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US254433A - Tuyere - Google Patents

Tuyere
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US254433A
US254433AUS254433DAUS254433AUS 254433 AUS254433 AUS 254433AUS 254433D AUS254433D AUS 254433DAUS 254433 AUS254433 AUS 254433A
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tuyere
water
chamber
blast
supply
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N. A. DIDIER TUYBRE.
No. 254.433. Patented Feb. 28,1882.
., IJUNITED STAT S T Owe-5,;
NICOLAS A. DIDIER, on PITTSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA.
TU YERE.
- SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 254,433, dated February 28, 1882.
Application filed December 27, 1 881, (No model.)
To all whom it may concern Be it known that I, NICOLAS A. DIDIER, a citizen of the Republic of France, but having declared my intention of becoming a citizen of the United States, residingat Pittsburg, county of Allegheny, State of Pennsylvania, have invented or discovered a new and useful Improvement in Tuyeres; and I do hereby declare the following to be a full, clear, concise, and exact description thereof, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, making a part of this specification, in which-like letters indicating like parts Figure 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of my improved furnace-tu'yere, and Fig. 2 is a rear end view of the same.
My invention relates to that class of furnacetnyeres which are covered exterior] y with a water-jacket as a protection against the destructive action of heat; and it consists in a tuyere or blast-pipe covered exteriorly with two water-jackets, one of which surrounds and extends over the front end of the other, each having a separate system of watersuppl y and discharge, as hereinafter more fully described and claimed.
The class of tuyeres to which my invention relates have heretofore been surrounded by a single water-jacket, as protection against the heat of the"blast acting on its inner wall and the heat of the furnace acting directly upon the outer wall. The supply of water, being thus exposed to heat both within and without, be-
' comes heated to a high degree very quickly, and
thus fails, in part, to afford the protection which would be secured with water at a lower temperature. (Jonsequently the walls of'the tuyere are quickly burned through and the tuyere unfitted for use. A more serious objection, however, with such tuyeres arises from the neces: sity practically ofshuttin g off the blast through a tuye're as soon as the outerjacketis burned through, since it would be highly dangerous to allow water to escape into the furnace, and if thetuyere be used after the water-supply is shut off it is soon ruined. The purpose ofmy invention is to obviate these difficulties, and this I do by means of a tuyere, A, constructed as follows: An'inner blast-pipe, a, of the usual size and length, is surrounded by an outer shell, 0,
of the same, or nearly the same, length, the two being connected at the point or nozzle by a flange, c, substantially in the manner commonly practiced. Thespace thus inclosedbetween the inner pipe, a, and outer shell, 0, is divided by an inner shell, 12, into two s'eparatewaterchambers, B and O, the inner'shell, b, being connected to pipe a by flange bin substantially the same manner as shell c, but a little distance back of the nozzlesay about equal to the radial distance between shells-whereby theouter chamber, 0, surrounds and covers both the inner chamber, B, and the blast-pipe, and also extends over and covers the front end, I), of the inner chamber. At the rear end thesechambers B and O are closed by rings E E, secured in place between the pipe and shells bywatertight connections, either in the course of manufacture, asin casting, or subsequently by brazing or otherwise, These rings are perforated with holes a n, by preference four in each, for separate supply and discharge of water for each chamber.
In Fig. 1 I have shown a supply-pipe, F, and a discharge-pipe, F, for each chamber, the supply-pipes extending well in toward the nozzle of the tuyere to insure a full supply of water at that end. I prefer, however, to employ two supply and two discharge pipes for each chamber, as indicated by the holes n a, Fig. 2, so that in case either a supply or discharge pipe for either chamber should become choked or disabled the free circulation of water through the tu yere will not beinterrupted. These pipes may be secured in place in the usual or any convenient way, and the openings around them may be packed by a gasket, t, held against the base of the tuyere by a band, I, the latter being secured by bolts 8 through holes 0. The supply of water through these pipes may be controlled byfcocks or valves in the usual way; also, the usual means may be employed for supporting my improved tuyere in place inthe furnace-wall.
It will be observed that the inner waterchamber, B, is protected in both its outer cylindrical surface and on its front end from the heat of thefurnace by the outer chamber, 0; also, that this outer chamber is protected over the greater part of its inner surface from the heat of the blast, and that one function of chamber B is to cool the water in chamber 0, the latter being exposed in use to the greater heat. The inner chamber thus serves a double purpose, and by means of the mutual protection of the two chambers the life of the tuyere is made much more than double the life of a tuyere havingbut a single water-chamber. Furthermore, it is often very disadvantageous to shut ofl' the blast of a tuyere at a particular time. In my improved tuyere the water-supply for the outer chamber maybe shut off in case the outer shell, 0 0, should be burned through, and the inner chamber, B, be still supplied, thus permitting the successful use of the tuyere until such time as may be convenient for inserting an uninjured one, thus avoiding the danger or necessity of stopping the blast at a critical stage. This feature of my improvement 1 consider very important, as the life or simple cost of a tuyere is a small matter compared with the danger of removing and replacingtuyeres during the blast.
Tuyeres embodying my invention may be made of any of the materials usually employed for such purposes-such as phosphor-bronze, sheet or cast copper, cast or wrought iron, &c. and they may be used in the usual way in blast or cupola furnaces, or in other furnaces in which tuyeres are usually employed.
I claim herein as my invention Afurnace-tuyere, A, having its blast-passage surrounded by two separate water-chambers, B and O,the outer ohamber,G, extendingover both the side wall and front end of the inner chamber, with a separate water supply and discharge for each chamber, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand.
NICOLAS A. DIDIER.
Witnesses:
B. H. WHITTLESEY, O. L. PARKER.
US254433DTuyereExpired - LifetimeUS254433A (en)

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2910972A (en)*1955-12-051959-11-03Hot Oil Heater Company IncHeat exchanger system
JPS4711686Y1 (en)*1968-02-271972-05-01
JPS5059306U (en)*1973-10-091975-06-02
WO2007100441A3 (en)*2006-02-242009-02-12Process Technology InternatCooling device for use in an electric arc furnace
US20090226350A1 (en)*2008-03-042009-09-10Fusselman Steven PReactor vessel and liner
US20100179404A1 (en)*2004-07-132010-07-15Dexcom, Inc.Transcutaneous analyte sensor

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2910972A (en)*1955-12-051959-11-03Hot Oil Heater Company IncHeat exchanger system
JPS4711686Y1 (en)*1968-02-271972-05-01
JPS5059306U (en)*1973-10-091975-06-02
US20100179404A1 (en)*2004-07-132010-07-15Dexcom, Inc.Transcutaneous analyte sensor
WO2007100441A3 (en)*2006-02-242009-02-12Process Technology InternatCooling device for use in an electric arc furnace
US20090226350A1 (en)*2008-03-042009-09-10Fusselman Steven PReactor vessel and liner
WO2009111092A3 (en)*2008-03-042010-03-04Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne, Inc.Reactor vessel and liner
US7972572B2 (en)2008-03-042011-07-05Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne, Inc.Reactor vessel and liner

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