Up-thrusting fluid system

US10801309B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10801309-B2
Application numberUS-201214427892-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateSep 12, 2012
Priority dateSep 12, 2012
Publication dateOct 13, 2020
Grant dateOct 13, 2020

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A submersible fluid system for operating submersed in a body of water includes a fluid-end housing having an upper end and a lower end. A fluid rotor is disposed to rotate in the fluid-end housing and to receive and interact with a process fluid flowing from an inlet of the fluid-end housing to an outlet of the fluid-end housing. The fluid rotor is configured to thrust upwards toward the upper end when rotating. A bearing near the lower end of the fluid-end housing has an upward-facing bearing surface coupled to the fluid rotor and a downward-facing bearing surface coupled to the fluid housing, the bearing surfaces cooperate to support the upward thrust of the fluid rotor.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A submersible fluid system for operating submersed in a body of water, the submersible fluid system comprising: a fluid-end housing having an upper end and a lower end; a fluid rotor disposed to rotate in the fluid-end housing and to receive and interact with a process fluid flowing from an inlet of the fluid-end housing to an outlet of the fluid-end housing, the fluid rotor configured to thrust upwards toward the upper end when rotating; a bearing near the lower end of the fluid-end housing, the bearing having an upward-facing bearing surface coupled to the fluid rotor and a downward-facing bearing surface coupled to the fluid-end housing, the upward-facing bearing surface and the downward-facing bearing surface cooperate to support the upward thrust of the fluid rotor; a seal that seals between the fluid-end housing and the fluid rotor and defines an upper boundary of a sump of the fluid-end housing, the seal responsive to provide a variable sealing effect depending on a pressure differential between the sump and another portion of the fluid-end housing; and a liquid injection port into the sump of the fluid-end housing below the seal and coupled to a source of liquid; wherein the bearing further comprises an inactive side that is loaded when the submersible fluid system is not in operation, and wherein the bearing surfaces that cooperate to support the upward thrust of the fluid rotor are configured to be not loaded when the submersible fluid system is not in operation; and wherein the liquid injection port is configured to inject the liquid into the sump at a rate sufficient to create a pressure differential across the seal, the pressure differential adequate to elevate the fluid rotor. 2. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the seal is responsive to provide a greater sealing effect when subjected to an increase in pressure in the sump. 3. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the source of liquid is a chemical fluid source. 4. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , wherein the source of liquid is the process fluid. 5. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , further comprising a radial bearing in the sump. 6. The submersible fluid system of claim 5 , wherein the bearing comprises a thrust bearing in the sump. 7. The submersible fluid system of claim 6 , wherein the thrust bearing is supported by a damper that absorbs impact energy. 8. The submersible fluid system of claim 5 , wherein the bearing and the radial bearing[s] comprise fluid-film bearings or magnetic bearings. 9. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , further comprising a damper external to the fluid-end housing. 10. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , further comprising a fluid-cooling system having a fluid inlet coupled to the fluid-end housing and configured to receive fluid from the sump. 11. The submersible fluid system of claim 10 , the inlet located above an outlet that delivers fluid into the sump. 12. The submersible fluid system of claim 11 , wherein the inlet and outlet are within the sump below the seal. 13. The submersible fluid system of claim 1 , further comprising a fluid rotor active thrust management system comprising: a sensor for monitoring fluid pressure at a location in the submersible fluid system; a pressure regulator configured to adjust pressure acting on the fluid rotor in the submersible fluid system; and a controller configured to receive fluid pressure information from the sensor and to control the pressure regulator to adjust the fluid pressure acting on the fluid rotor in the submersible fluid system. 14. The submersible fluid system of claim 13 , wherein the controller controls the pressure regulator automatically. 15. A submersible fluid system for operating submersed in a body of water, the submersible fluid system comprising: a fluid-end housing having an upper end and a lower end; a sump in the lower end of the fluid-end housing; a fluid rotor disposed to rotate in the fluid-end housing and to receive and interact with a process fluid flowing from an inlet of the fluid-end housing to an outlet of the fluid-end housing, the fluid rotor configured to thrust upwards toward the upper end when rotating; a bearing in the sump of the fluid-end housing, the bearing having an upward-facing bearing surface coupled to the fluid rotor and a downward-facing bearing surface coupled to the fluid-end housing, the upward-facing and downward-facing bearing surfaces cooperate to support the upward thrust of the fluid rotor; a seal that seals between the fluid-end housing and the fluid rotor and defines an upper boundary of the sump of the fluid-end housing, the seal responsive to provide a variable sealing effect depending on a pressure differential between the sump and another portion of the fluid-end housing; and a liquid injection port into the sump of the fluid-end housing below the seal and coupled to a source of liquid; wherein the bearing further comprises an inactive side that is loaded when the submersible fluid system is not in operation, and wherein the bearing surfaces that cooperate to support the upward thrust of the fluid rotor are configured to be not loaded when the submersible fluid system is not in operation; and wherein the liquid injection port is configured to inject the liquid into the sump at a rate sufficient to create a pressure differential across the seal, the pressure differential adequate to elevate the fluid rotor. 16. The submersible fluid system of claim 15 , wherein the inlet is located above an outlet that delivers fluid into the sump.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • hydrostatic; hydrodynamic thrust bearings · CPC title

  • hydrostatic; hydrodynamic thrust bearings · CPC title

  • F04D13/083Primary

    and protected by a gas-bell · CPC title

  • E21B43/128Primary

    Adaptation of pump systems with down-hole electric drives · CPC title

  • the pump and drive motor are both submerged · CPC title

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Frequently asked questions

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What does patent US10801309B2 cover?
A submersible fluid system for operating submersed in a body of water includes a fluid-end housing having an upper end and a lower end. A fluid rotor is disposed to rotate in the fluid-end housing and to receive and interact with a process fluid flowing from an inlet of the fluid-end housing to an outlet of the fluid-end housing. The fluid rotor is configured to thrust upwards toward the upper …
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Cunningham Christopher E, Fmc Tech Inc
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification F04D13/083. Mapped technology areas include Mechanical Engineering.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Oct 13 2020 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 5 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).