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GB2101278A - Bidirectional valve sea - Google Patents

Bidirectional valve sea Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2101278A
GB2101278A GB08215535A GB8215535A GB2101278A GB 2101278 A GB2101278 A GB 2101278A GB 08215535 A GB08215535 A GB 08215535A GB 8215535 A GB8215535 A GB 8215535A GB 2101278 A GB2101278 A GB 2101278A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
valve
annular
retaining ring
valve body
seal
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08215535A
Other versions
GB2101278B (en
Inventor
Philip John Dorrian
Joseph Albert Wucik
Carl Francis Livorsi
Lawrence France Struzik
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
TDK Micronas GmbH
ITT Inc
Original Assignee
Deutsche ITT Industries GmbH
ITT Industries Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Deutsche ITT Industries GmbH, ITT Industries Inc filed Critical Deutsche ITT Industries GmbH
Publication of GB2101278A publication Critical patent/GB2101278A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2101278B publication Critical patent/GB2101278B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16KVALVES; TAPS; COCKS; ACTUATING-FLOATS; DEVICES FOR VENTING OR AERATING
    • F16K1/00Lift valves or globe valves, i.e. cut-off apparatus with closure members having at least a component of their opening and closing motion perpendicular to the closing faces
    • F16K1/16Lift valves or globe valves, i.e. cut-off apparatus with closure members having at least a component of their opening and closing motion perpendicular to the closing faces with pivoted closure-members
    • F16K1/18Lift valves or globe valves, i.e. cut-off apparatus with closure members having at least a component of their opening and closing motion perpendicular to the closing faces with pivoted closure-members with pivoted discs or flaps
    • F16K1/22Lift valves or globe valves, i.e. cut-off apparatus with closure members having at least a component of their opening and closing motion perpendicular to the closing faces with pivoted closure-members with pivoted discs or flaps with axis of rotation crossing the valve member, e.g. butterfly valves
    • F16K1/226Shaping or arrangements of the sealing
    • F16K1/2263Shaping or arrangements of the sealing the sealing being arranged on the valve seat
    • F16K1/2266Shaping or arrangements of the sealing the sealing being arranged on the valve seat and being forced into sealing contact with the valve member by a spring or a spring-like member

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Lift Valve (AREA)

Abstract

A valve seal for a butterfly valve comprises a U-shaped annular seating member 100 disposed in an annular slot in the valve body 12 and a retaining ring 26 for holding the seating member in place. The seating member comprises two legs 104, 106 a first one of the legs being captured between the retaining ring and the valve body to hold the seating member and enable limited rotational movement thereof. A radially inwardly projecting extension 102 cooperates with the valve disc. The seal also comprises an annular open-helical back-up member 114 disposed in an annular cavity formed by the legs of the seating member and which is in fluid pressure communication with one axial side of the slot. The back-up member resists cross-sectional compression and creates an expansive reaction force in a direction perpendicular to a cross-sectional compressive force. This arrangement provides effective sealing for system pressure from either side of the seal. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Bidirectional valve seal This invention relates to a valve seal and more particularly to a bidirectional valve seal in which pressure in the fluid line makes sealing more effective.
The prior art shows many types of seals for butterfly valves. Perhaps the simplest seal uses a solid resilient member. In one form, the resilient member is captured in the valve body and has an annular surface that seals against the valve disc.
U.S. patents 3,591,133 to Miles et al; 3,608,861 to Helman et al; 3,997,142 to Broadway; 4,114,856 to MacAfee et al; and 4,210,313 to Chester; and British Patent 1,203,029 to Jarrett show such sealing arrangements. A variation of that approach mounts the solid resilient member to the disc and an annular surface on the resilient member seals against the valve body. U.S. patents 3,658,292 to Takigawa and 4,154,426 to Santy et al disclose such seals.
Another seal uses a sealing member similar to those discussed above, except that the member has an annular cavity rather than being solid.
Within the annular cavity is another separate resilient member. The outer member may be of a material relatively impervious to the media carried through the valve and the inner member provides the resistance to deformation that optimizes sealing. U.S. patent 3,563,510 to Priese shows that type of seal, in which a rubber or elastomeric O-ring or a helically wound, round-wire spring, comprises the inner member, Another variation of that approach uses a flat-wire spring as the resilient inner member held between two legs of the outer member clamped in the valve body. The two legs of the outer member having a spacing member between them that provides a bearing surface to resist radially outward movement of the inner member when the disc closes. That type of seal is incorporated in valves sold by Duriron Company, Inc. of Cookeville, Tennessee under the name of "Big Max".
A third type of seal uses a sealing member that "floats" in a cavity in the valve body and has a backing member in the cavity to urge the floating member radially inwardly against the valve disc.
U.S. Patents 3,282,558 to Swain; 3,497,178 to Priese; 3,642,248 to Benware; 3,986,699 to Wucik, Jr. et al; 4,088,299 to Maciulaitis et al; 4,113,268 to Simmons et al; 4,130,285 to Whittaker; 4,165,859 to Maciulaitis et al; and 4,194,749 to Bonafous disclose seals that use that approach. Those patents disclose various devices as the backing member. For example, in one embodiment of Benware's seal, an O-ring deforms in cross-section when system pressure enters the cavity and wedges against the sealing member to urge it radially inwardly against the valve disc. It is known that the seat shown in Benware has also used a flat-wire spring backing member. The flat-wire spring provides resistance to the radially outward urging of the floating member by reacting against the bottom of the cavity, thus holding the floating member against the disc.The seal shown in the Bonafous patent functions in a similar manner, but uses a roundwire instead of a flat-wire spring. The Benware patent, and other of those patents such as the Whittaker patent, also show a garter spring as the backing member. The garter spring creates hoop compression in the sealing member to urge it against the valve disc and thus generally creates a sealing action different from that created by a backing member that is resilient in cross-section.
A final type of seal uses a sealing member having one leg held in the valve body. The sealing member and the valve body define a cavity.
Generally, although not always, the cavity has a backing member in it. U.S. Patents 2,988,320 to Kent; 3,260,496 to Borcherdt; 3,734,457 to Roos; 4,005,848 to Eggleston; and 4,004,994 to Priese, and the "Series 206 Valves" made by Royal Industries of Santa Ana, California, show embodiments of that approach. The Kent '320 and Priese '994 patents show a round-wire garter spring that creates hoop compression in the disc to urge the sealing member radially inwardly. The Roos patent uses flat metal hoops for the same purpose. The Eggleston patent uses a round-wire garter spring in the cavity as a fulcrum about which the sealing member can bend under system pressure. In that way, the sealing member is urged against the valve disc.
The typical structure for holding annular seals, like those used for butterfly valves, in place includes a retaining ring held against a valve body.
The seal is disposed in an annular slot formed by the valve body and retaining ring. The valve body includes flanges for connecting the valve to flanges on the fluid line.
In the prior art, the retaining ring is held against the valve body by bolts disposed axially through the valve body and retaining ring. An example of such an arrangement is shown in the Broadway patent. With that configuration, the heads of the bolts must be recessed into the axial face of the retaining ring because the flanges on the fluid line bear directly against the axial face of the retaining ring.
The present invention comprises a valve seal for a valve having an annular valve body defining a valve chamber, a valve closure member movable in the valve chamber between open and closed positions and an annular retaining ring secured to the valve body and defining therewith an annular slot. The valve seal of the present invention comprises an annular valve seating member generally U-shaped in cross-section. One of the legs of the U-shaped cross-section comprises anchor means which is captured between the valve body and retaining ring to hold the valve seating member in the slot for limited rotation about the anchor means relative to the crosssection of the slot. The legs of the U-shaped crosssection co-operates with the sides of the slot to limit rotation of the seating member.The valve seating member divides the slot into first and second axial sides sealed from each other by the anchor means but each in said fluid pressure communication with the valve chamber. The bight portion of the U-shaped cross-section comprises an annular sealing surface for co-operating with valve closure member. The annular seating member forms in the slot an annular cavity in substantial radial alignment with the sealing surface and in fluid pressure communication with the second axial side of the slot. The annular seating member compresses the annular cavity when the seating member rotates toward the second side when pressure is higher by a predetermined amount on the first axial side than on the second axial side. The valve seal also comprises an annular, cross-sectionally compressible back-up member disposed in the cavity.
Another aspect of the present invention comprises attachment means for holding the retaining ring to the valve body. The attachment means comprises a radially extending threaded hole through the body and a conical blind hole in the retaining ring aligned with the radially extending threaded hole. A screw with a conical end is accepted in the radially extending threaded hole in the body for co-operation with the blind hole to urge the retaining ring axially toward the valve body.
Figure 1 is a sectional view of a butterfly valve, taken axially along the valve shaft, incorporating the present invention.
Figure 2 is a sectional view of the butterfly valve taken along lines Il-It in Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a detailed view of the valve seal of the present invention when the valve is open.
Figure 4 demonstrates the interference fit between the valve disc, shown in dotted lines, and the seal of the present invention, shown in the position it assumes when the valve is open.
Figure 5 is a detail of an open-helical, flat-wire spring back-up member used in the preferred embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 6 is a detail showing the relative positions of the valve parts and seal of the present invention when the valve disc is closed and, in solid lines, when there is no system pressure and, in dotted lines, when system pressure is from right to left in Figure 6.
Figure 7 is a detail of the relative positions of the valve parts and seal of the present invention when the valve disc is closed and system pressure is from left to right as viewed in Figure 7.
Figures 1 and 2 show a butterfly valve 10.
The butterfly valve 10 includes a valve body 1 2 that defines a valve chamber 14. The valve body 12 has a shaft 1 6 mounted therein for rotation. A disc 1 8 is mounted to the shaft 1 6 by pins 1 9 or other suitable fasteners. The disc 1 8 functions as a valve closure member that opens and closes by rotation of the shaft 16, as is illustrated in Figure 2.
Figure 2 illustrates the double-offset used in such valves. First the plane of the disc 1 8 is offset axially from the centre line of the valve shaft 1 6.
Second, the valve shaft 1 6 is offset very slightly (up or down as seen in Figure 2) from the centre line of the valve chamber 14. The first offset moves the valve disc 18 clear of its seal for all open positions. But for the first offset, the portions of the seal where the valve disc mounts to the valve body would be subject to rubbing and excessive wear. The second offset causes the final portion of the travel of the valve disc 1 8, as it approaches the closed position, to be axial of the valve chamber 14. This double-offset geometry is familiar to those skilled in the art and is particularly advantageous with the seal of the present invention. A stop 20 limits rotation and defines the closed portion of the valve disc 1 8.
The stop 20 is cast into the valve body 12 and then machined to provide precise positioning of the valve disc 1 8 in its closed position.
As Figure 1 shows, the shaft 1 6 is mounted in bosses 21, and seals and packing 22 prevent leakage from the valve chamber 14 around the shaft 1 6. The bosses 21 form an integral part of the valve body 12. The valve body also includes circumferentially extending mounting faces 24.
The mounting faces 24 include holes therethrough (not shown) for mounting the valve body to the flanges of pipes P that form the fluid line.
A retaining ring 26 fits into an annular groove in one face of the valve body 12. The retaining ring 26 holds in place a valve seal 100 that forms one aspect of the present invention. The valve seal 100 co-operates with the valve disc 1 8 when the valve disc is closed to prevent flow through the fluid line.
Figure 3 shows the relation of the valve body 12, the retaining ring 26 and the various attachment means. Figure 3 is a sectional view taken radially at a circumferential location away from the bosses 21.
The valve seal 100 comprises an annular valve seating member 102 made of a relatively hard, yet flexible, material such as TEFLON synthetic resin polymer. The seating member 102 is U-shaped with two legs 104,106 and a bight portion 108 connecting them. The bight portion 108 includes an extension 110 that projects radially inwardly.
The extension 110 terminates in an annular sealing surface 112 that co-operates with the outer surface of the valve disc 1 8. As the dotted lines in Figure 4 show, the valve seating member 102 forms an interference fit with the valve disc 1 8 when the valve disc is in its closed position.
The valve seal 100 also comprises an annular, cross-sectionally compressible back-up member 114. The valve body 1 2 and retaining ring 26 form an annular slot 11 6 in which the valve seal 100 fits.
One leg 104 of the valve seating member 102 forms an anchor means 11 8 that is captured between the valve body 12 and the retaining ring 26 to hold the valve seating member 102 in the slot 11 6. The valve body 12 has serrations on the axial face where the leg 104 is captured between the valve body 12 and the retaining ring 26. The axial distance between the valve body 12 and the retaining ring 26 where the leg is captured is less than the axial thickness of the leg 104. The retaining ring 26 includes a lip 120 that further decreases the axial distance between the valve body 12 and the retaining ring 26. When the retaining ring 26 is pressed axially against the valve body 12, the lip 120 causes cold flow of the leg 104 radially outwardly of the lip 120 and aids the cold flow of the leg 104 into the serrations.
The seating member is thus held securely in the slot 116 and the leg 104 acts as a secondary seal to ensure that there is no flow across the seal 100.
The principal force clamping the retaining ring 26 axially against the valve body 1 2 is provided by axial compression occuring when the valve body 12 is clamped between the pipes P. However, it is necessary to hold the valve body 12 and the retaining ring 26 in the proper relative positions with the seal 100 in its proper place prior to insertion of the valve in the fluid line. The retaining ring attachment means performs that task.
Pre-assembling positioning is accomplished by set screws 200, the axes of which are disposed radially. A plurality of threaded radially extending holes 202 spaced equally around the circumference of the valve body 12 accept the set screws 200. The retaining ring 26 includes a like plurality of blind conical holes 204 aligned with the threaded radial holes 202. The set screws 200 have conical ends 206 that co-operate with the inclined sides of the blind holes 204 to urge the retaining ring 26 axially to the right as viewed in Figure 3 as the set screws 200 are screwed radially into the holes 204. This retaining ring attachment means, instead of the axial holes through the retaining ring 26 used in the prior art, enables easier preliminary assembly of the valve body 12 and retaining ring 26.By eliminating the axial holes through the retaining ring 26, it removes a potential source of leakage. Although this arrangement can include any number of such attachment means, four has been found to yield acceptable results.
Figures 3 and 4 show the seal 100 in the position it assumes when the valve is open. The annular slot 116 formed by the valve body 12 and the retaining ring 26 is generally similar in crosssection shape to the shape of the annular seating member 102. The annular slot 11 6 narrows axially to a circumferentially extending opening. The radial extension 110 of the bight 108 projects through that opening into the valve chamber 14.
The seating member 102 divides the slot 11 6 into a first axial side 122 and a second axial side 124, both of which are in fluid communication with the valve chamber 14.
The slot 11 6 includes a radially inwardly facing shoulder 126 which, with the legs 104 and 106 and the bight portion 108, defines an annular cavity 128. The annular cavity 128 is substantially aligned radially with the annular sealing surface 112. The radially inwardly facing walls of the cavity 128 formed by the seating member 102 are circular in cross-section and conform to the outer surface of the back-up member 114. The cavity 1 28 is in fluid pressure communication with the second axial side 124 of the slot The annular sealing surface 112 has a face 130 at one axial side of the sealing surface 112.
Figure 5 shows in detail a portion of the preferred cross-sectionally compressible back-up member 114. The back-up member 114 comprises a helically wound metallic "flat wire" spring element. Stainless steel or Hasteloy is the preferred material because of their resistance to deterioration by a wide variety of media. The pitch of the spring is greater than the width of the flat wire so that there are spaces between adjacent sections of wire. Such an "open-helical" configuration enables fluid to flow freely around and through the back-up member 114 and thus transmit fluid pressure therethrough. When the cross-section of the back-up member 114 is compressed in one direction, it will cause an expensive reaction force perpendicular to the compressive force.A "flat wire" spring, that is, one formed of a strip of spring material rectangular in cross-section, more readily than other cross-sections transforms such a compressive force into an expansive reaction force perpendicular thereto.
The operation of the valve seal of the present invention is best seen by reference to Figures 6 and 7. Figure 6 shows, in solid lines, the position of the valve seal when the valve disc 18 is closed but no system pressure is present. A comparison of Figure 3 or 4 with Figure 6 shows that the seating member 102 moved slightly axially by rotation about the leg 104 as the disc 18 closed.
The outerperipheralsurface of the disc 18 contacts the annular sealing surface 112 and the seating member 102 rotates towards the second axial side 124 of the slot 116. The annular cavity 128 and the cross-section of the back-up member 114 is slightly compressed in a generally radial direction relative to the valve body.The back-up member 114 resists that compression and creates a generally radial reaction force against the shoulder 1 26 and the inside of the bight portion 108 that forces the valve seating member 102 toward the disc 1 8. The interference fit between the annular sealing surface 112 and the disc surface 18, in addition to the generally radial force exerted by the back-up member 114 in reaction to its compression, form the static component of the sealing force that holds the annular sealing surface 112 against the disc 1 8.
As Figure 2 illustrates, a certain circumferential portion of the periphery of the valve disc 1 8 approaches the annular seating member 102 from left to right as viewed in Figure 6. The double offset described above, the radius R and the flat sealing face F formed on the valve disc 1 8 and a face 132 on the annular sealing surface 112 combine to cause the disc 1 8 to approach the seating member 102 at an advantageous angle which aids in seating the face F of the valve disc against the face 130 of the annular sealing surface 112 (see Figure 6) around the entire periphery of the valve disc 1 8. Ideally, when the valve disc has closed completely, the annular seating member 102 has rotated just far enough to allow a very small passageway between the leg 106 and the second axial side 124 of the annular slot 116 to provide pressure communication between the valve chamber 14 and the annular cavity 128.
Fluid pressure adds a dynamic component to the sealing force regardless of which side of the disc is pressurized when the valve is closed. Figure 6 shows in dotted lines the position assumed by the annular seating member 102 and the valve disc 1 8 when the valve is pressurized from the right side as shown in Figure 6.As the pressure on the right side of the disc 1 8 builds, manufacturing tolerances and wear that inevitably leave clearance between the valve shaft 1 8 and the bearings and packing 22 (see Figure 1), and deflection of the disc 1 8 because of the pressure against it, allow axial movement to left of the disc 1 8. The annular seating member 102 rotates to the left with the axial movement of the valve disc 18 until the leg 106 contacts the wall on the second axial side of the annular slot 116. The back-up member 114 resists that rotation and thus urges the annular sealing surface 112 and the valve disc sealing face F together.
If the pressure is high enough, it will also push on the surface of the leg 104 facing the first axial side 1 22 of the slot 11 6 and axially compress the back-up member 11 4. The dotted line position of the leg 104 as shown in Figure 6 is exaggerated to illustrate this aspect of the operation of the valve seal. In any event, as the leg 104 continues to move generally axially under the influence of the pressure in the valve chamber 14 and the first axial side 122, the axial dimension of the annular cavity 128 is reduced. The back-up member 114 creates a generally radial reaction force that acts between the annular shoulder 126 and the annular seating member 102 to force the annular sealing surface 112 radially inwardly against the valve disc 1 8.
Figure 7 shows the position of the annular seating member 102 and the valve disc when the valve is pressurized from left to right. Pressure forces the valve disc 1 8 to the right because of the clearances and deflection already mentioned. The annular seating member 102 rotates to the right with the disc 1 8. Because the disc 1 8 rotated the seating member 102 to the left upon closing, the counterrotation caused by pressurization from the left acts against that original rotation.The counterrotation of the annular seating member 102 in effect wedges the annular sealing surface 112 against the sealing face F of the valve disc 1 8. The counterrotation also exposes the annular cavity 128 to system pressure by opening the passageway at the second axial side 124 of the slot 11 6. The system pressure thus urges further counterrotation of the annular seating member 102 and also creates a generally radially inward force on the interior of the annular cavity 128 that urges together the sealing face F of the valve disc 1 8 and the annular sealing surface 112.
Thus, the valve seal of the present invention provides a static sealing component that preloads the seat in the absence of system pressure and a dynamic component regardless of the direction in which system pressure acts on the valve disc.
Known prior art valve seals are believed to perform less effectively under a system pressure in one direction than they perform for a system pressure in the other direction. One of the reasons, it is believed, is because the known prior art seals do not allow for the inevitable axial movement of the valve disc under pressure. The present invention, however, performs very effectively regardless of the direction of system pressure.
As Figure 7 illustrates, the size of the passageway at the second side 124 of the slot 11 6 without system pressure is not critical. The axial movement of the disc when system pressure acts to the right will tend to open the passageway because the annular seating member 102 rotates under those conditions. The open-helical, flat-wire structure of the back-up member 114 has been found to be the most advantageous configuration.
For example, although a round-wire spring would work, it has been found that each coil of the spring provides insufficient bearing surface between the TEFLON annular seating member and the spring and the TEFLON cold-flows between the coils. A solid back-up member that deforms in crosssection, such as an O-ring, can also be used but is the least advantageous choice because it will not allow system pressure to enter the entire annular cavity 1 28 when pressurization is from left to right (see Figure 7).
Although certain specific embodiments of the present invention and modifications thereto have been described, those skilled in the art will recognize other modifications that can be made within the spirit of the invention. For example, the present invention may be used with other types of valves and is not limited to use with a butterfly valve like that shown herein. Thus, it is intended that the above description be illustrative only of the preferred embodiments of the present invention, the scope of which is defined solely by the appended claims.

Claims (11)

1. A valve seal for a valve having an annular valve body defining a valve chamber, a valve closure member movable in said valve chamber between open and closed positions and an annular retaining ring secured to said valve body and defining therewith an annular slot having a shoulder, the valve seal comprising: an annular valve seating member having anchor means, wherein said anchor means is captured between the valve body and the retaining ring to hold said valve seating member in the annular slot for limited rotation about said anchor means relative to the cross-section of the annular slot and to divide the slot into first and second axial sides each in fluid pressure communication with the valve chamber, and an annular sealing surface for co-operating with the valve closure member, wherein said valve seating member forms with the shoulder an annular cavity in substantial radial alignment with said sealing surface and in fluid pressure communication with said second axial side and said valve seating member compresses said cavity when said seating member rotates towards said second axial side and when pressure is higher by a predetermined amount on said first axial side than on said second axial side; and an annular back-up member disposed in said cavity for contact with the walls thereof and the shoulder, wherein said back-up member resists cross-sectional compression and creates an expansive reaction force in a direction perpendicular to a cross-sectional compressive force.
2. The valve seal recited in claim 1, wherein said back-up member comprises an open-helically wound spring element with a rectangular crosssection, wherein the long side of said rectangle co-operates with the walls of said cavity and with the shoulder.
3. The valve seal recited in claim 1, wherein said valve seating member is U-shaped in crosssection having two legs and a bight connecting them, wherein the first said leg comprises said anchor means, said legs and bight co-operate with said shoulder to form said cavity and said bight includes a radially inwardly projecting extension terminating in said sealing surface.
4. The valve seal recited in claim 3, wherein said U-shaped cross-section has a first predetermined axial dimension, said extension has a second, smaller predetermined axial dimension, said slot narrows axially to a circumferentially extending axial opening, and said extension projects through said opening into the valve chamber.
5. The valve seal recited in claim 4, wherein the radially inner surface of said cavity is a portion of a circle in cross-section and said back-up member is circular in cross-section and comprises an openhelically wound spring element with a rectangular cross-section, wherein the long side of said rectangle co-operates with the walls of said cavity and with the shoulder.
6. A valve comprising: an annular valve body defining a valve chamber; a valve closure member mounted to said valve body for movement in said valve chamber between open and closed positions; an annular retaining ring secured to said valve body and defining therewith an annular slot having a generally radially inwardly facing shoulder; and a valve seal for co-operating with said valve closure member when in said closed position, said valve seal comprising the valve seal recited in claim 3, 4 or 5.
7. The valve recited in claim 6, wherein: said valve body includes bosses; said valve closure member comprises a disc secured to a shaft mounted for rotation in said bosses; and the periphery of said valve closure member cooperates with said valve seating member to seal said valve closure member when in said closed position.
8. The valve recited in claim 7, wherein: said radially inwardly projecting extension of said bight portion forms an interference fit with said disc to rotate said valve seating member about said first leg toward said second axial side when said disc is closed and form a seat between said disc and said valve seating member; and for pressure on said first axial side of said slot in excess of the pressure on said second axial side by a predetermined amount, said first leg moves axially toward said second axial side of said slot and generally axially compresses said annular cavity and said back-up member and creates a generally radial expansive reaction force urging said sealing surface against said disc.
9. The valve recited in claim 6, wherein said retaining ring and said valve body compress said first leg therebetween, one of said valve body and retaining ring includes a serrated surface and the other of said valve body and retaining ring includes a lip, and said lip and serrated surface cooperate to cause cold flow of said first leg.
10. A valve including an annular valve body, an annular retaining ring for capturing therebetween a valve seal and retaining ring attachment means, said attachment means comprising: a generally radially extending threaded hole through said valve body; a conical blind hole in said retaining ring substantially aligned with said threaded hole; and a set screw for reception into said threaded hole, said screw having a conical end for cooperating with said blind hole to urge said retaining ring axially toward said valve body as said screw advances into said blind hole.
11. The valve recited in claim 10 including a plurality of said retaining ring attachment means substantially equally spaced around said valve.
GB08215535A 1981-05-28 1982-05-27 Biderectional valve seal Expired GB2101278B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US26795681A 1981-05-28 1981-05-28

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2101278A true GB2101278A (en) 1983-01-12
GB2101278B GB2101278B (en) 1985-07-17

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Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB08215535A Expired GB2101278B (en) 1981-05-28 1982-05-27 Biderectional valve seal

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JP (1) JPS5830564A (en)
CA (1) CA1208191A (en)
DE (1) DE3219309A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2506884B1 (en)
GB (1) GB2101278B (en)
IT (1) IT1201091B (en)
MX (1) MX159596A (en)

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US4130285A (en) * 1978-01-26 1978-12-19 Walworth Company Valve sealing device
NO141348C (en) * 1978-09-20 1980-02-20 Westad Armaturfab Sealing ring for turntable valves, SPECIAL FOR USE WITH CRYOGEN FLUIDA
US4266752A (en) * 1979-03-30 1981-05-12 Mcc Flowseal, A Unit Of Mark Controls Corporation Seal structure

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN1323250C (en) * 2005-06-15 2007-06-27 黄作兴 Two way polytetrafluoroethylene sealed butterfly valve

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2101278B (en) 1985-07-17
IT1201091B (en) 1989-01-27
DE3219309A1 (en) 1982-12-16
MX159596A (en) 1989-07-11
IT8221483A0 (en) 1982-05-26
FR2506884B1 (en) 1986-07-11
FR2506884A1 (en) 1982-12-03
JPS5830564A (en) 1983-02-23
CA1208191A (en) 1986-07-22

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19920527