US289877A - Storage-basin for water-works - Google Patents

Storage-basin for water-works Download PDF

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US289877A
US289877A US289877DA US289877A US 289877 A US289877 A US 289877A US 289877D A US289877D A US 289877DA US 289877 A US289877 A US 289877A
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water
basin
waters
storage
works
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02BHYDRAULIC ENGINEERING
    • E02B8/00Details of barrages or weirs ; Energy dissipating devices carried by lock or dry-dock gates
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/402Distribution systems involving geographic features
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/8593Systems
    • Y10T137/86236Tank with movable or adjustable outlet or overflow pipe
    • Y10T137/86252Float-supported outlet

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Civil Engineering (AREA)
  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
  • Sewage (AREA)

Description

(No Model.)
H. W. WILSON.
- STORAGE BASIN FOR WATER WORKS.
Patented Dec. 11,1883.-
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WITNEEEEE Nrrnn ra'rns ATENT FMCE.
STORAGE-BASIN FOR WATER-WORKS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 289,877, dated December 11, 1883.
' Application filed February 23, 1883. (No model.)
To all whom; it may concern:
. Be it known that L'HENRY lV. WVILsoN, of
Boston, in the county of Suffolk and State of Massachusetts, have invented new and useful Improvements in Storage-Basins for Water- VVorks, of which the following is a specification.
Thisis an improvement in the mode of constructing storage-basins for water works, whereby the purer and more aerated waters from the surface can be secured for use by means of the ordinary conduits and pipes, while the more, turbid and contaminated waters from the bottom can be ejected from the basins and carried to waste over the dam and down the stream; also, by means of which the more speedy and effectual subsidence of any matters held in suspension in the water can beaccomplished. WVhile this mode of construction is applicable to all storage-basins, however they may have been previously constructed, yet as most of them are designed as impounding-reservoirs, by constructing a dam across the bed of a stream, and thus flowing the water back over the low grounds of greater or lessextent, this description will be especially applicable to that particular class of basins or reservoirs which may be fairly considered as a type of that kind of public works, but is not restricted to them exclusively.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 is a vertical section of so much of a storage-basin as is necessary to illustrate my invention. Fig. 2 is a plan view, showing the platform, &c., below described. Fig. 3 is a horizontal section on line :20 of the mouth-piece or upper section of the telescopic surface-pipe. Fig. 4 is a horizontal section of the diffuser. Fig. 5 is a vertical section of a portion of a storagebasin, showing a slightly-different construction of the fine 1, below described. The dam O, being built, as is commonly the case, across the bed A B of the stream, will cause the water to flow back andrise to the height of line D, when the surplus water will flow over the crest of the dam at E. The waters of the stream are poured into the upper end of the storage-basin at or nearly at a level with its surface, and are always more or less charged with sediment and impurities, which, as the waters pass along the basin toward the point of discharge, are deposited by the action of gravity, .which often requires the lapse of several days for itsperfect accomplishment.
It has been the uniform practice hitherto to 5 5 dinary screens,.which prevent fish or other large objects from entering the pipe, but cannot eliminate fine sediments or other similar corrupting materials, which the action of gravity cause to subside to the bottom of the basins, leaving the pure and aerated water upon the 6 surface.
It is a fact which has been long and well known that the mechanical effect of gravity would cause sediment-bearing waters to tend toward the bottom up on entering abasin, while the clearer water, rising to the surface, would become aerated, and thus becoming specifically lighter than the rest of the water would remain there; but ,by the means and appliances commonly in'use hitherto none ofthese pure andaerated waters could be utilized for distribution and use, so that the only ,waters which have entered the effluent conduits and pipesto be delivered for consumption from this class of Works have been those from nearer the bottom of the basins, and thereby more liable to be contaminated.
By my improvements the flowing waters are first introduced into the basin at or as near to the deepest portion of the basin as is practica g/ ble, for the reason that it is preferable to deposi the sediment at once at the bottom of the basin and allow the clear water to rise from it, as it will, than to have the turbid waters poured continuously into the basin at or near a level 0 with its surface, so that the sediments, while slowly gravitating toward the bottom, are continually adding to the turbidity of the water near the surface through which they are slowly Subsiding. 5 At the expanding mouth H of the inlet pipe or conduit H, through which the waters are introduced into the basin or reservoir, is placed a device, which I term a diffuser, bolted to said pipe H or made integral there- :00 with, and consisting of the flat closed top plate, I, and downwardlyextending radial guide-plates or partitions I, (see Figs. 1 and 4,) so constructed in order that the inflowing water may be gently deflected into a horizontal direction and the velocity of the current greatly reduced, so as to prevent any material disturbance of the subsiding sediments and impurities. The expanding and curved sides H of the inlet-pipe H at this point aid the diffuser in permitting and controlling a gradual change in the current of the water and a diminution in its velocity. The diffuser should be placed at some distance above the bottom of the basin, but still much nearer to the bottom than to the surface of the water, yet the exact ratio is not material, and might I be determined differently for sediments of different specific gravities.
K represents the telescopic surface effluentpipe, so constructed that its open (upper) end may be adjusted to any given depth below the surface of the water. This adjustment is obtained by means of screws Z, operating in the platform L, secured to and supported by the floats L, which, of course, rise and fall with the varying changes of the level of the water. These screws Z extend downwardly into the arms or wings K, radiating from the upper section or mouth-piece, K, of the telescopic effluent surface-pipe K. Suitable hand-wheels, Z, operate the screws Z. The telescopic form of the effluent-pipe permits the vertical motion of the mouth-piece as borne by the floats.
In order to increase the perimeter of the upper end of the mouth-piece K, to allow a more shallow vein or stratum of water being drawn from the surface of the basin, the arms or wings K (above mentioned) are placed upon its sides, as shown in Fig. 3. These wings K are hollow, open at the top and inner ends, closed at the bottom and outer ends, and are preferably of the triangular shape shown in Fig. 1. They may be greater or less in number or dimensions, but form an important feature in the construction of the mouth-piece, as they greatly increase the length of the lip of the same over which the water falls, as over a weir, and thence pours into the mouth-piece K through the openings 7c therein without increasing, in a corresponding ratio, the size of the pipe itself. The telescopic effluent-pipe connects at the lower end with the conduits and pipes as they are ordinarily constructed and disposed.
WVhen the rigor of winter makes it evident that the mouth-piece K is likely to beaffected by the formation of anchor-ice within it, the attendant can lower it, by means of the adjusting-screws Z, to such a depth as will place it below the level at which ice will be formed, which depth can be easily determined by experiment in each instance.
The observed tendency of turbid waters flowing into a storage-basin or other reservoir, as ordinarily constructed, from a running stream, when the flow of that stream is in examer:
cess of the outward flow through the effluentconduit, is for the excess of the turbid and otherwise contaminated waters'to fill the entire body of the basin gradually from the bottom upward, and cause the clear and purified waters to rise up on their surface and flow over the dam and run to waste. To obviate this characteristic movement of water, andsecure the pure and areated water within the basin during times of floods or freshets, when the waters of all rivers and streams are loaded with impurities, I construct, when building a basin throughout, a vaulted space, P, (shown in the sectional view illustrated in Fig. 5,) said space or flue being built longitudinally within the dam itself, and extending in length as far as may be necessary to secure a free outlet for the surplus waters, and from the bottomto the top of the dam by means of the connecting-flue P. The vaulted space or flue opens out into the bottom of the basin so that the waters from the bottom may enter it freely. The upstream side of the connecting flue or space F is continued at the top to a greater height than the lower side or lip, E, of the dam, so that the purer water may be restrained from flowing away, but, by its hydrostatic pressure, may cause the turbid waters from below, with their impurities and sediments, to rise through the spaces or flues P I and flow over the dam or weir and go to waste, thereby disposing of the make a vaulted space, P, as shown in Fig. 1 viz., by laying an apron, S, of broad flaggingstones or equivalent material, supported upon ribs or partitions of brick or other suitable material, and extending from the bottom to the top of the slope of the water-surface or upstream side of the dam, the lower part or edge of this apron being left at a suflicient distance from the bottom of the basin to allow the free and unrestricted entrance of the water, and the upper portion being constructed ,as shown, in manner similar to the flue 1?, above described, whereby the purer waters may be withheld from flowing away and the foul waters discharged over the dam.
Having thus fully described my invention, whatI claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. In a storage-basin for water-works, the combination of an inlet-pipe adapted,by means of a diffuser, to introduce the water into said basin near the bottom thereof with a decreased velocity, and an effluent-pipe opening into said basin near the surface of the water therein,substantially as and for the purpose described.
2. In a storage-basin for water-works, the combination, with the inlet-tube H, provided with the expanding mouth H, of the diffuser I I, constructed substantially as described, and for the purpose set forth.
3. ,In a storage-basin for water-works, the telescopic effluent surface-pipe K, having an 5. In a storage-basinforwater-works,awall 7 IO or '(lam built-with a flue or internal space leading from the bottom of the basin to the top thereof, said wall ordain being lower on the outer side of said flue than on the inner side of the same, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.
HENRY W. WILSON.
\Vitnesses:
HENRY W. WILLIAMS, JOSEPH ISHBAUGH.
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2608300A (en) * 1948-07-03 1952-08-26 Standard Oil Dev Co Floating liquid-liquid separator
US2882928A (en) * 1953-10-31 1959-04-21 Cogliati Marco Constant delivery self-controlling device
US4642191A (en) * 1982-03-12 1987-02-10 Atlantic Richfield Company Multi-zone flow control method and apparatus
US20030159986A1 (en) * 2000-05-03 2003-08-28 Jul Amado Gravity separator for multi-phase effluents
US7790023B1 (en) * 2008-01-15 2010-09-07 Mills Nickie D Adjustable floating weir apparatus

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2608300A (en) * 1948-07-03 1952-08-26 Standard Oil Dev Co Floating liquid-liquid separator
US2882928A (en) * 1953-10-31 1959-04-21 Cogliati Marco Constant delivery self-controlling device
US4642191A (en) * 1982-03-12 1987-02-10 Atlantic Richfield Company Multi-zone flow control method and apparatus
US20030159986A1 (en) * 2000-05-03 2003-08-28 Jul Amado Gravity separator for multi-phase effluents
US6881329B2 (en) * 2000-05-03 2005-04-19 Schlumberger Technology Corporation Gravity separator for multi-phase effluents
US7790023B1 (en) * 2008-01-15 2010-09-07 Mills Nickie D Adjustable floating weir apparatus

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