Manufacturing process for surge arrestor module using compaction bladder system
US-11894166-B2 · Feb 6, 2024 · US
US9470352B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9470352-B2 |
| Application number | US-201313922567-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jun 20, 2013 |
| Priority date | Dec 31, 2010 |
| Publication date | Oct 18, 2016 |
| Grant date | Oct 18, 2016 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
The composite tube comprises a tubular arrangement of knitted fiber having plurality of interlocking loops. The knitted pattern allows for variable electrical, mechanical and geometrical options. A matrix material is applied over the knitted fiber pattern and is allowed to cure. The matrix material may be applied by a vacuum bag molding process. The flexible knitted reinforcing layer allows use of an inflatable bladder to hold the reinforcing layer in the desired shape, thereby facilitating tube constructions of varying shapes and diameters. Continuous application of the matrix material avoids overlapping seams that are prone to delamination. Identification and labeling of the composite tube may be achieved with distinguishing knitted patterns having different types and colors of knitted fibers within the knitted reinforcing layer. A clear or translucent matrix material enables viewing of the underlying knitted patterns. Identification may also include RF ID tags Incorporated directly within the knitted reinforcing layer.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A composite element especially adapted for conveying fluid, comprising: a knitted reinforcement layer comprising a plurality of interlocking loops of fiber formed in a plurality of rows, each said loop having no more than a single fiber and each said row having at least three adjacent loops of fiber, and adjacent rows of said plurality of rows interlocking one another at a single interlocking point for corresponding interlocking pairs of loops to form a first knitted pattern; an integral identifier incorporated within said knitted reinforcement layer, said integral identifier comprising at least one of (i) a second knitted pattern incorporated within said first knitted pattern, and said second knitted pattern being visually distinct from said first knitted pattern and (ii) a plurality of different threads or fibers being visually distinct from threads or fibers of said first knitted pattern; a matrix applied over said reinforcement layer, said matrix comprising resin and epoxy constituents, said matrix filling voids between said loops of said reinforcement layer, and between and around both said reinforcement layer and said integral identifier, said matrix having an internal surface extending radially inward beyond and radially outward beyond said reinforcement layer thereby forming a composite tube of a desired thickness. 2. The composite element, claimed in claim 1 , wherein: said matrix comprises resin and epoxy constituents. 3. A composite element especially adapted for conveying fluid, comprising: a knitted reinforcement layer comprising a plurality of interlocking loops of fiber formed in a plurality of rows, and adjacent rows interlocking one another at a single interlocking point for corresponding interlocking pairs of loops to form a first knitted pattern; an integral identifier incorporated within said knitted reinforcement layer, said integral identifier comprising at least one of (i) a second knitted pattern incorporated within said first knitted pattern, and said second knitted pattern being visually distinct from said first knitted pattern and (ii) a plurality of different threads or fibers being visually distinct from threads or fibers of said first knitted pattern; a matrix applied over said reinforcement layer, said matrix comprising resin and epoxy constituents, said matrix filling voids between said loops of said reinforcement layer, and between and around both said reinforcement layer and said integral identifier, said matrix having an internal surface extending radially inward beyond and radially outward beyond said reinforcement layer thereby forming a composite tube of a desired thickness; and wherein said reinforcement layer has a variable diameter along its length, and at least one non-circular cross-sectional area defining at least one of a plurality of end configurations, said end configurations comprising at least one of a flange, a coupler, or a junction. 4. The composite element, claimed in claim 1 , wherein: said second knitted pattern includes a plurality of interlocking loops of fiber having a different size or different density as compared to said interlocking loops of said first knitted pattern, thereby making said second knitted pattern visually distinct from said first knitted pattern. 5. The composite element, claimed in claim 1 , wherein: said plurality of different threads or fibers include at least one of a different color, texture, or size, thereby making said plurality of different threads or fibers visually distinct from threads or fibers of said first knitted pattern. 6. The composite element, claimed in claim 1 , wherein: said knitted reinforcement layer comprises the interlocking loops arranged in a plurality of rows and columns, adjacent rows and adjacent columns being interlocked with one another, wherein fibers used to create the knitted pattern follow meandering non-parallel paths thereby forming said plurality of interlocking loops. 7. The composite element, claimed in claim 1 , wherein: said integral identifier includes at least one of assembly instructions, a flow direction, attaching instructions, or identification data. 8. The composite element, claimed in claim 7 , wherein: said identification data includes at least one of a part number, a serial number, a manufacturers name, a date, a cage code, a location, a color coding, a part specification, a conductive/nonconductive area, a bonding region, an aircraft/vehicle coordinate, a material description, or a material designation. 9. A composite element especially adapted for conveying fluid, comprising: a knitted reinforcement layer comprising a plurality of interlocking loops of fiber formed in a plurality of rows, and said adjacent rows interlocking one another to form a first knitted pattern; an integral identifier incorporated within said knitted reinforcement layer, said integral identifier comprising an RFID tag; a matrix applied over said reinforcement layer, said matrix comprising resin and epoxy constituents, said matrix filling voids between said loops of said reinforcement layer, and between and around both said reinforcement layer and said integral identifier, said matrix having an internal surface extending radially inward beyond and radially outward beyond said reinforcement layer and said RFID tag thereby forming a composite tube of a desired thickness. 10. The composite element, claimed in claim 9 , wherein: said matrix comprises resin and epoxy constituents. 11. The composite element, claimed in claim 9 , wherein: said reinforcement layer has a variable diameter along its length, and at least one non-circular cross-sectional area defining at least one of a plurality of end configurations, said end configurations comprising at least one of a flange, a coupler, or a junction. 12. The composite element, claimed in claim 9 , wherein: said RFID tag is a passive RFID tag. 13. The composite element, claimed in claim 9 , wherein: said RFID tag is an active RFID tag. 14. The composite element, claimed in claim 12 , wherein: a coil of said passive RFID tag is made from selected fibers of said knitted reinforcement layer. 15. A composite element especially adapted for conveying fluid, comprising: a knitted reinforcement layer comprising a plurality of interlocking loops of fiber formed in a plurality of rows, and adjacent rows interlocking one another at a single interlocking point for corresponding interlocking pairs of loops to form a first knitted pattern; an integral identifier incorporated within said knitted reinforcement layer, said integral identifier comprising at least one of (i) a second knitted pattern incorporated within said first knitted pattern, and said second knitted pattern being visually distinct from said first knitted pattern and (ii) a plurality of different threads or fibers being visually distinct from threads or fibers of said first knitted pattern; a matrix applied over said reinforcement layer, said matrix comprising resin and epoxy constituents, said matrix filling voids between said loops of said reinforcement layer, and between and around both said reinforcement layer and said integral identifier, said matrix having an internal surface extending radially inward beyond and radially outward beyond said reinforcement layer thereby forming a composite tube of a desired thickness; and wherein the knitted reinforcement layer comprises at least one material with resistive or conductive properties. 16. The composite of claim 1 , wherein an exterior surface of the composite is polished or painted.
Moulding structures having an axis of symmetry or at least one channel, e.g. tubular structures, frames · CPC title
Identification or marking · CPC title
electrically conducting · CPC title
Tubes or pipes, i.e. rigid (bent tubes not for use as pipe couplings B29L2023/004) · CPC title
partly or totally electrically conductive, e.g. for EMI shielding (conductive floors or floor coverings H05F3/025; EMI shielding in general H05K9/00) · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.