UNDERWATER PORT-HOLE WHOSE SURFACE ORIENTED TOWARD THE INSIDE OF ITS MOUNTING STRUCTURE IS FACETED
20220371690 · 2022-11-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
B32B2250/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63C11/49
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63B19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63B17/0018
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63B2019/0038
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/308
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B63B19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A port-hole of an immersed structure, for seeing, from inside the structure in air, to the outside of the structure in water, level with the structure, wherein the face of the port-hole oriented toward the inside of the structure includes at least one flat section forming an angle of 20 to 40° with respect to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure.
Claims
1. A port-hole of a submerged structure, for seeing, from an inside of the structure in air, to an outside of the structure in the water, level with the structure, wherein a face of the port-hole oriented toward the inside of the structure comprises at least one flat section forming an angle of 20 to 40° with respect to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure.
2. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, wherein said angle is at least equal to 25°.
3. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, wherein said angle is at most equal to 35°.
4. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the face of the port-hole oriented toward the inside of the structure comprises at least one flat section parallel to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure.
5. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a plurality of said flat sections defining planes whose pairwise intersections are straight lines substantially parallel to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside, and parallel to one another.
6. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a plurality of said flat sections forming an angle of 20 to 40° with respect to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure, and conforming to a polyhedron.
7. The port-hole as claimed in claim 6, wherein the face of the port-hole oriented toward the inside of the structure comprises a flat section parallel to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure and forming a truncated face of said polyhedron.
8. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a monolithic glazing consisting of a single transparent sheet of mineral glass, optionally thermally tempered or chemically reinforced, or of polymer material, and/or a laminated glazing consisting of several such transparent sheets of mineral glass or of polymer material glued in pairs by an adhesive interlayer of polyvinylbutyral (PVB), thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU), or ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA).
9. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of said flat sections is mounted with the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure in double-glazing with a space filled with air or rare gas, in triple-glazing with two spaces filled with air or rare gas, or in multiple glazing with at least three spaces filled with air or rare gas.
10. The port-hole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the port-hole is mounted in a frame consisting of a window frame secured to a mounting structure of the port-hole, a turn-up and screws, the sealing between the port-hole and the frame being obtained via a dry or extruded seal.
11. A method comprising providing a port-hole according to claim 1 to a ship or a submarine or to an immersed structure or equipment.
12. The port-hole as claimed in claim 3, wherein said angle is at most equal to 30°.
13. The port-hole as claimed in claim 8, wherein the mineral glass is a sodocalcic, aluminosilicate, or borosilicate glass, and wherein the polymer material is poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), polycarbonate (PC), polyurethane (PU), or ionomer resin.
14. The port-hole as claimed in claim 9, wherein the air or rare gas is krypton, argon, xenon.
15. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the port-hole is a propeller port-hole.
16. The method as claimed in claim 15, wherein the structure or equipment is an oil platform or wind turbine.
Description
[0019] The attached drawings illustrate the invention. The figures are schematic representations in cross-section of propeller port-holes as mentioned previously.
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027] Referring to
[0028] A mounting frame of the port-hole 4 comprises a window frame 2 welded to the hull 1 of the boat, a turn-up 5 and a screw 6, which make it possible to mount the glazing by pinching. The sealing between the glazing 4 and the frame is ensured by a dry or extruded seal 3.
[0029] Referring to
[0030] To be able to observe the hydraulic flows from upstream to downstream of the propeller, it is therefore necessary to distribute three port-holes according to the state of the art over the hull of the boat, as represented in
[0031] In
[0032] Applying the same refractive indices as those cited above, it can be seen in
[0033]
[0034] In
[0035] According to another variant of the invention, one or several inclined faces (flat sections, facets) of the port-hole 4 can be mounted in multiple-glazing with one or more spaces filled with air or gas, with the vertical outer face of the port-hole 4.
[0036] To simplify,
[0037] By convention, the flat sections of the port-hole in these figures can be designated from top to bottom by an angle with positive sign, for example to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside, i.e., from top to bottom, +40°, +30°, +20° for example, the figures not necessarily exactly representing these angles.
[0038] Other examples below fall within the scope of the invention.
[0039] A port-hole having a single facet of +25° angle provides, for vision from inside in air to the outside in water, a solid angle of 2.46 sr, representing 39% of the maximum solid angle of 2π sr. By comparison, the solid angle of a port-hole with parallel faces is 2.14 sr, i.e. 34%. In the device represented in
[0040] A port-hole with two facets of +25° and 0° from top to bottom provides a solid angle of 3.25 sr, i.e. 52%.
[0041] A port-hole with three facets of +25°, 0° and −25° from top to bottom provides a solid angle of 4.35 sr, i.e. 69%.
[0042] According to the second main variant of the port-hole of the invention, it comprises several said flat sections forming an angle of 20 to 40° with respect to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure, and conforming to a polyhedron. The variations of angle of said flat sections are, here, in three dimensions.
[0043] A tetrahedron of three facets at 25° and an isosceles triangle base parallel to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure, provides a solid angle of 5.33 sr, i.e. 85%. The same values are obtained by truncating this tetrahedron, by adding a 0° facet.
[0044] A pyramid with square base (demi-octahedron) of four facets at 25° and a square base parallel to the face of the port-hole oriented toward the outside of the structure, provides a solid angle of 5.89 sr, i.e. 94%. The same values are obtained by truncating this tetrahedron, by adding a 0° facet.