Tube
11543056 · 2023-01-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B32B2597/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B3/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2307/714
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16L11/127
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B15/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2307/546
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16L11/15
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L58/1054
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L11/085
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16L9/147
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A tube includes a corrugated metal tubular member; and a first covering part that covers the outside of the tubular member, and forms a braided structure using a resin string member of which at least a part is covered by a metal having lower electrical resistance than that of a metal forming the tubular member. The tube can also include a third covering part made of an insulating resin arranged between the tubular member and the first covering part, and covers the tubular member, wherein the first covering part covers the third covering part.
Claims
1. A tube comprising: a corrugated metal tubular member; and a first covering part that covers an outside of the tubular member, and forms a braided structure using a resin string member of which at least a part is covered by a metal having a lower electrical resistance than an electrical resistance of a metal forming the tubular member, wherein the braided structure includes a first resin string member covered by a metal and a second resin string member not covered by a metal, and the first resin string member and the second resin string member are braided to be alternately arranged.
2. The tube according to claim 1, further comprising a third covering part made of an insulating resin arranged between the tubular member and the first covering part, and covers the tubular member, wherein the first covering part covers the third covering part.
3. The tube according to claim 2, wherein the string member in the first covering part is covered by winding a metal foil having a lower electrical resistance than an electrical resistance of a metal forming the tubular member.
4. The tube according to claim 1, wherein the string member in the first covering part is covered by winding a metal foil having a lower electrical resistance than an electrical resistance of a metal forming the tubular member.
5. A tube comprising: a corrugated metal tubular member; and a second covering part that covers an outside of the tubular member, and forms a braided structure using a metal string member having a lower electrical resistance than an electrical resistance of a metal forming the tubular member in at least a part of the braided structure, wherein the braided structure includes a resin string member and the metal string member, and the resin string member and the resin metal string member are braided to be arranged alternately.
6. The tube according to claim 5, further comprising a third covering part made of an insulating resin arranged between the tubular member and the second covering part, and covers the tubular member, wherein the second covering part covers the third covering part.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
(6) 10 Tube 10a Tube 50 Tubular member 100 First covering part 110 String member 200 Second covering part 210 String member 220 String member 300 Third covering part
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
A. First Example
(7)
(8) The tube 10 is a tube through which fluid such as gas or water used in a home flows. The tube 10 is grounded. The tube 10 includes a tubular member 50 and a first covering part 100.
(9) The tubular member 50 is a corrugated stainless-steel tubular member. The corrugating is processing of shaping a circumferential surface of a tubular member in a wave form. A circumferential surface of the tubular member 50 are shaped in a wave form in which a portion projecting in an outer radial direction and a portion dented in an inner radial direction are repeated alternately along the X axis direction. The corrugated tubular member is excellent in bendability compared to a tubular member having a smooth circumferential surface. The thickness of the circumferential surface of the tubular member 50 can be determined according to required bendability and durability. For example, the thickness of the circumferential surface of the tubular member 50 may be 0.2 mm to 0.5 mm.
(10) The first covering part 100 covers the outside of the tubular member 50. In this example, the first covering part 100 directly covers the tubular member 50. The first covering part 100 forms a braided structure described later. The braided structure is a structure formed by combining and braiding string members.
(11)
(12) In a state where the tube 10 is arranged in a home, it is assumed that a large current flow into the tube 10 due to spark discharge generated from induced lightning generated by lightning strike. In this example, in the tube 10, since the outside of the tubular member 50 is covered by the first covering part 100 including metal, spark discharge occurs not for the tubular member 50 having large electrical resistance but for the first covering part 100. Accordingly, damage in the tubular member 50 such as melting of a part of the circumferential surface of the tubular member 50 due to abnormal heat generation in the tubular member 50 having large electrical resistance due to spark discharge, can be prevented. The first covering part 100 has a braided structure using the string member 110, and has a position where the string members 110 are not in contact with each other. Therefore, compared to a configuration in which a covering part is formed of a metal layer having thickness continuing uniformly, the first covering part 100 has small conductive path for the amount of the position where the string members 110 are not in contact with each other. Therefore, even when a large current flow into the first covering part 100, a range of burning out due to the large current is hard to expand. In other words, in the first covering part 100, since multiple independent string members 110 are braided to form a mesh shape, there is a position where the string members 110 are not in contact with each other (discontinuous position). Since a current is hard to flow over the position where the string members are not in contact with each other, a range of burning out is hard to expand radially. Furthermore, all the string member 110 never be burned out at one time. Therefore, burning out the first covering part 100 over a wide range is hard to occur, compared to the configuration in which a range of burning out may expand radially and uniformly, for example, a configuration in which a covering part is formed of a metal layer having thickness continuing uniformly. From these factors, in the tube 10, it is possible to prevent burning out of a large part of the first covering part 100 due to spark discharge by a single induced lightning occurrence, and it is possible to maintain a function of releasing a large current to the ground not through the tubular member 50 for spark discharge due to multiple induced lightning occurrences.
(13) Moreover, the first covering part 100 is formed of a braided structure using the string member 110, and is excellent in bendability and stretchability so that flexibility in the tube 10 is easy to be maintained as compared to the configuration in which a covering part is formed of a metal layer having thickness continuing uniformly. Furthermore, since the string member 110 is covered with a copper foil wound spirally around the string member 110, it is possible to prevent the copper covering the string member 110 from hindering the stretch in the axis direction of the string member 110. Accordingly, it is possible to prevent flexibility in the tube 10 from being hindered.
(14) According to the first example described above, the first covering part 100 forming the braided structure can make the function of releasing a large current to the ground not through the tubular member for spark discharge due to induced lightning of plural times easy to be maintained, and can make the flexibility in the tube 10 easy to be maintained. Accordingly, maintaining of the function of releasing a large current to the ground not through the tubular member 50 for spark discharge due to induced lightning of plural times, and maintaining of the flexibility in the tube 10 can be both achieved. When spark discharge occurs from a steel frame or the like due to induced lightning for the tube 10 in the first example, the spark discharge occurs not toward the tubular member 50 but toward the first covering part 100. The current generated by the spark discharge flows not through the tubular member 50 but through the first covering part 100, is released to a side of a tube joint connected to the tube 10, and then, released to the ground via a ground electrode connected to the tube joint.
(15) Furthermore, since the first covering part 100 has a braided structure, even when the thickness of the copper foil forming the string member 110 is increased, the flexibility in the tube 10 can be maintained. Therefore, improving of resistance against spark discharge in the tube 10 and maintaining of flexibility in the tube 10 can be both achieved. “Improving of resistance against spark discharge” here refers to improving the performance of releasing a large current to the ground not through the tubular member for spark discharge due to induced lightning. Furthermore, in the tube 10 in the first example, since the first covering part 100 has a braided structure using the string member 110. Accordingly, a cross-sectional area of a metal having lower electrical resistance than that of a metal forming the tubular member 50 can be made large in a cross section (cross section as shown in
B. Second Example
(16) A tube in the second example is the same as the tube 10 in the first example except that the tube in the second example includes a second covering part (a second covering part 200 described later) instead of the first covering part 100. The second covering part is different from the first covering part 100 in the first example in a type (material) of the string member forming a braided structure.
(17)
C. Third Example
(18)
(19) The third covering part 300 is made of an insulating resin, and is a covering part directly covering the tubular member 50. In the first example, the first covering part 100 directly covers the tubular member 50. However, in the third example, the third covering part 300 directly covers the tubular member 50. In the third example, the first covering part 100 covers the third covering part 300. That is, the third covering part 300 is arranged between the tubular member 50 and the first covering part 100.
(20) The tube 10a of the third example having the above configuration has a similar effect to that of the tube 10. Furthermore, since the resin third covering part 300 is arranged between the tubular member 50 and the first covering part 100, the tubular member 50 and a metal (copper and tin) portion in the first covering part 100 do not contact with each other so that the tubular member 50 and the first covering part 100 are electrically insulated. Accordingly, current flowing through the tubular member 50 via the first covering part 100 can be prevented.
D. Modification
D1. Modification 1
(21) The tubular member 50 in the first example is formed of a stainless steel, but this disclosure is not limited thereto. For example, a tubular member in a tube of another example may be formed of a copper alloy such as brass or red brass, or an aluminum alloy.
D2. Modification 2
(22) In the first example, the string member 110 is formed by winding the copper foil spirally around the resin string member, but this disclosure is not limited thereto. For example, the string member 110 may be formed by winding at least one or more copper foils along the circumferential direction of the resin string member. The string member 110 may be covered by covering by a copper a part of a surface of the resin string member, or may be covered by covering by a copper the entire surface of the resin string member. The string member 110 may be covered by any manner as long as at least a part of the string member 110 is covered by a copper. Furthermore, the string member 110 may be covered by any metal as long as the metal has lower electrical resistance than that of the metal forming the tubular member 50.
D3. Modification 3
(23) The braided structure in the second covering part 200 of the second example is a structure formed by using the copper string member 210 and the resin string member 220, but this disclosure is not limited thereto. For example, in another example, a braided structure in the second covering part 200 may be a structure formed by using only the copper string member 210.
D4. Modification 4
(24) The tube 10a of the third example includes the tubular member 50, the first covering part 100, and the third covering part 300, but this disclosure is not limited thereto. For example, a tube in another example may have a form of including the second covering part 200 instead of the first covering part 100 forming the tube 10a in the third example.
(25) Our tubes are not limited to the configurations, examples, and modifications described above, and may be implemented by various configurations. For example, the examples corresponding to the technical features in each example described in the Summary, the examples, and the technical features in the modifications can be replaced or combined as appropriate to solve part or all of the above problem, or to achieve part or all of the above effect. Furthermore, as long as the technical feature is not described in the specification as essential, the technical feature may be deleted as appropriate.