when used herein includes a flight without a central shaft, similar to a corkscrew.
(22) Drill bit: when used herein is the terminally located portion of a drill that enters the ground first, a drill bit is intended to ease the insertion, or the movement, of the drill into the ground;
(23) Flight: when used herein is a strip of material following a helical path like a spiral staircase.
(24) Rotary or Rotary Head: The rotational drive unit, normally incorporating hydraulic motors, used to rotate a drill. They may drive the drill directly or through a gearbox of some description.
(25) Tube: when used herein a tube is meant to indicate a long hollow member whose outer cross sectional profile may be circular or any other shape (triangular, square, hexagonal, elliptical, etc.) and whose inner cavity is circular (or approximately circular/elliptical) in cross section.
(26) Please note the drawings are representative only, they are not to any scale and the relative dimensions may be exaggerated for clarity. For example, but not limited to, the wall thickness of various components are likely to be exaggerated, as otherwise the details would simply not be apparent.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
(27) Referring to
(28) Referring to
(29)
(30) The displacement cover (20) is shown as having a similar shape to a top hat, with the brim forming an outer lip (24), and the void within forming a core cavity (25). The core cavity (25) is dimensioned to contain the core section (21) whilst not preventing it from rotating about its longitudinal axis within the core cavity (25). The core cavity (25) includes a core cavity face (26) which is the inside surface of the core cavity (25) facing the longitudinal axis of the displacement cover (20). When assembled the displacement cover (20) and core section (21) are longitudinally co-axial.
(31) In the first form, shown in
(32) In the second form, as shown in
(33) In both forms the guides (23) are dimensioned to slide or roll within the guide channel (22). The guides may be rollers or wheels (cylindrical, conical, spherical or any other suitable shape) attached to shafts, solid or hollow pieces of material that slide along the guide channel (22), or thin resilient pieces of material that are biased to contact one or both side walls of the guide channel (22). In addition the guides (23) may be free to rotate, have restricted rotational or no rotational capacity.
(34) The waveform of the guide channel (22) is likely to be approximately sinusoidal (or the superposition of a plurality of approximately sinusoidal waveforms) and have a peak to trough distance of between 1 mm and 400 mm. The preferred peak to trough distance is between 20 mm and 100 mm. The figures show a guide channel (22) two wavelengths in length, but this will depend on the rotational speed of the drill (11), the required vibration and the peak to trough distance of the guide channel (22). The length of the guide channel (22) will be at least 1 wavelength and could be up to 100 wavelengths, but, the number is preferably in the range of between 1 and 10 wavelengths for most applications. It is felt that the waveform will consist of a whole number of waves of the same waveform and wavelength, but, some applications may benefit from a variable waveform consisting of a number of partial or whole wavelengths of the same or different waveforms and/or frequencies. The guide channel (22) may also benefit from discontinuities. It should be noted that the waveform can be a superposition of different waveforms, where those superimposed waveforms have different wavelengths and/or peak to trough heights. For example a wave with a periodicity of 1 with a peak to trough of 25 mm could be combined with a wave with a periodicity of 10 and a peak to trough of 1 mm, so the displacement unit imparts a slow large movement combined with a faster short displacement at the same time, the higher frequency low wave could be discontinuous imparting a rapid oscillation to the drill (11) intermittently.
(35) In both forms shown in
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(37) To avoid complex constructions, from this point onwards, we will refer to the component including the guide channel (22) as the channel unit (30) and the component including the guides (23) as the guide unit (31). This numbering is present in
(38) Referring to
(39) The reverse rotation of the drill (11) forces the material (32)/additional material (33) out radially as well as downwardly which, when combined with the vibratory motion imparted by the displacement unit (10), is believed to compact material better than either of these alone. For example the radial motion can be used to form a compacted column of material with a more highly compressed wall than core. Alternatively a large zone of ground surrounding the drill (11) can be compacted by the combination of the radial and vibratory forces applied by the drill (11) in combination with the displacement unit (10).
(40) Referring to
(41) In this second embodiment the drill assembly (3) includes a hopper (40) and a delivery tube (41) which surrounds a portion of the drill (11). The delivery tube (41) includes an inlet terminal end (42) and an outlet terminal end (43), which are opposite terminal ends of the delivery tube (40).
(42) The hopper (40) is shown as including a cylindrical section (44) immediately above a frusto-conical section (45), where the base of the frusto-conical section (45) is coterminous with the base of the cylindrical section (44). The other terminal end of the frusto-conical section (45) is coterminous with the inlet terminal end (42), of the delivery tube (41).
(43) The drill (11), hopper (40) and the delivery tube (41) are co-axially aligned with the drill (11) extending from the outlet terminal end (43) of the delivery tube (41). In use the hopper (40) is used to hold the additional material (33). The delivery tube (41) provides a pathway from the inside of the hopper (40) to a point longitudinally separated from the drill flight (13).
(44) The inside diameter (di) of the delivery tube (41) is greater than the outside diameter (δ) of the central shaft (12), and the outside diameter (do) of the delivery tube (41) is less than the maximum outside diameter (D) of the drill flight (13). This configuration means that the drill flight (13) can impart the required radial force to the material (32) and additional material (33). Please note that at least
(45) The outlet terminal end (43) may be located close to the start of the drill flight (13), or anywhere up to a point close to coterminous with the inlet terminal end (42). When the outlet terminal end (43) is close to the drill flight (13) it is sufficiently distant so as to allow the repetitive longitudinal displacement imparted by the displacement unit (10) to the drill (11) to occur. The optimum will vary between these extremes and it is likely it will normally be within the ground when the compaction/modification commences. The minimum distance between the outlet terminal end (43) and the start of the drill flight (13) is the separation distance (sd), shown on
(46) One preferred method of using the second embodiment is shown in
(47) Referring to
(48) In a variant of the second embodiment, see
(49) Please note that in most of the figures the displacement unit (10) is shown close to the rotary head (34) and generally attached to the terminal end of the drill (11), this is not necessarily the case and it can be located along the length of the drill assembly (3) providing the displacement cover (20) can be rotationally locked and isolated from the drill (11), and the core section (21) can be locked to the drill (11) when the displacement unit (10) is required to impart a vibratory/oscillatory motion to the drill (11). One such variant is shown in
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(51) Referring to
(52) One preferred method of using the third embodiment is shown in
(53) It should be noted that in any of the methods described the additional material (33) may be added to increase the density of the compacted zone even if the surface does not distort or sink.
(54) A tube cap (46) and a tube plug (67) can both be present in a single drill assembly (3) configuration, though this is not shown.
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(58) Referring to
(59) Please note that it is intended that compatible features of the various variants and embodiments can be combined without additional specific description of those variants.
KEY
(60) 1 Drilling rig;
(61) 2 Excavator/Crane;
(62) 3 Drill assembly;
(63) 10 Displacement Unit;
(64) 11 Drill;
(65) 12 Central shaft;
(66) 13 Drill flight;
(67) 14 First end;
(68) 15 Second end;
(69) 16 Flight termination point;
(70) 20 Displacement cover;
(71) 21 Core section;
(72) 22 Guide channel;
(73) 23 Guide;
(74) 24 Outer lip;
(75) 25 Core cavity;
(76) 26 Core cavity face;
(77) 27 Connection section;
(78) 30 Channel unit (includes the guide channel);
(79) 31 Guide unit (includes the guides);
(80) 32 Material;
(81) 33 Additional material (one or more of aggregate, grout, concrete, sand, filler material, adhesive material, or similar construction fillers/adhesives);
(82) 34 Rotary Head;
(83) 40 Hopper;
(84) 41 Delivery tube;
(85) 42 Inlet terminal end (of delivery tube);
(86) 43 Outlet terminal end (of delivery tube);
(87) 44 Cylindrical section of hopper;
(88) 45 Frusto-conical section of hopper;
(89) 46 Tube cap (optional);
(90) 50 Floor section;
(91) 60 Shaft flight;
(92) 61 Delivery apertures (optional);
(93) 62 Side wall (of delivery tube);
(94) 63 Shaft-tube attachment;
(95) 64 Slot (into delivery tube wall for shaft tube attachment);
(96) 67 Tube plug;
(97) 68 Sealing portion (of the tube plug);
(98) 69 Tapered portion (of the tube plug);
(99) 70 Drill tip/bit;
(100) 74 Flat plate;
(101) 75 Flat plate;
(102) 76 lowermost edge;
(103) 77 lowermost edge;
(104) 80 Alpha section;
(105) cpod=outside diameter of the cylindrical portion of the tube plug;
(106) δ=outside diameter of the central shaft;
(107) δo=outside diameter of the shaft flights, if present;
(108) da=outside diameter (maximum) of the alpha section;
(109) di=inside diameter of the delivery tube;
(110) do=outside diameter of the delivery tube;
(111) D=maximum outside diameter of the drill flight;
(112) LA=longitudinal axis of the drill;
(113) sd=separation distance.