US2531230A - Electric power source - Google Patents

Electric power source Download PDF

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US2531230A
US2531230A US655002A US65500246A US2531230A US 2531230 A US2531230 A US 2531230A US 655002 A US655002 A US 655002A US 65500246 A US65500246 A US 65500246A US 2531230 A US2531230 A US 2531230A
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valve
vessel
water
pressure
energy
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Warren P Mason
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02NELECTRIC MACHINES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H02N2/00Electric machines in general using piezoelectric effect, electrostriction or magnetostriction
    • H02N2/18Electric machines in general using piezoelectric effect, electrostriction or magnetostriction producing electrical output from mechanical input, e.g. generators
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02NELECTRIC MACHINES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H02N11/00Generators or motors not provided for elsewhere; Alleged perpetua mobilia obtained by electric or magnetic means
    • H02N11/002Generators

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  • This invention relates to-prime sources of energy and more particularly to a novel system for producing electrical or vibratory energy from the gravitational energy of a hydrostatic pressure head.
  • An object of the invention is to convert hydrostatic energy into electrical energy in a direct and simple manner.
  • Another object of the invention is to convert hydrostatic energy into hydrodynamic energy of vibration.
  • Another object of the invention is to produce electrical energy without the use of massive rotating mechanicalparts.
  • Still another object of the invention is to utilize the energy of highfrequency pressure waves to excite an electromechanical transducer such as a piezoelectric element.
  • the phenomenon known as water hammer has been known for generations. It has generally been regarded as an annoyance to be tolerated or as a difliculty to be circumvented by the ingenuity of hydraulic engineers. It has been put to practical use in one instrumentality, the water ram, wherein the sudden closure of a valve in a pipe in which water is flowing combines with the inertial mass of the flowing water to raise a portion of the water to a higher level.
  • This device is in general very wasteful of water, makes no use of the transitory high frequency wave energy which follows the shock of valve closure, and is, furthermore, restricted to comparatively low frequency operation.
  • the water hammer principle in one of its aspects is embodied in a new ,instrumentality of greater efficiency, while in another aspect the considerable avail able high frequency water hammer energy is converted into electrical energy to be supplied to any desired load.
  • principles which have long been well known in the wind musical instrument art are taken over and applied to the hydraulic art and to the art of power generation with consequently greatly improved efdciency due to the difference between the characteristics of the liquid medium and those of the air or gas medium.
  • a fluid such as water is intermittently admitted to and dis? charged from a vessel, containing a resonant chamber by way of a rapidly oscillatingvalve giving rise. to oscillating pressures within the.
  • a rapidly oscillatingvalve giving rise. to oscillating pressures within the.
  • Fig. 1 is a sectional diagram of the apparatus and a schematic diagram of the electrical circuit of a vibratory system for converting hydrostatic energy into electrical energy;
  • Fig. 2 is a sectional diagram of a modified arrangement of a part of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 is a partial end view taken on line 3--3 of Fig. 2, being principally, however, a diagrammatic showing of the relationships of the nozzles, and of the cross-sectional shape of the chamber carrying said nozzles;
  • Fig. 4 is a sectional diagram of the apparatus and a schematic diagram of the electric circuit of a modification of Fig. 1 adapted principally for operation at lower frequencies than Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 5 shows an alternative construction for a part of Fig. 4.
  • Fig. 6 shows anotheralternative construction for another part of Fig. 4.
  • a vessel or chamber I is provided of rugged pressure-resisting material such as steel. It is closed at one end by a pressure-responsive valve which may be a sheet of spring steel 2 fixed to one part of the vessel wall as at 3 and bearing, when closed, tightly and snugly against a valve seat 4, which may be continuous with the vessel wall, under the influence of its own elastic strains; In the figure the valve is shown by broken lines in the closed position and by full lines in the open position.
  • the vessel is substantially closed at the opposite end by a light, rigid member such as an aluminum plate 5. The plate is not fixed to the inside walls of the vessel I but is free to move in the fashion of a piston at 7 least over short distances.
  • a massive, rigid backing block 1 To the far side of the plate are fixed the ends of a considerable number of piezoelectric crystals 6, the other ends of which are similarly fixed to a massive, rigid backing block 1.
  • the latter may ga ish be mounted on and supported by a skirt 8 movably engaging with a skirt 9, which may be an extension of the outer walls of the chamber I.
  • the assembly comprising the backing block l, the crystals 6, the plate 5 and the skirt 8 may be moved bodily inward or outward of the chamber 5, correct positioning being efiected as by turn buckles ID.
  • the piezoelectric crystal elements 5 may be cut from any suitable mother material, for example ammonium dihydrogen phosphate (ADP) to vibrate in their fundamental longitudinal mode.
  • ADP ammonium dihydrogen phosphate
  • the crystal lengths may be substantially onequarter of the wavelength of a compression wave in the crystal material. Each one is provided on either side with a conducting plate or film i l, l l
  • Corresponding electrodes H may be connected electrically in parallel and to one terminal ,of the primary winding of a transformer 12, the other terminal of which may be connected to the oppositely located crystal electrodes H.
  • the secondary Winding of the transformer [2 may be connected to supply a desired load 53 and, if direct current is desired, a rectifier id of conventional design may be interposed.
  • the crystals 5 may be injured by contact with water, it is desirable to surround them with oil which serves as a protection and also insulates the electrodes and the conductors from one another.
  • oil which serves as a protection and also insulates the electrodes and the conductors from one another.
  • castor oil is suitable for this purpose.
  • the same oil I5 is supplied on both sides of the plate 5, hydrostatic pressures being equalized by leakage past the plate 5, that is, between the periphery of the plate a and the inner walls of the chamber l.
  • the oil extends to a diaphragm I6 which may be a simple sheet of rubber, or the like, which is sealed in any desired manner to the inner walls of the chamber I in leak-proof fashion. It may thus be easily deflected under the influence of unbalanced hydrostatic pressures without substantially modifying the operation of the apparatus while still serve ing to separate the oil which lies to one side of it from the water which lies to the other side of it.
  • the cross-section of the chamber I may be circular or rectangular or may have any other shape as desired. Its dimensions, which are related to the manner in which the apparatus operates, will be discussed hereinafter.
  • the length of the free-swinging portion of the spring valve 2 may be adjusted as by positioning a roller 2
  • the roller may be mounted on a bracket 22 arranged for movement in a direction parallel to the surface of the spring valve, being restrained:
  • the cut-off valve [9 is opened and water .or other suitable fluid is admitted to the chamber I under pressure.
  • the pressure may have any desired value but should not exceed two atmospheres, else injury to the apparatus by cavitation may occur.
  • the hy drostatic pressure inside the chamber pushes outvward against the spring steel valve 2, but the spring tension in the valve at first sufiices to hold it in place against its seat 4.
  • the water pressure inside the vessel just balances the tension in the spring valve 2 and the valve opens slightly. Immediately water starts to escape through the narrow passage formed between the valve 2 and its seat 4.
  • the spring valve '2 when properly adjusted, opens and closes periodically after the fashion of a vibrating reed, permitting the water to escape through the passage between it and the seat 4 in sharp spurts.
  • closure of the valve 2 is accompanied by an increase in the pressure on its inner face while opening of the valve is accompanied by a reduction of such pressure.
  • the latter is a hard, rigid reflecting surface and it therefore reflects the wave without change of 0 phase back again towardthe valve 2.
  • these T? waves become cumulative, and standing waves gar-28a are formed in the vessel with nodes or high pressure regions at the valve 2 and at the aluminum plate 5.
  • These pressure waves may contain substantial amounts of vibratory energy.
  • the period of the valve may easily be accomplished in accordance with the invention by movement of the tuning roller 2! to adjust the length of the vibrating portion of the valve 2. This is analogous to the adjustment of the length of the beating reed of an instrument such as the clarinet by the lips of the player.
  • the diameter of the vessel I assuming its cross-section to be circular, or its shortest side, if rectangular, should not exceed one-half wavelength. This restric- K tion is fully explained in Electrical Transducers and Wave Filters by W. P. Mason (Van Nostrand 1942).
  • a filter tuned to the frequency of vibration in the intake line IS.
  • a suitable and simple form of filter consists of a pair of oppositely arranged closed end branch pipes 29, each one-quarter wavelength long, measured from the axis of the intake pipe l8, and positioned one-quarter wavelength above the inner wall of the vessel I, measured to the axes of the branch pipes.
  • a valving arrangement may be employed in the apparatus.
  • a rigid end plate of the vessel there are mounted on a rigid end plate of the vessel an array of inwardly projecting nozzles 31, each having a closed inward end but a central axial tubular passage which connects with a hole in one side wall.
  • An elastic beating reed 32 is rigidly attached to the base of each of these nozzles 3
  • Fig. 3 is diagrammatic to the extent that it does not show the reed which is related to each nozzle or the precise appearance of the nozzle as seen from the right, so as, for instance, to take account of the tapering conformation of the crosssection. It is thought that, in view of the number of the nozzles, a more detailed showing would be more confusing than instructive.
  • This pressure increase travels axially of the vessel as described above, is reflected and returns to the plane of the plate 30 on which the reed valves are mounted, and operation continues as described in connection with Fig. 1.
  • the natural frequency of vibration of each of the crystals 6 coincide with the natural period of vibration of the water-oil column l5, H in the chamber 1.
  • the crystals should be initially cut to the proper length for operation at the desired frequency, and the dimensions of the Vessel should be selected to match. Final adjustment can be made in any convenient manner but is preferably made by adjusting the length of the water-oil column in the vessel I.
  • the crystal array, with its mounting block may be moved axially into and outward of the vessel as by adjustment of turn buckles H].
  • oil may be added to or extracted from the oil chamber by way of the oil intake line and stop cock 34.
  • the middle regions of the vessel support the greatest water movement whereas the two ends support the greatest dynamic pressures. Therefore, the ends of the vessel are planes of high impedance.
  • the high pressures bearing against the aluminum plate 5 actuate the crystals 6 and set them into longitudinal vibration. Because the crystals are each of a length equal to substantially one-quarter of the wavelength of the longitudinal vibrations of the crysi tall, the ends of the crystals 5 which are fixed to the aluminum plate 5 undergo the greatest movements while the other ends, fixed to the rigid backing plate 7, undergo substantially no movement.
  • the outer ends of the crystals 6 lie 1 in a plane of comparatively lower impedance than resonant impedance looking into the free ends of quarter wave crystals of this material is about one-fifth as great, or 120,000 mechanical ohms per square centimeter.
  • the characteristic impedance of water or oil is about 150,000 mechanical ohms .per square centimeter. Consequently, if the ends of the crystals 6 substantially fill the area of the plate 5, a good impedance match is obtained, and an efficie'nt energy transfer will result.
  • FIG. 1 With a construction substantially equivalent to that illustrated in Fig. 1 an apparatus has been constructed which operates at a frequency or 10,000 cycles per second, with high eificiency, delivering one kilowatt of electric energy and drawing a flow of 36 cubic feet of waterper minute under a statichead of pounds per square inch aboveatmospheric pressure.
  • the vibrating wateroil column l5, H was one full wavelength, or 5.2 inches in length. The apparatus thus provides a very compact, as well as asimple, rugged and inexpensive source of electric energy.
  • Fig. 4 shows a modification of the invention which is suitable for use at -frequencies of the order of 60 to 200 cycles per second.
  • Two resonant chambers or tubes -35 are provided which may be formed of standard steel piping, connected together and to a combination intake and discharge pipe 36 by way of a standard T-section coupling 31. Each tube is filled with water 3.5 and is one-half wavelength long, i. e., at a frequency of 200 cycles per second, 11 feet in length.
  • the ends of the tubes are closed by metallic diaphragm s 39, 39' to the outer face of each of which is fixed a coil 40, 10 of wire mounted and disposed to be moved by the diaphragm in the annular air-gap of a magnet il, ii.
  • the magnets may, of course, be electromagnets if desired but the permanent magnets shown offer a certain convenience.
  • Valving action may conveniently be'secured by a slide valve Q2 which controls both intake and exhaust of the water 33.
  • the slide valve may be arranged to be reciprocated by an eccentric 43 which may be drven by a synchronous motor 44.
  • the pipe 35 may be divided by a septum 48 which separates the intake portion 46 from the discharge portion 4?,
  • the coils it may be connected in parallel by way of leads 53 to the primary winding of a transformer 5!, of which the secondary winding supplies electrical energy to a load 52. If direct current is desired, a rectifier 53 may be interposed. A portion of the energy derived from the coils be, '43 may be fed back from the transformer 52%, byway of an adjustable phase controlling device 5 to operate the synchronous motor '64, or to control the operation thereof, and so control the water input to the system.
  • the resonator pipes may beterminated in composite piezoelectric elements of the type which respond to fiexural distortion.
  • Such elements are of many types, several of which are shown in Sawyer Patent 2,105,101.
  • Fig. 5 shows one end of one of the resonator pipes 35 of Fig. 4, along the section Iii-21, modified in this way.
  • the piezoelectric crystal assembly may consist of a pair of plates 55 of piezoelectric material-such as Rochelle salt, ammonium dihydrogen phosphate (ADP) 'or the like, external electrodes 55, connected together and to one of the leads 5!], and an internal electrode 5? connected to the other of the leads 5c.
  • the assembly may be held in place in any convenient manner, for example, between a shoulder as which may be integral with the pipe 35 or may be a threaded ring screwed into the pipe 35, and a screw cap as.
  • Diaphragms 61') of rubber or plastic may be employed to protect the crystals from the water 38, and to prevent short-circuiting of the electrode 56 by the cap 59.
  • the remainder of the apparatus may be similar inall respects to the apparatus of Fig. 4 and may operate in the same way.
  • FIG. 6 shows a construction alternative to the portion of Fig. a lying to the right of the section YY, it being assumed that the structure to the left thereof duplicates this structure.
  • the pipes 5 are closed at their ends as by inactive reflecting pipe caps GI while a multitude of piezoelectric crystal elements 82, each provided with a pair of electrodes 63, 64 are distributed throughout the volume of the resonator pipes 35.
  • a suitable chemically inactive oil 65 as the wave supporting medium.
  • the oil may be confined in the resonator pipes as by diaphragms 66 of some material such as artificial rubber which is not injured either by water or oil.
  • the crystals 62 may be of a material such as lithium sulphate (Li SO4I-IzO).
  • Corresponding electrodes may all be connected in parallel, and the electric charges may be withdrawn as an electric current and be supplied by way of the transformer to the load 52. As with the apparatus of Fig. 4, a portion of the energy so derived may be fed back to the synchronous motor 44 to control the timing of the valve 42.
  • a source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a fluid within said vessel capable of supporting standing waves of a given natural frequency and wavelength determined by the dimensions of the vessel, a port for admitting fluid under pressure into said vessel, a flexible, reed-like valve member adapted, as in accordance with the Bernoulli effect, to open and close a passage in alternation under influence of pressures within said vessel and the flow of said fluid through said passage, a baflle element in said vessel and fluid, a mechanical-electrical transducer element coupled to said fluid through said bafiie element, and means to positionally adjust a boundary of said vessel, said bafile element, and said transducer element as a unit to tune the vessel and contents to said frequency, said transducer element also being dimensioned to be tuned to said frequency.
  • a source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a flexible partition dividing said vessel into at least two compartments, a first fluid within one compartment capable of supporting standing waves of a given natural fre- 3.
  • a source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a flexible partition dividing said vessel into at least two compartments and opposing a negligible impedance to the passage of compression wave energy therethrough, a first fluid in one compartment, a second, and different, fluid in another compartment, a supply of said second fluid, a tunable resonantly vibratable valve for periodically admitting fluid from said supply to said second compartment and discharging said second fluid from said second compartment, to develop standing compression waves in said two fluids, a bafile element in said first fluid, and a plurality of hydrostatic pressure-responsive piezoelectric elements positioned in said first compartment and coupled to said first fluid through said bafile element.
  • a source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a flexible partition dividing said vessel into at least two compartments and opposing a negligible impedance to the passage of compression wave energy therethrough, a first fluid in one compartment, a second, and different, fluid in another compartment, a supply of said second fluid, a valve for periodically admitting fluid from said supply to said second compartment and discharging said second fluid from said second compartment, to develop, as in accordance with the water hammer principle, standing compressional waves in said two fluids, a pressure-responsive mechanical-electrical transducer element coupled to said first fluid by attachment to said first compartment, and means to positionally adjust a boundary element of said vessel and said transducer element as a unit to tune the vessel and contents to the frequency of said compressional wave, said transducer element also being dimensioned to be tuned to said frequency.

Description

Nov. 21, 1950 w. P. MASON ELECTRIC POWER SOURCE 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed March 16, 1946 ATTORNEY INVENTOR m P. MA SON Nov. 21, 1950 w. P. MASON ELECTRIC POWER SOURCE 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed March 16, 1946 lNi/ENTOR M. R MASON K (WK ATTORNEY Patented Nov. 21, 1950 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
(Cl. 299-l) 4. Claims.
This invention relates to-prime sources of energy and more particularly to a novel system for producing electrical or vibratory energy from the gravitational energy of a hydrostatic pressure head.
An object of the invention is to convert hydrostatic energy into electrical energy in a direct and simple manner.
Another object of the invention is to convert hydrostatic energy into hydrodynamic energy of vibration.
Another object of the invention is to produce electrical energy without the use of massive rotating mechanicalparts.
Still another object of the invention is to utilize the energy of highfrequency pressure waves to excite an electromechanical transducer such as a piezoelectric element.
The phenomenon known as water hammer has been known for generations. It has generally been regarded as an annoyance to be tolerated or as a difliculty to be circumvented by the ingenuity of hydraulic engineers. It has been put to practical use in one instrumentality, the water ram, wherein the sudden closure of a valve in a pipe in which water is flowing combines with the inertial mass of the flowing water to raise a portion of the water to a higher level. This device is in general very wasteful of water, makes no use of the transitory high frequency wave energy which follows the shock of valve closure, and is, furthermore, restricted to comparatively low frequency operation.
In accordance with the invention in one of its aspects the water hammer principle is embodied in a new ,instrumentality of greater efficiency, while in another aspect the considerable avail able high frequency water hammer energy is converted into electrical energy to be supplied to any desired load. In still another aspect, principles which have long been well known in the wind musical instrument art are taken over and applied to the hydraulic art and to the art of power generation with consequently greatly improved efdciency due to the difference between the characteristics of the liquid medium and those of the air or gas medium.
In accordance with the invention a fluid such as water is intermittently admitted to and dis? charged from a vessel, containing a resonant chamber by way of a rapidly oscillatingvalve giving rise. to oscillating pressures within the. By the proper dimensioning of the component parts the chamber is made resonant chamber.
at' the desired frequency so that dynamic presenergy of a liquid column into hydrodynamic energy of pressure waves, while the latter is then in turn converted into electric energy by the high frequency pressure responsive transducer.
The invention will be fully understood from the following detailed consideration of some preferred embodiments thereof, taken in conjunction with the appended drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a sectional diagram of the apparatus and a schematic diagram of the electrical circuit of a vibratory system for converting hydrostatic energy into electrical energy;
Fig. 2 is a sectional diagram of a modified arrangement of a part of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a partial end view taken on line 3--3 of Fig. 2, being principally, however, a diagrammatic showing of the relationships of the nozzles, and of the cross-sectional shape of the chamber carrying said nozzles;
Fig. 4 is a sectional diagram of the apparatus and a schematic diagram of the electric circuit of a modification of Fig. 1 adapted principally for operation at lower frequencies than Fig. 1;
Fig. 5 shows an alternative construction for a part of Fig. 4; and
Fig. 6 shows anotheralternative construction for another part of Fig. 4.
Referring now toFig. 1, a vessel or chamber I is provided of rugged pressure-resisting material such as steel. It is closed at one end by a pressure-responsive valve which may be a sheet of spring steel 2 fixed to one part of the vessel wall as at 3 and bearing, when closed, tightly and snugly against a valve seat 4, which may be continuous with the vessel wall, under the influence of its own elastic strains; In the figure the valve is shown by broken lines in the closed position and by full lines in the open position. The vessel is substantially closed at the opposite end by a light, rigid member such as an aluminum plate 5. The plate is not fixed to the inside walls of the vessel I but is free to move in the fashion of a piston at 7 least over short distances. To the far side of the plate are fixed the ends of a considerable number of piezoelectric crystals 6, the other ends of which are similarly fixed to a massive, rigid backing block 1. The latter may ga ish be mounted on and supported by a skirt 8 movably engaging with a skirt 9, which may be an extension of the outer walls of the chamber I. The assembly comprising the backing block l, the crystals 6, the plate 5 and the skirt 8 may be moved bodily inward or outward of the chamber 5, correct positioning being efiected as by turn buckles ID.
The piezoelectric crystal elements 5 may be cut from any suitable mother material, for example ammonium dihydrogen phosphate (ADP) to vibrate in their fundamental longitudinal mode. This material and the manner in which it should be out are described and claimed in United States patent to Mason 2,450,010, September 28, 1948.
The crystal lengths may be substantially onequarter of the wavelength of a compression wave in the crystal material. Each one is provided on either side with a conducting plate or film i l, l l
which serves as an electrod in accordance with known principles of construction and operation. Corresponding electrodes H may be connected electrically in parallel and to one terminal ,of the primary winding of a transformer 12, the other terminal of which may be connected to the oppositely located crystal electrodes H. The secondary Winding of the transformer [2 may be connected to supply a desired load 53 and, if direct current is desired, a rectifier id of conventional design may be interposed.
Because the crystals 5 may be injured by contact with water, it is desirable to surround them with oil which serves as a protection and also insulates the electrodes and the conductors from one another. Among other oils, castor oil is suitable for this purpose. To avoid the necessity of sealing the plate 5 to the inside walls of the chamber I, the same oil I5 is supplied on both sides of the plate 5, hydrostatic pressures being equalized by leakage past the plate 5, that is, between the periphery of the plate a and the inner walls of the chamber l. The oil extends to a diaphragm I6 which may be a simple sheet of rubber, or the like, which is sealed in any desired manner to the inner walls of the chamber I in leak-proof fashion. It may thus be easily deflected under the influence of unbalanced hydrostatic pressures without substantially modifying the operation of the apparatus while still serve ing to separate the oil which lies to one side of it from the water which lies to the other side of it.
To the left (in the figure) of the diaphragm I 6 stands a mass of water ll which enters the chamber 1 from an intake pipe H? .by way of a manually adjustable cut-off valve l9 and a filter 20. The water mass H is retained in the vessel under static conditions by the force of the spring steel valve 2 but can escape by way of the opening between the valve 2 and its seat a when the valve 2 is deflected from the position shown in broken lines to the position shown in full lines.
The cross-section of the chamber I may be circular or rectangular or may have any other shape as desired. Its dimensions, which are related to the manner in which the apparatus operates, will be discussed hereinafter.
The length of the free-swinging portion of the spring valve 2 may be adjusted as by positioning a roller 2| against it in a desired location.- The roller may be mounted on a bracket 22 arranged for movement in a direction parallel to the surface of the spring valve, being restrained:
against movements in any other direction as by guides 23. Its position maybe manually ad justed as by a handwheel 24 and a threaded shaft 25 which engages with a nut 26 fixed to a projection from the vessel wall.
Further details of the structure of the apparar tus will be better understood after the ensuing discussion of its operation.
In operation, the cut-off valve [9 is opened and water .or other suitable fluid is admitted to the chamber I under pressure. The pressure may have any desired value but should not exceed two atmospheres, else injury to the apparatus by cavitation may occur. As the pressure is gradually increased up to the operating point, the hy drostatic pressure inside the chamber pushes outvward against the spring steel valve 2, but the spring tension in the valve at first sufiices to hold it in place against its seat 4. As the opcrating value of pressure is reached, the water pressure inside the vessel just balances the tension in the spring valve 2 and the valve opens slightly. Immediately water starts to escape through the narrow passage formed between the valve 2 and its seat 4. Due to the inertial characteristics of the water this flow does not start off instantaneously at its full value but accelerates gradually. Now it is well known that the pressure against the walls of a .conduit through vhich a liquid is flowing rapidly is .less than that which would obtain were the liquid at rest. This phenomenon is known as the Bernoulli effect, after the name of the Swiss scientist who first investigated and analyzed it. Due to this .efiect the outward pressure on the valve 2 is less while the water is flowing through the passage than it is when the valve is closed. Therefore, the valve haying opened .due .to water pressure inside the vessel, the spring tension of the valve soon su'fiices to overcome the static pressure and the'valve commences to close .once more. As the valve closes, the passage through which the wa ter escapes is more and more constricted. As the constriction of the valve proceeds, the speed of lineal flow through the passage increases while the volumetric flow of course decreases. Thus the pressure in the opening is more and more reduced as the valve closes until it is fully closed, whereupon the flow is arrested with a sudden jerk or hammer effect, the pressure rises very suddenly to its original value, and the full cycle is repeated.
Thus the spring valve '2 when properly adjusted, opens and closes periodically after the fashion of a vibrating reed, permitting the water to escape through the passage between it and the seat 4 in sharp spurts.
As above stated, closure of the valve 2 is accompanied by an increase in the pressure on its inner face while opening of the valve is accompanied by a reduction of such pressure. The
cyclic recurrence of these increases and reductions in pressure at the surface of the valve are propagated away from the valve surface in the form of pressure waves. Each pressure wave travels axially of the vessel through the water 5 I1, the diaphragm 16 which opposes only a negligible impedance to its passage, and through the oil I5 to impinge on the aluminum plate 5.
The latter is a hard, rigid reflecting surface and it therefore reflects the wave without change of 0 phase back again towardthe valve 2. When the dimensions of the vessel are such that the reflected wave returns to the valve 2 at just the instant that the valve is closing so that a new pressure wave is starting from the valve 2, these T? waves become cumulative, and standing waves gar-28a are formed in the vessel with nodes or high pressure regions at the valve 2 and at the aluminum plate 5. These pressure waves may contain substantial amounts of vibratory energy.
To obtain this standing wave condition it suffices that the time required for the full travel of one wave from the valve to the aluminum plate 5 and to return shall equal the period of vibration of the valve itself or an integral multiple thereof. propagation speed of sound in the propagating liquid, here mostly made up of water, which speed varies very little with variation in conditions such as temperature, pressure and the like.
Therefore, in order to make the periods equal,
applicant prefers to adjust the period of the valve. This may easily be accomplished in accordance with the invention by movement of the tuning roller 2! to adjust the length of the vibrating portion of the valve 2. This is analogous to the adjustment of the length of the beating reed of an instrument such as the clarinet by the lips of the player.
To preserve the pressure wave energy in the form of plane waves of the fundamental mode, in order to abstract as much as possible of this energy by vibration of the crystals 6, the diameter of the vessel I, assuming its cross-section to be circular, or its shortest side, if rectangular, should not exceed one-half wavelength. This restric- K tion is fully explained in Electrical Transducers and Wave Filters by W. P. Mason (Van Nostrand 1942).
In order further to prevent the escape of vibratory energy which does not afiect the crystals, it sumces to provide a filter tuned to the frequency of vibration, in the intake line IS. A suitable and simple form of filter consists of a pair of oppositely arranged closed end branch pipes 29, each one-quarter wavelength long, measured from the axis of the intake pipe l8, and positioned one-quarter wavelength above the inner wall of the vessel I, measured to the axes of the branch pipes. The theory, construction, and operation of such a filter, which permit free passage of a steady non-vibratory flow of water, is well known in the acoustic art and is fully explained in many publications, for example, Elements of Acoustical Engineering by H. F. Olson (Van Nostrand 1940) Various types of valving arrangements may be employed in the apparatus. One less simple to construct than the spring 2 of Fig. l, but which operates with even more suddenness and therefore with greater efficiency, is illustrated in Figs. 2 and 3. In this construction there are mounted on a rigid end plate of the vessel an array of inwardly projecting nozzles 31, each having a closed inward end but a central axial tubular passage which connects with a hole in one side wall. An elastic beating reed 32 is rigidly attached to the base of each of these nozzles 3|. The reeds 32 are adjusted to stand slightly away from the side openings in the nozzles when the pressures on both sides of the reeds are alike. In operation, therefore, when water is first admitted to the vessel, it immediately starts flowing through the passages between the reeds and the nozzles. As it gathers speed, the pressure on the inward side of each reed is reduced in accordance with the Bernoulli effect, so that the reed tends to close the side opening. This still further increases the lineal velocity of the liquid and still further tends to close the opening. Finally the opening becomes tightly closed and This time depends principally on the the water flow is arrested with a sudden jerk or hammer effect, thus giving'rise to an impulsive increase in pressure inside the vessel 1 in the neighborhood of the reed. The operation is therefore almost precisely like that of a clarinet, differing substantially only in the type of fluid medium. It should be recognized that Fig. 3 is diagrammatic to the extent that it does not show the reed which is related to each nozzle or the precise appearance of the nozzle as seen from the right, so as, for instance, to take account of the tapering conformation of the crosssection. It is thought that, in view of the number of the nozzles, a more detailed showing would be more confusing than instructive. This pressure increase travels axially of the vessel as described above, is reflected and returns to the plane of the plate 30 on which the reed valves are mounted, and operation continues as described in connection with Fig. 1.
It is characteristic of such a. beating reed that it can vibrate with substantially equal effectiveness at any frequency within a relatively wide range. Therefore, the reeds 32 will attune themselves to and vibrate at the resonant frequency of the water oil-column I5, I! in the chamber I without difficulty.
Forbest results, it is desirable that the natural frequency of vibration of each of the crystals 6 coincide with the natural period of vibration of the water-oil column l5, H in the chamber 1. To this end, the crystals should be initially cut to the proper length for operation at the desired frequency, and the dimensions of the Vessel should be selected to match. Final adjustment can be made in any convenient manner but is preferably made by adjusting the length of the water-oil column in the vessel I. To this end, the crystal array, with its mounting block, may be moved axially into and outward of the vessel as by adjustment of turn buckles H]. To prevent accumulation, positive or negative, of oil [5 under these circumstances, and consequent deflection or bulging of the diaphragm [6 in one direction or the other, oil may be added to or extracted from the oil chamber by way of the oil intake line and stop cock 34.
When the water in the vessel is in a state of standing wave vibrations at the lowest natural frequency, the middle regions of the vessel support the greatest water movement whereas the two ends support the greatest dynamic pressures. Therefore, the ends of the vessel are planes of high impedance. The high pressures bearing against the aluminum plate 5 actuate the crystals 6 and set them into longitudinal vibration. Because the crystals are each of a length equal to substantially one-quarter of the wavelength of the longitudinal vibrations of the crysi tall, the ends of the crystals 5 which are fixed to the aluminum plate 5 undergo the greatest movements while the other ends, fixed to the rigid backing plate 7, undergo substantially no movement. I Thus, the outer ends of the crystals 6 lie 1 in a plane of comparatively lower impedance than resonant impedance looking into the free ends of quarter wave crystals of this material is about one-fifth as great, or 120,000 mechanical ohms per square centimeter. 'The characteristic impedance of water or oil is about 150,000 mechanical ohms .per square centimeter. Consequently, if the ends of the crystals 6 substantially fill the area of the plate 5, a good impedance match is obtained, and an efficie'nt energy transfer will result.
speed of sound in water or oil is about 4,460 feet per second. At a frequency of 10,090 cycles per second the full wavelength is only .44 feet or 5.2 inches, and the half wavelength only 2.6 inches. These small dimensions make for some awkwardness of construction and therefore it-is recommended that at frequencies of the order of 2,000 cycles per second or more the apparatus be operated at one; oi its harmonics.
With a construction substantially equivalent to that illustrated in Fig. 1 an apparatus has been constructed which operates at a frequency or 10,000 cycles per second, with high eificiency, delivering one kilowatt of electric energy and drawing a flow of 36 cubic feet of waterper minute under a statichead of pounds per square inch aboveatmospheric pressure. The vibrating wateroil column l5, H was one full wavelength, or 5.2 inches in length. The apparatus thus provides a very compact, as well as asimple, rugged and inexpensive source of electric energy.
The invention is not lim ted to such high frequencies -or to the use of piezoelectric crystals as pressure 'responsve mechanical electrical transducers. Indeed, for lower frequencies, other types of transducers, for example, the electromagnetic type, are preferable. Fig. 4 shows a modification of the invention which is suitable for use at -frequencies of the order of 60 to 200 cycles per second. Two resonant chambers or tubes -35, are provided which may be formed of standard steel piping, connected together and to a combination intake and discharge pipe 36 by way of a standard T-section coupling 31. Each tube is filled with water 3.5 and is one-half wavelength long, i. e., at a frequency of 200 cycles per second, 11 feet in length. The ends of the tubes are closed by metallic diaphragm s 39, 39' to the outer face of each of which is fixed a coil 40, 10 of wire mounted and disposed to be moved by the diaphragm in the annular air-gap of a magnet il, ii. The magnets may, of course, be electromagnets if desired but the permanent magnets shown offer a certain convenience.
Valving action may conveniently be'secured by a slide valve Q2 which controls both intake and exhaust of the water 33. The slide valve may be arranged to be reciprocated by an eccentric 43 which may be drven by a synchronous motor 44. The pipe 35 may be divided by a septum 48 which separates the intake portion 46 from the discharge portion 4?,
As it moves backward and forward, a port which is cut through the slide 42 exposes the intake stand-pipe it and the discharge pipe 4? in alternation to the resonators 35, 35. When the slide valve 42 is i'eciprocated at the proper resonant frequency of the resonators 35, 35 the following sequence of operation takes place:
Assume that the port 49 suddenl opens the intake pipe 45. A small amount of water passes through the port and into the resonators 35, 35'. Acting against both the elasticity of the water 38 in the resonators and the elasticity of the diaphragms which terminate the resonators, this impulsesets up -a compression condition. This condition of compression travels outward to the far ends of both resonator pipes 35, 35, is there reflected by the diaphragms 39, 39', and returned to the valve 32. Meantime the sleeve valve 42 will have reached the opposite position at which the intake passage 36 is closed and the discharge passage il' is open. This permits some water to escape. At the same time, since the port 49 is small compared with the area of the junction pipe 36, a large portion of the energy of the returning wave is 'refie'cted back into the resonator pipes 35, 3-5, for a second round trip. Thus to maintain a "standing wave condition in each resonator pipe, it is only necessary to operate the slide valve :22 in-such a way that the ort 39 is opened to the intake 4% slightly after the low pressure point of the operation cycle and open to the discharge '6? one-half cycle later. Thus wate is admitted at the instants when the hydrostatic pressure in the stand-pipe 66 outside the valve s"? exceeds the pressure in the resonator pipes 35, 35.
The coils it may be connected in parallel by way of leads 53 to the primary winding of a transformer 5!, of which the secondary winding supplies electrical energy to a load 52. If direct current is desired, a rectifier 53 may be interposed. A portion of the energy derived from the coils be, '43 may be fed back from the transformer 52%, byway of an adjustable phase controlling device 5 to operate the synchronous motor '64, or to control the operation thereof, and so control the water input to the system.
If it be desired to make use of piezoelectric crystal elements at low frequencies in place of the electromagnetic devices of Fig. this can be accomplished in various ways. For example, the resonator pipes may beterminated in composite piezoelectric elements of the type which respond to fiexural distortion. Such elements are of many types, several of which are shown in Sawyer Patent 2,105,101. Fig. 5 shows one end of one of the resonator pipes 35 of Fig. 4, along the section Iii-21, modified in this way. Here the piezoelectric crystal assembly may consist of a pair of plates 55 of piezoelectric material-such as Rochelle salt, ammonium dihydrogen phosphate (ADP) 'or the like, external electrodes 55, connected together and to one of the leads 5!], and an internal electrode 5? connected to the other of the leads 5c. The assembly may be held in place in any convenient manner, for example, between a shoulder as which may be integral with the pipe 35 or may be a threaded ring screwed into the pipe 35, and a screw cap as. Diaphragms 61') of rubber or plastic may be employed to protect the crystals from the water 38, and to prevent short-circuiting of the electrode 56 by the cap 59.
The remainder of the apparatus may be similar inall respects to the apparatus of Fig. 4 and may operate in the same way.
Another way in which piezoelectric elements may be employed is indicated in Fig. 6, which shows a construction alternative to the portion of Fig. a lying to the right of the section YY, it being assumed that the structure to the left thereof duplicates this structure. Here the pipes 5 are closed at their ends as by inactive reflecting pipe caps GI while a multitude of piezoelectric crystal elements 82, each provided with a pair of electrodes 63, 64 are distributed throughout the volume of the resonator pipes 35. To avoid injury to the crystals by water, it is preferable to use a suitable chemically inactive oil 65 as the wave supporting medium. To avoid the necessity v of supplying oil as the ultimate power source, the oil ma be confined in the resonator pipes as by diaphragms 66 of some material such as artificial rubber which is not injured either by water or oil. The crystals 62 may be of a material such as lithium sulphate (Li SO4I-IzO).
Operation takes place in the manner described above in connection with Fig. 4. The rubber diaphragzns 66 offer only a negligible impedance to the passage of the wave energy, being deflected outward and inward alternately as the water is injected by way of the intake pipe 46 and discharged cy wa of the exhaust pipe 41. The compression wave travels through the oil and among the crystals to the ends of the pipes 35 where it is reflected by the end caps, and returns. As in the case of the apparatus of Fig. 4, a standing compression wave of considerable amplitude is thus set up in the resonator pipes and each of the piezoelectric crystals is subjected to the pressures of this wave and responds by the appearance of an electric charge on its electrodes. Corresponding electrodes may all be connected in parallel, and the electric charges may be withdrawn as an electric current and be supplied by way of the transformer to the load 52. As with the apparatus of Fig. 4, a portion of the energy so derived may be fed back to the synchronous motor 44 to control the timing of the valve 42.
Various modifications of the arrangements shown will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art as being within the spirit of the invention Whose scope is defined in the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
l. A source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a fluid within said vessel capable of supporting standing waves of a given natural frequency and wavelength determined by the dimensions of the vessel, a port for admitting fluid under pressure into said vessel, a flexible, reed-like valve member adapted, as in accordance with the Bernoulli effect, to open and close a passage in alternation under influence of pressures within said vessel and the flow of said fluid through said passage, a baflle element in said vessel and fluid, a mechanical-electrical transducer element coupled to said fluid through said bafiie element, and means to positionally adjust a boundary of said vessel, said bafile element, and said transducer element as a unit to tune the vessel and contents to said frequency, said transducer element also being dimensioned to be tuned to said frequency.
2. A source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a flexible partition dividing said vessel into at least two compartments, a first fluid within one compartment capable of supporting standing waves of a given natural fre- 3. A source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a flexible partition dividing said vessel into at least two compartments and opposing a negligible impedance to the passage of compression wave energy therethrough, a first fluid in one compartment, a second, and different, fluid in another compartment, a supply of said second fluid, a tunable resonantly vibratable valve for periodically admitting fluid from said supply to said second compartment and discharging said second fluid from said second compartment, to develop standing compression waves in said two fluids, a bafile element in said first fluid, and a plurality of hydrostatic pressure-responsive piezoelectric elements positioned in said first compartment and coupled to said first fluid through said bafile element.
4. A source of oscillatory energy which comprises a closed vessel, a flexible partition dividing said vessel into at least two compartments and opposing a negligible impedance to the passage of compression wave energy therethrough, a first fluid in one compartment, a second, and different, fluid in another compartment, a supply of said second fluid, a valve for periodically admitting fluid from said supply to said second compartment and discharging said second fluid from said second compartment, to develop, as in accordance with the water hammer principle, standing compressional waves in said two fluids, a pressure-responsive mechanical-electrical transducer element coupled to said first fluid by attachment to said first compartment, and means to positionally adjust a boundary element of said vessel and said transducer element as a unit to tune the vessel and contents to the frequency of said compressional wave, said transducer element also being dimensioned to be tuned to said frequency.
WARREN P. MASON.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 4,499 Ives May 9, 1846 139,912 Morgan June 17, 1873 142,183 Walter Aug. 26, 1873 185,728 Cook Dec. 26, 1876 767,516 Foster Aug. 16, 1904 1,213,611 Fessenden Jan. 23, 1917 1,249,462 Nilson Dec. 11, 1917 1,493,340 Hahnemann et al. May 6, 1924 1,510,476 Hammond Oct. 7, 1924 1,544,010 Jordan June 30, 1925 1,633,186 Meissner June 21, 1927 1,677,632 Harden July 17, 1928 2,111,036 Wippel Mar. 15, 1938 2,155,741 Severy Apr. 25, 1939 2,198,521 Whitelegg Apr. 23, 1940 2,215,895 Wippel Sept. 24, 1940 2,248,574 Knight July 8, 1941 2,259,858, Reid Oct. 21, 1941 2,319,219 Draper et a1 May 18, 1943 2,362,151 Ostenberg Nov. 7, 1944 2,414,886 Meissner Jan. 28, 1947
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US2860265A (en) * 1954-06-21 1958-11-11 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Ferroelectric device
US2900592A (en) * 1958-10-03 1959-08-18 Baruch Sydney Norton Power sources
US3217163A (en) * 1962-04-30 1965-11-09 Clevite Corp Piezoelectrically powered x-ray equipment
US3799205A (en) * 1966-07-18 1974-03-26 Us Army Fluid oscillators
US3822388A (en) * 1973-03-26 1974-07-02 Mc Donald Douglas Corp Stirling engine power system and coupler
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US5039901A (en) * 1990-06-22 1991-08-13 Newbould John M Electric power source through steam transition
US5594293A (en) * 1992-01-14 1997-01-14 Igor Gorlitsky Electroacoustic energy converter for transformation between thermal and electrical energy
US20030160543A1 (en) * 2002-02-25 2003-08-28 Lee Yoon Pyo Microelectromechanical generator using bubbles
US20110095655A1 (en) * 2009-10-26 2011-04-28 Stmicroelectronics (Crolles 2) Sas Thermoelectric generator
US20130009469A1 (en) * 2011-07-06 2013-01-10 Gillett Carla R Hybrid energy system
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US2860265A (en) * 1954-06-21 1958-11-11 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Ferroelectric device
US2900592A (en) * 1958-10-03 1959-08-18 Baruch Sydney Norton Power sources
US3217163A (en) * 1962-04-30 1965-11-09 Clevite Corp Piezoelectrically powered x-ray equipment
US3799205A (en) * 1966-07-18 1974-03-26 Us Army Fluid oscillators
US3822388A (en) * 1973-03-26 1974-07-02 Mc Donald Douglas Corp Stirling engine power system and coupler
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US20030160543A1 (en) * 2002-02-25 2003-08-28 Lee Yoon Pyo Microelectromechanical generator using bubbles
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US20110095655A1 (en) * 2009-10-26 2011-04-28 Stmicroelectronics (Crolles 2) Sas Thermoelectric generator
US8378558B2 (en) * 2009-10-26 2013-02-19 Stmicroelectronics (Crolles) Sas Thermoelectric generator
US20130009469A1 (en) * 2011-07-06 2013-01-10 Gillett Carla R Hybrid energy system
US9553452B2 (en) * 2011-07-06 2017-01-24 Carla R. Gillett Hybrid energy system
US20150260171A1 (en) * 2014-03-14 2015-09-17 The Boeing Company Method and system for producing electricity from airport acoustical energy
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