Tank valve and tank with such a valve

20190376604 ยท 2019-12-12

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    A tank valve with a valve seat and a valve disc can be displaced relative to the valve seat along a displacement direction into either a closed position or a through-flow position. The valve seat includes a plate shaped part and a ring-shaped part. The valve disc has a first contact area which contacts the first plate shaped part of the valve seat when the tank valve is in the closed position. The valve disc also has a second contact area which is in contact with a second part of the valve seat when it is in the closed position.

    Claims

    1. A tank valve, comprising: a valve seat comprising a first plate-shaped part, and a second ring shaped part; and a valve disc displaceable relative to the valve seat along a displacement direction to either a closed position where the tank valve is closed or to a through-flow position where the tank valve is open, wherein the valve disc comprises a first contact area, which is in contact with the first part of the valve seat when the tank valve is in the closed position, and wherein the valve disc comprises a second contact area, which is in contact with the second part of the valve seat when the tank valve is in the closed position.

    2. The tank valve according to claim 1, wherein the valve disc comprises a tubular casing which connects the first contact area of the valve disc with the second contact area of the valve disc.

    3. The tank valve according to claim 2 wherein the first contact area of the valve disc is arranged on an inwardly folded end of the casing.

    4. The tank valve according to claim 2 wherein the casing tapers in the direction of displacement.

    5. The tank valve according to claim 2 wherein the casing has at least one elastic area in the direction of displacement.

    6. The tank valve of claim 5 wherein the at least one elastic area of the casing is in a form of a bellows

    7. The tank valve of claim 5 wherein the at least one elastic area is situated at an end of the casing that is inwardly folded.

    8. The tank valve according to claim 1 wherein the first part and the second part of the valve seat are situated at a distance from one another along the direction of displacement.

    9. The tank valve according to claim 1 wherein the first part and the second part of the valve seat have a same outer diameter perpendicular to the direction of displacement.

    10. The tank valve according to claim 1 wherein the tank valve is configured to be operated at temperatures below 50 C.

    11. The tank valve according to claim 1 wherein the tank valve is configured to be operated at temperatures below 100 C.

    12. The tank valve according to claim 1 wherein the tank valve is configured to be operated at temperatures below 160 C.

    13. A tank for liquefied gases, comprising: at least one tank volume; at least one discharge pipe; a tank valve according to claim 1 arranged at one end of the at least one discharge pipe, and which is situated inside the tank volume.

    14. The tank according to claim 13, wherein the valve disc of the tank valve is displaceable by a traction device arranged on a roof of the tank.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0026] In the following, two examples of an embodiment of the present invention will be explained in more detail by way of the attached drawings: They show:

    [0027] FIGS. 1 to 3the schematic sectional view through a valve according to a first example of an embodiment of the present invention in different positions, and

    [0028] FIGS. 4 to 6the schematic sectional views from FIGS. 1 to 3 for a valve according to a second example of an embodiment of the present invention.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0029] FIG. 1 depicts a schematic sectional view through a tank valve 1 according to a first example of an embodiment of the invention. It comprises a valve seat 2, which has a first plate-shaped part 4 and a second ring-shaped part 6. The tank valve 1 also has a valve disc 8, which features a first contact area 10 and a second contact area 12.

    [0030] In FIG. 1, the tank valve 1 is shown in the closed position. The first contact area 10 lies flat on the first part 4 of the valve seat 2 and the second part 12 of the valve disc 8 lies flat on the second part 6 of the valve seat 2. The valve is closed. An outlet opening 14, through which a medium can flow through the valve in the direction of the arrow 22 when the valve is open, is upwards completely closed.

    [0031] The valve disc 8 comprises a casing 16, which connects the first contact area 10 and the second contact area 12 to one another and features an inwardly folded end 18 in its upper area. The first contact area 10 is situated on this inwardly folded end.

    [0032] If the tank valve 1 is installed in a tank, the pressure of the liquefied gas inside the tank generally acts from above; tank valves from the prior art must be opened against said pressure. Unlike valves from the prior art, with a tank valve 1 according to the present invention the pressure of the liquefied gas predominantly pushes on the first part 4 of the valve seat. The pressure from above only acts on the inwardly folded part of the inwardly folded end 18.

    [0033] In the embodiment of the tank valve 1 depicted in FIGS. 1 to 3, the casing 16 features a tapering towards the first contact area 12. The surface of the valve disc 8 that is projected in the direction of movement of the valve disc 8 from the closed position into the through-flow position therefore comprises two parts. One is the part that is created as a result of the inwardly folded of the casing 8 in FIGS. 1 to 3. The other is the part that is created by the cross-sectional tapering of the casing 8. Given that one force from the hydrostatic pressure that is acting on these surface parts in the direction of displacement is doing so in a downward direction and the other in an upward direction, they at least partially counterbalance one another; in the example of an embodiment shown, they fully counterbalance one another.

    [0034] FIG. 2 shows the valve from FIG. 1 in a slightly opened position. One can recognize a gap 20 between the first part 4 of the valve seat 2 and the first contact area 10 of the valve disc 8, as well as between the second part 6 of the valve seat 2 and the second contact surface 12 of the valve disc 8, wherein the medium can enter the valve through said gap, said medium then leaving the valve through the outlet opening 14 along the arrow 22. It is clear to see that the valve disc 8 in the diagrams shown is moved upwards to open the valve. The largest surface of the valve disc 8 that is subjected to pressure is the casing 16, which extends parallel to the direction of movement. The pressure acting on the casing 16 therefore acts perpendicular to the direction of movement and barely impairs the movement.

    [0035] FIG. 3 shows the valve in the fully open position.

    [0036] In FIGS. 1 to 3, both the first contact area 10 and the second contact area 12 are designed to be ring-shaped, wherein the two contact areas 10, 12 have the same diameter. This is not the case in the valve depicted in diagrams 4 to 6. In the embodiments shown, the casing 16 of the valve disc 8 extends vertically upwards and does not feature the overhang of the valve disc 8 in FIGS. 1 to 3.

    [0037] FIGS. 5 and 6 depict the valve from FIG. 4 in a slightly open and in the fully open position.

    REFERENCE LIST

    [0038] 1 tank valve [0039] 2 valve seat [0040] 4 first plate-shaped part [0041] 6 second ring-shaped part [0042] 8 valve disc [0043] 10 first contact area [0044] 12 second contact area [0045] 14 outlet opening [0046] 16 casing [0047] 18 inwardly folded end [0048] 20 gap [0049] 22 arrow