SYSTEMS, DEVICES, AND METHODS FOR UNDERWATER VEHICLES
20230146152 · 2023-05-11
Inventors
Cpc classification
B63B2022/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63G8/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B63G8/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B63G8/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present disclosure relates to methods, techniques, and systems for underwater vehicles, in particular buoyancy driven vehicles such as vertical profiling floats. An example vertical profiling float vehicle is constructed from two independent substantially cylindrical pressure housings that each have a concave end. The housings are coupled to one another at their concave ends, such that the concavities face one another and form a chamber. The chamber is open to the environment and houses an external displacement bladder, such that the bladder is located at or about the midplane of the vehicle. The vehicle may also include a fluid return system that is operable to precisely control the return of fluid from the displacement bladder to an internal reservoir. The vehicle in some embodiments may also include a fixed-displacement pump configured to pump fluid from the internal reservoir to the displacement bladder.
Claims
1. A vertical profiling float, comprising: a first and second cylindrical pressure housing each having a convex end and a concave end, wherein the concave ends of the pressure housings are coupled to one another such that the concave ends face one another and thereby form a chamber between the concave ends, wherein the chamber is fluidly coupled to the environment, such that water can pass between the chamber and the environment; and a displacement bladder positioned within the chamber, such that the bladder is equidistant from the convex ends of the first and second pressure housings, wherein, when the float is placed in a body of water, the first pressure housing is above the second housing, and wherein the convex ends of the first and second pressure housings are respectively at the top and bottom of the float.
2. The vertical profiling float of claim 1, wherein the concave end of each of the pressure housings forms a concavity that is hemispherical in shape, and wherein the chamber is substantially spherical in shape.
3. The vertical profiling float of claim 1, wherein the concave end of each of the pressure housings is flared, such that the diameter of each pressure housing is greater at its concave end than in its mid-section.
4. The vertical profiling float of claim 1, wherein the concave ends of each of the pressure housings form a concavity that is cylindrical in shape, and wherein the chamber is cylindrical in shape.
5. The vertical profiling float of claim 1, wherein concave ends of the first and second housing are spaced apart and coupled via a plurality of rigid members, leaving gaps between the rigid members that allow for the passage of water between the environment and the chamber.
6. The vertical profiling float of claim 1, wherein the first pressure housing contains: a fluid reservoir; a pump fluidly coupled to the fluid reservoir and the displacement bladder, wherein the pump is configured to move fluid from the reservoir to the displacement bladder, thereby expanding the displacement bladder and displacing water from the chamber.
7. The vertical profiling float of claim 6, wherein the second pressure housing contains a battery that powers the pump.
8. The vertical profiling float of claim 6, wherein the first pressure housing contains a volume-controlled return system configured to deflate the displacement bladder by routing fluid from the bladder to the reservoir.
9. The vertical profiling float of claim 8, wherein the return system includes: a fluid inlet coupled to the displacement bladder; a valve chamber coupled to the fluid inlet; and a porous restrictor disk between the valve inlet and the valve chamber, wherein the disk slows fluid transfer between the fluid inlet and a valve chamber.
10. The vertical profiling float of claim 9, wherein the valve chamber includes: a spring; and a ball that is biased by the spring to close the valve chamber.
11. The vertical profiling float of claim 10, wherein the return system includes an electromechanically driven plunger operable to force the ball into the valve chamber, thereby opening the chamber and allowing fluid passage out of the chamber.
12. The vertical profiling float of claim 8, wherein the return system includes: a fluid inlet coupled to the displacement bladder; a valve chamber coupled to the fluid inlet; and a flow restrictor valve that regulates fluid flow into the valve chamber.
13. The vertical profiling float of claim 12, wherein the return system includes: a shutoff valve; and a servo motor that is operable to open and close the shutoff valve, such that opening the shutoff valve allows fluid passage through the flow restrictor valve.
14. The vertical profiling float of claim 13, wherein the shutoff valve is one of a plug valve, a quarter turn valve, a trunnion valve, and a needle valve.
15. The vertical profiling float of claim 5, wherein the pump is a fixed-displacement hydraulic pump with clutch transmission configured to deliver a same volume of hydraulic fluid independent of shaft speed or resulting pressure.
16. The vertical profiling float of claim 15, wherein the pump includes a plurality of motors that each have different windings and power inputs and outputs.
17. The vertical profiling float of claim 16, configured to: operate a first motor of the plurality of motors in a predetermined first depth range; and operate a second motor of the plurality of motors in a predetermined second depth range, wherein the first and second depth ranges are different.
18. The vertical profiling float of claim 15, wherein the pump further includes: a driveshaft; and an angular swashplate coupled directly to the driveshaft, wherein the swashplate is configured to drive pump plungers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] The present disclosure relates to methods, techniques, and systems for underwater vehicles, in particular buoyancy driven vehicles such as vertical profiling floats. As described in detail below and with reference to the drawings, some embodiments may provide a float vehicle that is constructed from two independent substantially cylindrical pressure housings that each have a concave end. The housings are coupled to one another at their concave ends, such that the concavities face one another and form a chamber. The chamber is open to the environment and houses an external displacement bladder, such that the bladder is located at or about the midplane of the vehicle. In some embodiments, the vehicle may also include a fluid return system that is operable to precisely control the return of fluid from the displacement bladder to an internal reservoir. The vehicle in some embodiments may also include a fixed-displacement pump configured to pump fluid from the internal reservoir to the displacement bladder.
Buoyancy-Driven Vehicle with Mid-Plane Displacement
[0021] Buoyancy-driven vehicles, such as vertical profiling floats use a change in displacement to achieve thrust (buoyant force equal to the volume of the displaced liquid, Archimedes' Principle) in either the positive or negative direction, travelling up and down through the water column or other body of liquid. This change in displacement is typically done with oil transfer from an internal bladder or reservoir to an external one, or driving a piston from inside a pressure housing to the exterior. In addition, the stability of the vehicle is determined by the distance between the center of gravity (CG), also referred to as the center of mass, and the center of buoyancy (CB). The greater this distance the greater the stability. For ease of construction and engineering, the variable displacement (e.g., external bladder) on existing vehicles has always been located on the bottom endcap of pressure housings.
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[0023] The housings 103 and 104 are independent pressure housings that are generally cylindrical in shape. Each housing has a convex end cap at one end and is flared at the other, distal end. Each pressure housing thus has a diameter at its flared end that is greater than at its mid-section. As shown, housing 103 and 104 respectively have a convex end cap shown at the top end 101 and bottom end 102 of the vehicle 100. Each housing is concave at its flared end. The housings are symmetrical and are coupled at their flared ends at the mid-plane 126. As will be discussed further below, the housings 103 and 104 are coupled in such a way that the concavities at their flared ends form a chamber that is open to the environment, such that water may pass between the chamber and the environment (e.g., body of water, ocean, lake).
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[0025] A bladder 116 is located within the chamber 105 of the vehicle 100. The bladder 116 is thus “external” to the vehicle, in the sense that it is not located within either of the pressure housings 103 and 104. The bladder 116 is fluidly connected to the fluid reservoir 110, via the pump 110 and return system 114. The pump 110 moves fluid from the reservoir 110 to the bladder. When the bladder is filled, water that was formerly within the chamber 105 is displaced and the volume of the vehicle 100 is increased while retaining the same mass, thereby reducing its density and increasing its buoyancy. With greater buoyancy, the vehicle will travel in a positive direction, or upward through the water column. Conversely, fluid can be moved from the bladder 116 to the reservoir 110 via the return system 114 and/or pump 112. This causes the volume of the vehicle to be reduced, resulting in a higher density and lower buoyancy.
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Volume-Controlled Return System for Precision Buoyancy Control
[0030] Underwater vehicles such as the float 100 encounter many obstacles to proper operation including change in water densities, debris and marine growth. To remain at a desired depth or water density the vehicle needs the ability to change its displaced volume, for a constant neutral buoyant force. Some embodiments provide a cost-effective fluid return system that provides for extremely fine-grained (milliliter, mL) adjustments and measurements.
[0031] The precision buoyancy control system utilizes a hydraulic fluid (considered to be incompressible) to inflate or deflate an external bladder to change the overall displacement of the vehicle. To inflate the bladder, resulting in a positive buoyant force, a hydraulic displacement pump is used. To deflate the bladder (resulting in a negative buoyant force) in a controlled manner a variation of Bernoulli's principle, the Continuity Equation is applied.
[0032] Routing the returning hydraulic fluid through a small fixed orifice, then into a larger chamber allows the pressure to drop. Any number of these pathways can be put in series to achieve a suitable final hydraulic pressure.
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Fixed-Displacement Hydraulic Pump with Clutch Transmission
[0038] Buoyancy driven vehicles use a change in volumetric displacement to achieve thrust in either the positive or negative direction. They are also deployed with a fixed amount of available energy (batteries), making efficiency the key to long duration deployments.
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[0042] While embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited by the above disclosure.