CIVIL ENGINEERING STRUCTURE FOR GUIDING A LINE
20240360641 ยท 2024-10-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
E02D27/46
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A civil engineering structure for guiding a line in a slot in a surface area outdoors, said slot being formed by a milling or grinding process. A protective cover which consists of sub-pieces connected together in an articulated manner, extends above the line in the slot. The volume region of the slot in which the line is located is unfilled and is protected against expected compressive loads from the top by the sub-pieces. Because the sub-pieces are connected together in an articulated manner, the cover can be inserted without difficulty into longitudinal regions of the slot that have a curved course.
Claims
1. A civil engineering structure for conducting a line in a slit trench, made by milling or cutting, in an outdoor ground area, wherein a protective cover, which consists of portions each downwardly supported against lateral boundary surfaces of the volume of the slit trench, extends in the slit trench above the line, wherein the portions are arranged in line with one another along the longitudinal direction of the slit trench and articulatedly connected to one another in such a way that they can be pivoted relative to one another about vertical axes, wherein that volume region of the slit trench where the line is located is unfilled, and in that the portions are designed fixedly with respect to flexural strength about bending axes parallel to the longitudinal direction of the slit trench such that they upwardly protect the spanned, unfilled volume region against the compressive force loading that is to be expected.
2. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein a first dimension of the portions is substantially the same as the width to be covered of the slit trench.
3. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the portion has the form of a C profile or an S profile, and in that adjacent portions are hooked together.
4. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the portion is approximately a flat, sheetlike part, and in that adjacent portions are pivotably held on one another at the longitudinal centers of their mutually facing lateral edges by a rivet.
5. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cover has the contours of a groove profile, which is put over the line in the slit trench with a downwardly open cross-sectional area side in front.
6. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein lateral flank faces of the portions of the cover extend into that height region where the line is.
7. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein the portions of the cover have the form of a U profile piece, and in that these portions are arranged one behind another in line in their profile direction, and between adjacent portions there is a respective slit-like aperture, of which the longitudinal direction is aligned normal to the profile direction and the length extends over the entire width of the basic face and over the entire height of respectively just one of the two flank faces of the U profile.
8. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein the lower region of the cover rests on the base face of the slit trench.
9. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein the cover has an upper basic face and two flank faces, wherein the basic face projects on either side beyond the strips occupied by the flank faces and the space between them, and rests with the two projecting regions against a respective shoulder face of the slit trench.
10. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 5, wherein the cover has apertures on its upward face, wherein an aperture is covered by a further part.
11. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 10, wherein the further part is a portion of a groove profile.
12. The civil engineering structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the line is a fiber-optic cable.
Description
[0014] The invention is illustrated on the basis of somewhat stylized drawings:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023] According to
[0024] A hollow profile 5 which extends parallel to the slit trench and can consist of plastic or sheet metal is inserted in the slit trench 2. The lateral surface of the hollow profile 5 is open; in the advantageous case illustrated, the open side is at the top. The lines 6 to be laid are laid in the hollow profile 5.
[0025] The slit trench 2 is upwardly closed by a cover 7, which consists of portions 8. The portions 8 span the upper region of the slit trench 2 between its two flanks. In the example illustrated, the portions 8 rest on the shoulder faces 4 of the slit trench 2. It would, however, also be possible for the portions 8 to be supported on other parts, which bear against them from underneath and prevent them from moving downward. As illustrated, the uppermost face of the cover 7 formed by the portions 8 is preferably aligned at least approximately flush with the surface of the ground 1 that surrounds the slit trench 2. The dimension 9 of the cover 7, and thus of the portions 8, measured normal to the longitudinal direction of the slit trench is the same as the width to be covered of the slit trench 2.
[0026] The lines 6 to be laid, typically cables, which each comprise a multiplicity of individual fiber-optical lines, are laid in the slit trench 2. In the optional example illustrated, a hollow profile 8, which extends parallel to the slit trench and can consist of plastic or sheet metal, is inserted in the slit trench 2, and the lines 6 are laid in the hollow profile 8.
[0027] The portions 8 of the cover 7 are dimensioned fixedly such that they can withstand a motor vehicle traveling over the slit trench 2, without damage. Typically, the portions 8 consist of an iron alloy, that is to say steel or cast iron, to this end. In order to be able to make the portions 8 from a less-strong material, such as aluminum or plastics composites, their vertical dimensions must be made larger.
[0028] According to
[0029] According to
[0030] According to
[0031] In the exemplary embodiments according to the invention in the drawings
[0032] The cover can thus discharge compressive forces acting on it from above downward past the lines. It thus acts as an enclosure for the lines, which protects them from mechanical action from above and from the side.
[0033] According to
[0034] The required cover 16 for the lines 6 in the slit trench 14 is formed by portions 17. The portions 17 are each a segment of a groove profile, that is to say a profile with a cross-sectional area that encloses the cross-sectional area of a groove. The portions 17 are disposed in the slit trench 14 one behind another in the longitudinal direction of the slit trench, so that they form the cover 16, which extends along and in the slit trench 14. The portions 17 are pushed into the slit trench 14 with a downwardly open cross-sectional area side and put over the lines 6, so that the lines 6 are enclosed at the top by the basic face 18 of the portions 17 and laterally by the flank faces 19 of the portions 17.
[0035] At the bottom, the portions 17 rest on the base face 15 of the slit trench 14 and are supported thereby. As intended, the portions 17 have a fixed design such that they can withstand the maximum compressive forces from above that are to be expected. Typically, they are those forces that arise when a road vehicle travels on the surface of the ground 1 and in the process travels over the slit trench 14.
[0036] In order that the portions 17 do not sink in the ground 1 in the event of a compressive force from above, it is necessary for the material adjoining the base face 15 of the slit trench 14 at the bottom to have sufficient strength. If this material is the usual material for road coverings, that is to say asphalt, concrete or stone, it certainly does have sufficient strength. This is always the case when the slit trench 14 is milled or cut to a shallower depth than the layer thickness of the upper, strong material of the ground 1 when the slit trench is being milled or cut.
[0037] If the ground material at the base face 15 is expected to be less strong, it is necessary to form a separate strong layer (not illustrated) as the bottom of the slit trench 14 in order to be able to apply the structure according to the invention.
[0038] In the example according to the top part of the image in
[0039] In the example according to the central part of the image in
[0040] In the example according to the bottom part of the image in
[0041]
[0042] On the one hand, for the intended use case, each portion 17 must be stable with respect to compressive forces acting between the outer side of the basic face 18 and the end faces, spaced apart therefrom, of the flank faces 19 and, on the other hand, the cover 16 in the form of a chaining of the portions 17 should be readily flexible about axes normal to the basic faces 18. This flexibility is necessary in order that the cover 16 can easily be laid even in curved longitudinal regions of the slit trench 14.
[0043] The cover 16 is typically made from a sheet steel strip, which was rolled into the form of a U profile. In order to achieve the desired deformability, this U profile has regularly recurring slit-like apertures 23, of which the longitudinal direction is aligned normal to the profile direction of the U profile and the length extends over the entire width of the basic face 18 and over the entire height of respectively just one of the two flank faces 19 with respect to the U profile. The respective slit-like aperture 23 ends in a material partition 24 at the respective other one of the two flank faces 19.
[0044] The material partition 24 preferablyas illustrateddoes not extend as far as the bottom edge of the respective flank face 19. Instead, an additional slit-like aperture 25 extends from said bottom edge of this flank face 19 to the opposite side of the material partition 24 to the first slit-like aperture 23.
[0045] Such a slit-like aperture 23 which completely divides the right-hand flank face follows a slit-like aperture 23 which completely divides the left-hand flank face, along the longitudinal direction of the cover 16. In this way it is possible to achieve, in the best possible way, a largely uniform and gentle flexibility of the cover 16.
[0046] The slit-like apertures 23 subdivide the cover 16 into the individual portions 17. Adjacent portions 17 are connected by a respective one of the material partitions 24. Since the material partitions 24 have a small cross-sectional area, they are readily flexible, whereby the portions 17 can be pivoted with respect to one another by overcoming some force of resistance against deformation of the material partitions 24.
[0047] The lower end of the material partition 24 is preferably above the halfway point of the height of the respective flank face 19, and the upper end of the material partition 24 is preferably below the corner region of the flank face 19 with the basic face 6. This results in the best ease of handling of the cover 16.
[0048]
[0049] For example, the covering groove profile 30 together with the covered groove profile 27 can be made from a common sheet-metal strip by stamping and roll forming, and the two groove profiles 30, 26 remain monolithically connected in the process. It is, however, also possible to produce separate groove profiles 30, 26 and put them on top of one another and connect them separately at individual points.
[0050]
[0051] The associated cover 33 again consists of portions 34, which have the form of short U profile pieces, and thus have a basic face 35 and two flank faces 36, wherein the basic face 35 is at the top.
[0052] In this instance, the basic face 35 is widened with respect to the distance between the outer faces of the flank faces 36, so that it laterally projects beyond the flank faces 36. The basic face 35 of the respective portion 34 of the cover 33 rests with the projecting faces on the shoulder faces 32 of the slit trench 31. In this structure, loading by compressive forces on the cover 33 from above is not discharged directly to the base face of the slit trench 31, but to the shoulder faces 32. Given otherwise comparable boundary conditions, the civil engineering structure can thus withstand greater compressive forces from above than that according to the structural variants from
[0053] Like the covers according to the embodiments in
[0054] According to a variant of the invention which is not illustrated, the slit trench in the ground 1 may have shoulder faces, although the cover according to the invention can still rest on the base face of the slit trench, and an additional cover may rest on the shoulder faces of the slit trench above the cover according to the invention.
[0055] According to an addition to the invention which is not illustrated, the portions of the cover that is applied according to the invention have projections which project laterally from the other profile face of the cover and, in the mounted state, bear against a respective flank face of the slit trench in the ground under pressure. This easily brings about a sort of anchoring of the cover in the slit trench.
[0056] According to another addition to the invention which is not illustrated, the respective surface at the very top of the cover applied according to the invention is designed such that it has better slip resistance than would otherwise be the case with a flat sheet-metal surface. This slip-resistant design can be brought about by a separate coating or by embossed or stamped portions in the uppermost sheet-metal face. Such embossed portions are known in the context of tread plates; they have the effect that the surface is given sharp-edged roughnesses, which make it slip-resistant.