Emergency underwater miniaturized breathing device
09994292 ยท 2018-06-12
Assignee
Inventors
- Clayton Gregory Bowman (Ladera Ranch, CA, US)
- Tyler Jamison Bowman (Capistrano Beach, CA, US)
- Joseph-Eamonn Clerkin (Belmont, CA, US)
- Janusz Labedz (Mountain View, CA, US)
- Randy Cardona (Aptos, CA, US)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A miniature breathing device for underwater breathing that can be worn on a person during water activities. A small form factor and lightweight housing suitable for submerging in shallow water. The small form factor preventing disruption of activities of a user undertaken while wearing the miniature breathing device. A canister within the housing stores a mixture of compressed air. An actuator on the housing to controllably releases the compressed air from the canister. A regulator piston within the housing is shaped with chambers to decompress the compressed air to breathable form. A mouthpiece opening of the housing provides breathable air to lips of a user. A strap secures the miniature breathing device to the user during activities.
Claims
1. A miniature breathing device to provide air for underwater breathing, comprising: a miniature inline form factor housing suitable for submerging in water, the miniature inline form factor housing preventing disruption of activities of a user undertaken while wearing the miniature breathing device; a canister within the miniature inline form factor housing to store a mixture of compressed air; an actuator comprising a button on the miniature inline form factor housing that is configured to be depressed to controllably release the mixture of compressed air from the canister; a regulator piston within the miniature inline form factor housing; a first and second chamber oriented in a miniature inline design, the first chamber of a first cross-section size and the second chamber of a second cross-section size that is larger than the first cross-section size, the second chamber positioned contiguous in parallel orientation to the first chamber and offset from the first chamber to regulate pressure, wherein an air path starting from the canister comprises the mixture of the compressed air at a first pressure, at the first chamber comprises the mixture of compressed air at a second pressure, and at the second chamber comprises the mixture of compressed air at a third pressure in breathable form at an end of the air path; a mouthpiece opening of the miniature inline form factor housing configured to provide breathable air to lips of the user, wherein the canister, first chamber, second chamber and the mouthpiece opening are oriented in a common parallel inline orientation in the miniature inline design; and a strap configured to secure the miniature breathing device to the user during activities.
2. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein the canister is configured to be refilled with the mixture of compressed air.
3. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein the strap is configured to be attached to an arm of the user during activities.
4. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein the miniature inline form factor housing comprises rubber chamfers configured to provide a grip for the user in wet environments.
5. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein the actuator is configured to be depressed to compress a return spring which permits the mixture of compressed air to enter the regulator piston.
6. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein the first chamber of the first cross-section size is upstream the second chamber of the second cross-section size, the second chamber being upstream from the mouthpiece opening.
7. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, configured in an inline design such that the canister, the chambers, and the mouthpiece opening, are oriented in a parallel air flow.
8. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein a capacity of the canister provides approximately one to five breaths of the breathable air.
9. The miniature breathing device of claim 1, wherein the strap comprises a breakaway strap.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the following drawings, like reference numbers are used to refer to like elements. The Figures depict various embodiments for purposes of illustration only. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from the following discussion that other embodiments of the structures and methods illustrated herein may be employed without departing from the described principles.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) The present disclosure provides a miniature breathing device for use in underwater breathing, and methods for operating the same.
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(10) Each of the exterior components house several interior components exposed by the exploded view. A canister 232 fits within the lower body 230. The canister 232 can be, for example, 3 or 4 inches long and have 14 ml at 1 Atm and store 12 grams of CO2. The contents can be compressed air, O2, or similar breathable fluid. Supposing a male inspiratory capacity is about 3.5 L and a female is about 2.4 L, 1 to 2 breaths of usable lung volume is provided by the canister 232. An implementation-specific mixture of compressed air and is sealed by a membrane. A piercing valve 234 has a needle on one end facing the canister 232 to pierce the sealing membrane in order to release gas. A valve body 236 directs a path of released gas. Along with a regulator piston 224, the pressure is reduced to a useable level.
(11) The upper body 220 actuates the miniature breathing device 100 when the actuator button 222 is depressed by a user. The regulator piston 224 creates a flow path for air between the canister 232 and the mouthpiece 210, and also controls release of the air mixture. A return spring 226 controls the air path by opening the piston when depressed and closes the piston when released. In an embodiment, the actuator button 222 releases more compressed air when pressed harder and/or for a longer duration.
(12) The mouthpiece 210 covers a one-way valve 212 that fits within the upper body 220. The fitting allows air to be released to the mouthpiece 210 in one direction. At the same time, the one-way valve 212 prevents ingress of water into the air pathway, essentially water-proofing the miniature breathing device 100.
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(14) From the current view, the canister 232 is shown to protrude into the regulator piston 224. Further, the piercing valve creates an opening of the air mixture to escape the canister 232. However, the return spring 226 blocks the opening prior to being actuated. It is when the return spring 226 is compressed, that the opening is unblocked and the air mixture can travel through the regulator piston 224. Chambers 310A,B within the regulator piston 224 are positioned and sized to allow the air mixture to expand to a usable pressure. More specifically, in one embodiment, chamber 310A is larger than an inlet opened by a depressed return spring 226, and chamber 310B is larger than an inlet from the chamber 310B. A slight offset between the chambers 310A and 310B provides further pressure regulation.
(15) In some embodiments, the canister 232 can be removed and replaced or refilled by unscrewing the exterior components. In other embodiments, the canister 232 is refilled without any or with minimal disassembly.
(16) In other alternatives, aggressive chamfers (e.g., grooves) made of rubber provide better gripping, especially in wet environments. Other designs are worn like a glove for even more security.
(17) In one embodiment, an inline design allows the miniature size relative to conventional breathing tanks. In more detail, conventional devices using a 90 degree mouthpiece allow the tank to conveniently orient from vertically but can require additional space-consuming components to operate. The miniature breathing device 100 being small in size and temporary in use, is able to conserve space with the inline design in which the canister 232, the chambers 310A,B, and mouthpiece 210 are oriented generally in a parallel manner.
(18) In yet another embodiment, the miniature breathing device 100 is preferably used in shallow water situations (e.g., 5 or 10 feet deep) that are not subject to the more intense pressure of deep waters. As a result, components can be lightweight.
(19) As will be understood by those familiar with the art, the subject matter described herein may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. Likewise, the particular naming and division of the portions, modules, agents, managers, components, functions, procedures, actions, layers, features, attributes, methodologies, data structures and other aspects are not mandatory or significant, and the mechanisms that implement the subject matter or its features may have different names, divisions and/or formats. The foregoing description, for purpose of explanation, has been described with reference to specific embodiments. However, the illustrative discussions above are not intended to be exhaustive or limiting to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain relevant principles and their practical applications, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize various embodiments with or without various modifications as may be suited to the particular use contemplated.