US3765601A - Centrifuge - Google Patents

Centrifuge Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3765601A
US3765601A US00122663A US3765601DA US3765601A US 3765601 A US3765601 A US 3765601A US 00122663 A US00122663 A US 00122663A US 3765601D A US3765601D A US 3765601DA US 3765601 A US3765601 A US 3765601A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
rotor
tube
fluid
arrangement
head
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00122663A
Inventor
Gulley P Baker
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.)
MSE Holdings Ltd
Original Assignee
MSE Holdings Ltd
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 MSE Holdings Ltd filed Critical MSE Holdings Ltd
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3765601A publication Critical patent/US3765601A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B04CENTRIFUGAL APPARATUS OR MACHINES FOR CARRYING-OUT PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES
    • B04BCENTRIFUGES
    • B04B11/00Feeding, charging, or discharging bowls
    • B04B11/02Continuous feeding or discharging; Control arrangements therefor
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B04CENTRIFUGAL APPARATUS OR MACHINES FOR CARRYING-OUT PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES
    • B04BCENTRIFUGES
    • B04B11/00Feeding, charging, or discharging bowls
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B04CENTRIFUGAL APPARATUS OR MACHINES FOR CARRYING-OUT PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES
    • B04BCENTRIFUGES
    • B04B15/00Other accessories for centrifuges
    • B04B15/08Other accessories for centrifuges for ventilating or producing a vacuum in the centrifuge
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B04CENTRIFUGAL APPARATUS OR MACHINES FOR CARRYING-OUT PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES
    • B04BCENTRIFUGES
    • B04B5/00Other centrifuges
    • B04B5/04Radial chamber apparatus for separating predominantly liquid mixtures, e.g. butyrometers
    • B04B5/0442Radial chamber apparatus for separating predominantly liquid mixtures, e.g. butyrometers with means for adding or withdrawing liquid substances during the centrifugation, e.g. continuous centrifugation
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B04CENTRIFUGAL APPARATUS OR MACHINES FOR CARRYING-OUT PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES
    • B04BCENTRIFUGES
    • B04B5/00Other centrifuges
    • B04B5/04Radial chamber apparatus for separating predominantly liquid mixtures, e.g. butyrometers
    • B04B5/0442Radial chamber apparatus for separating predominantly liquid mixtures, e.g. butyrometers with means for adding or withdrawing liquid substances during the centrifugation, e.g. continuous centrifugation
    • B04B2005/0464Radial chamber apparatus for separating predominantly liquid mixtures, e.g. butyrometers with means for adding or withdrawing liquid substances during the centrifugation, e.g. continuous centrifugation with hollow or massive core in centrifuge bowl

Definitions

  • This invention relates to fluid feed heads for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from rotating centrifuge rotors, and is particularly applicable to such heads for zonal centrifugation and centrifugation under a vacuum.
  • a conventional zonal centrifuge head is designed to feed fluid to and from a centrifuge zonal rotor during rotation and incorporates various seals including a rotating seal to maintain sealing between the stationary and rotating parts of the head.
  • the rotating parts are fixed relative to each other and to the rotor and cooperate with a stationary part by the rotary, face-to-face, seal.
  • a fluid head for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from rotating centrifuge rotors, the head comprising two relatively rotatable and sealable portions, one being intended to be held stationary and the other being intended to rotate with a rotor, and said other, rotatable, portion carrying two feed tubes for feeding material to and from a centrifuge rotor, characterised in that one of said tubes is axially clampable, so as to be subjected to the axial sealing forces between said head portions whilst being rotatable relative to at least one of the rotor and said rotatable portion, and in that the other tube has coupling means so that it will rotate with, and be movable axially relative to at least one of, the rotor and said rotatable portion so as to transmit torsion forces between the rotor and the head.
  • said one tube coaxially surrounds the other.
  • Said other tube may be formed for splined or equivalent coupling, such as by a pin and slot coupling, with the rotor and/or the head.
  • the region of said other tube to engage a rotor may be formed with a slot or pin as the case may be and the rotor, or a coupling member secured to the rotor, may be formed with a corresponding pin or slot.
  • Such a coupling member when provided, will be formed with passages to transfer fluid between the tubes and the interior of the rotor.
  • Said one tube will advantageously have a friction coupling with a rotor and/or the head to relieve that tube of substantially all torsional stress should the rotor and head momentarily undergo a relative angular movement.
  • the friction coupling may be provided by seals positioned to seal the joints made between that tube and the rotor and the rotatable head portion.
  • FIG. 1 is a cross-section of a centrifuge having a continuous flow head
  • FIG. 2 is a crossasection of the head and rotor shown in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a cross-section of a fluid transfer plug of the head of FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 4 shows a modification of the head of FIG. 1.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 are cross-sectional views of a centrifuge and its flow head respectively, showing at the left hand side one form of centrifuge and head and at the right hand side a modified form illustrating the change necessary to allow for differing distances between top of rotor and underside of lid. The following description applies to both forms.
  • the illustrated centrifuge comprises a vacuum enclosure 1 containing a rotor 2 coupled to a continuous flow head 3 mounted on the movable cover 4 of the enclosure 1.
  • the rotor comprises a main body 5 releasably supported on a motor driven shaft 6.
  • a rotor core member 7 is supported axially by the body 5 and contains feed passages 8 and 9.
  • the member 7 contains a fluid transfer plug 10 illustrated in cross-section in FIG. 3.
  • the plug 10 has an axial feed passage 11 communicating by radial passages 12 with a fluid transfer annulus 13 into which the passages 9 open. O-rings are placed at each side of the annulus to form a seal with the core member 7.
  • the member 7 is surrounded by a hollow member 14 containing feed passages 15a and 15b communicating with the passages 8 and feed passages 16 communicating with the passages 9.
  • a centrifuge chamber 17 is defined between body 5 and the member 14.
  • the passages 15a open at the upper outer region of the chamber 17, the passages 15b open at the upper inner region of the chamber 17 and the passages 16 open at the lower inner region of the chamber.
  • the chamber 17 contains septa dividing it into segments.
  • the head 3 comprises a rotatable portion and a static portion, the static portion defining first feed passages 36 and a second passage 35.
  • the static portion comprises a flanged cylinder 18 mounted in a recess-20 formed in the cover 4 or a member secured thereto, the cylinder 18 being held in the recess by an annular member 21.
  • the lower flange 19 of the cylinder 18 is movable in the recess 20 during assembly to allow the head to be aligned with the rotor 2.
  • a static bearing sleeve 22 is fitted in the cylinder 18 and contains a water cooling annulus 23 and an oil lubrication annulus 24.
  • To the bottom of sleeve 22 is fitted an oil drain reservoir comprising concentric tubes 25, separated by a supporting tube 26, and a bottom plug 27.
  • the tube 26 has apertures for oil drainage from volume A to volume B.
  • the plug 27 contains a plastics ring 28.
  • the static portion also comprises a sealing pressure member 29 contained in a retaining tube 30 screwed to the static bearing member 22.
  • the sealing pressure member 29 is held under pressure against the rotatable portion of the head by a spring 31 retained and controlled by a cap 32 screw-threaded to the tube 30.
  • the sealing pressure member 29 carries feed tubes 33 and 34, the tube 33 opening into said axial feed passage 35 in the member 29 and the tube 34 communicating with passages 40 communicating at one end with the passages 36, the passages 39 and 40 opening at their other ends into the rotatable bearing member 37.
  • a tube 42 is fixedly secured coaxially within member 37 at its upper end to define throughthe member 37 a first passage communicating with tube 33 and a second passage 41 coaxially surrounding the tube 42 and communicating with the tube 34.
  • the tube 42 extends into the transfer plug and its lower end is formed with slots 43a engaged by inwardly extending pins 43 (FIG. 3) of the plug 10.
  • An O-ring seal 44 seals the tube 42 relative to the core member 7.
  • the annular passage surrounding tube 42 in the bearing member 37 is connected to the rotor by a tube 45, the ends of which are formed with annular projections each containing an annular recess housing a sealing means in the form of an O-ring 51 which, together with further sealing means in the form of compressed 0- rings 52 abutting the annular projections, seal the passage defined by the tube 45 from the space within the vacuum enclosure.
  • this tube 45 is subjected compressively to the axial sealing forces of the head whilst at the same time being relieved substantially entirely of torsion stress, which is taken up by the tube 42.
  • the tube 45 can rotate relative to the core 7 and bearing member 37 if the tube 42 is torsionally deformed.
  • the rotor is put in position on the shaft 6 and the cover 4 is slid to its final position.
  • the cylinder 18, with bearing member 22, is then placed in the illustrated position and annular member 21 is screwed into the recess to retain the flange 19.
  • the bearing member 22 is aligned coaxially with the rotor, the annular member is tightened up to clamp the flange 19.
  • the rotatable bearing member 37 with the tubes 42 and 45 attached thereto is then positioned in member 22, causing tube 42 to pass through O-ring 44 and engage the pins 43.
  • the tube 45 will be held by O-rings at its ends, the O-rings at the upper end being a tighter fit than those at the lower end so that tube 45 will be released with the bearing member 37 when the latter is removed.
  • the seal 38 is then positioned on the rotatable bearing member 37 and the pressure member 29 is placed on the bearing member 37.
  • the retaining tube 30 is screwed into position and the spring 31 and cap 32 added to complete the head.
  • the cap 32 is screwed down to apply the desired sealing pressure, which compressively stresses the tube 45 but not the tube 42.
  • a vacuum is produced in the enclosure 1 and the rotor is run up to a relatively low speed.
  • Liquid such as water, is then pumped through tube 33 and fills the rotor chamber 17, displacing air through passages 1521, passages 15b being blocked at this speed from passages 8 by an O-ring valve 46.
  • the rotor speed is then increased to open valve 46 centrifugally and a sample in a carrier is fed through tube 33.
  • the carrier flows from passages 16 along the surface of the rotor member 14 and through passages 15b to the tube 34.
  • the sample particles migrateradially across the chamber according to their densities.
  • the sample particles may be removed by slowing the rotor to close valve 46 and by passing a dense solution along tube 34 via passages 15a, displacing sample via passages 16 and out of tube 33.
  • a sample may be continuously fed into and out of the rotor at high speed and under vacuum.
  • FIG. 4 shows a valve arrangement 47 which may be found to be preferable to O-ring valve 46.
  • the valve arrangement comprises a ball 49 urged by a spring 48 onto a seating 50.
  • balls 49 are lifted off their seatings 50 to interconnect passages 8 and 15b.
  • a centrifuge arrangement having a rotor and a fluid feed head for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from said rotor whilst the rotor rotates, the head comprising:
  • first, stationary, portion defining first and second passages; a second portion rotatable with said rotor;
  • sealing means for effecting a rotary seal between said first and second portions
  • a first tube providing a feed path between said first passage and said rotor and being axially clamped so as to be subjected to the axial sealing forces of said sealing means whilst being rotatable relative to at least one of said rotor and said second portion;

Landscapes

  • Centrifugal Separators (AREA)

Abstract

A fluid feed head for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from a rotating centrifuge rotor, comprising two coaxial rotating feed tubes one of which is subjected to the axial sealing forces of the head whilst being substantially isolated from the torsional forces between the rotor and head and the other of which tubes is mounted so as to be held against rotation with respect to the rotor and the rotary portion of the head whilst being movable axially.

Description

United States Patent [191 [1 11 3,765,601 Gulley Oct. 16, 1973 [54] CENTRIFUGE 3,191,856 6/1965 Pickels et a1. 233/3 [75] Inventor: Peter James Baker Gulley Kent 3,498,532 3/1970 l-larbott 233/16 England [73] Assignee: M. S.E. Holdings Limited, Sussex, Primary Kl'ilmanich E l d Attorney-Waters, Roditi, Schwartz & Nissen [22] Filed: Mar. 10, 1971 21 A 1. No.: 122 663 l 1 pp [57] ABSTRACT [30] Foreign Applicafim Priority Data A fluid feed head for supplying fluid to and removing Mar. 10, 1970 Great Britain 11,491/70 fluid from a rotating centrifuge rotor, comprising two coaxial rotating feed tubes one of which is subjected [52] US. Cl. 233/28, 233/1 A to the axial sealing forces of the head whilst being sub- [51] Int. Cl B04b l/ stantially isolated from the torsional forces between [58] Field of Search 233/46, 1 A, 12, the rotor and head and the other of which tubes is 233/14 R, l A, 27, 28, 16 mounted so as to be held against rotation with respect to the rotor and the rotary portion of the head whilst References Cited being movable axially.
UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,103,489 9/1963 Pickels 233/1 A 7 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures 38 57" 22 24 if 52 4 3 7g w W C: Q a 4 c 22 V y, g
8' "5 75p 4 2 /4 W j, 416 I J V4 3 3 9 z /7 3 I7 PATENTEU HUT 161973 SHEET 10F 2 1 CENTRIFUGE BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTION This invention relates to fluid feed heads for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from rotating centrifuge rotors, and is particularly applicable to such heads for zonal centrifugation and centrifugation under a vacuum.
A conventional zonal centrifuge head is designed to feed fluid to and from a centrifuge zonal rotor during rotation and incorporates various seals including a rotating seal to maintain sealing between the stationary and rotating parts of the head. The rotating parts are fixed relative to each other and to the rotor and cooperate with a stationary part by the rotary, face-to-face, seal. By virtue of this construction, vibrations set up during operation are transmitted to the seals and impair I their performance.
It is an object of the present invention to reduce the effect of vibrations.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION According to the present invention, there is provided a fluid head for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from rotating centrifuge rotors, the head comprising two relatively rotatable and sealable portions, one being intended to be held stationary and the other being intended to rotate with a rotor, and said other, rotatable, portion carrying two feed tubes for feeding material to and from a centrifuge rotor, characterised in that one of said tubes is axially clampable, so as to be subjected to the axial sealing forces between said head portions whilst being rotatable relative to at least one of the rotor and said rotatable portion, and in that the other tube has coupling means so that it will rotate with, and be movable axially relative to at least one of, the rotor and said rotatable portion so as to transmit torsion forces between the rotor and the head.
In a preferred embodiment, for operation under a vacuum, said one tube coaxially surrounds the other.
Said other tube may be formed for splined or equivalent coupling, such as by a pin and slot coupling, with the rotor and/or the head. Thus, the region of said other tube to engage a rotor may be formed with a slot or pin as the case may be and the rotor, or a coupling member secured to the rotor, may be formed with a corresponding pin or slot.
Advantageously such a coupling member, when provided, will be formed with passages to transfer fluid between the tubes and the interior of the rotor.
Said one tube will advantageously have a friction coupling with a rotor and/or the head to relieve that tube of substantially all torsional stress should the rotor and head momentarily undergo a relative angular movement. The friction coupling may be provided by seals positioned to seal the joints made between that tube and the rotor and the rotatable head portion.
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES For a better understanding of the invention and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a cross-section of a centrifuge having a continuous flow head;
FIG. 2 is a crossasection of the head and rotor shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a cross-section of a fluid transfer plug of the head of FIG. 2; and
FIG. 4 shows a modification of the head of FIG. 1.
FIGS. 1 and 2 are cross-sectional views of a centrifuge and its flow head respectively, showing at the left hand side one form of centrifuge and head and at the right hand side a modified form illustrating the change necessary to allow for differing distances between top of rotor and underside of lid. The following description applies to both forms.
The illustrated centrifuge comprises a vacuum enclosure 1 containing a rotor 2 coupled to a continuous flow head 3 mounted on the movable cover 4 of the enclosure 1.
The rotor comprises a main body 5 releasably supported on a motor driven shaft 6. A rotor core member 7 is supported axially by the body 5 and contains feed passages 8 and 9. The member 7 contains a fluid transfer plug 10 illustrated in cross-section in FIG. 3. The plug 10 has an axial feed passage 11 communicating by radial passages 12 with a fluid transfer annulus 13 into which the passages 9 open. O-rings are placed at each side of the annulus to form a seal with the core member 7. The member 7 is surrounded by a hollow member 14 containing feed passages 15a and 15b communicating with the passages 8 and feed passages 16 communicating with the passages 9. A centrifuge chamber 17 is defined between body 5 and the member 14. The passages 15a open at the upper outer region of the chamber 17, the passages 15b open at the upper inner region of the chamber 17 and the passages 16 open at the lower inner region of the chamber. The chamber 17 contains septa dividing it into segments.
The head 3 comprises a rotatable portion and a static portion, the static portion defining first feed passages 36 and a second passage 35.
The static portion comprises a flanged cylinder 18 mounted in a recess-20 formed in the cover 4 or a member secured thereto, the cylinder 18 being held in the recess by an annular member 21. The lower flange 19 of the cylinder 18 is movable in the recess 20 during assembly to allow the head to be aligned with the rotor 2. A static bearing sleeve 22 is fitted in the cylinder 18 and contains a water cooling annulus 23 and an oil lubrication annulus 24. To the bottom of sleeve 22 is fitted an oil drain reservoir comprising concentric tubes 25, separated by a supporting tube 26, and a bottom plug 27. The tube 26 has apertures for oil drainage from volume A to volume B. The plug 27 contains a plastics ring 28.
The static portion also comprises a sealing pressure member 29 contained in a retaining tube 30 screwed to the static bearing member 22. The sealing pressure member 29 is held under pressure against the rotatable portion of the head by a spring 31 retained and controlled by a cap 32 screw-threaded to the tube 30. The sealing pressure member 29 carries feed tubes 33 and 34, the tube 33 opening into said axial feed passage 35 in the member 29 and the tube 34 communicating with passages 40 communicating at one end with the passages 36, the passages 39 and 40 opening at their other ends into the rotatable bearing member 37.
A tube 42 is fixedly secured coaxially within member 37 at its upper end to define throughthe member 37 a first passage communicating with tube 33 and a second passage 41 coaxially surrounding the tube 42 and communicating with the tube 34. The tube 42 extends into the transfer plug and its lower end is formed with slots 43a engaged by inwardly extending pins 43 (FIG. 3) of the plug 10. Thus, torque can be transmitted by the tube 42 from the rotor to the bearing member 37, whilst longitudinal stress on the tube 42 is negligible as the tube 42 is axially movable relative to the rotor. An O-ring seal 44 seals the tube 42 relative to the core member 7.
The annular passage surrounding tube 42 in the bearing member 37 is connected to the rotor by a tube 45, the ends of which are formed with annular projections each containing an annular recess housing a sealing means in the form of an O-ring 51 which, together with further sealing means in the form of compressed 0- rings 52 abutting the annular projections, seal the passage defined by the tube 45 from the space within the vacuum enclosure. It will be apparent that this tube 45 is subjected compressively to the axial sealing forces of the head whilst at the same time being relieved substantially entirely of torsion stress, which is taken up by the tube 42. By virtue of the frictional engagement between the tube 45 and the core 7 and bearing member 37, the tube 45 can rotate relative to the core 7 and bearing member 37 if the tube 42 is torsionally deformed.
The construction illustrated is assembled and operated as follows.
Firstly, the rotor is put in position on the shaft 6 and the cover 4 is slid to its final position. The cylinder 18, with bearing member 22, is then placed in the illustrated position and annular member 21 is screwed into the recess to retain the flange 19. When it is seen that the bearing member 22 is aligned coaxially with the rotor, the annular member is tightened up to clamp the flange 19.
The rotatable bearing member 37 with the tubes 42 and 45 attached thereto is then positioned in member 22, causing tube 42 to pass through O-ring 44 and engage the pins 43. At this stage, the tube 45 will be held by O-rings at its ends, the O-rings at the upper end being a tighter fit than those at the lower end so that tube 45 will be released with the bearing member 37 when the latter is removed.
The seal 38 is then positioned on the rotatable bearing member 37 and the pressure member 29 is placed on the bearing member 37. The retaining tube 30 is screwed into position and the spring 31 and cap 32 added to complete the head. The cap 32 is screwed down to apply the desired sealing pressure, which compressively stresses the tube 45 but not the tube 42.
In operation, a vacuum is produced in the enclosure 1 and the rotor is run up to a relatively low speed. Liquid, such as water, is then pumped through tube 33 and fills the rotor chamber 17, displacing air through passages 1521, passages 15b being blocked at this speed from passages 8 by an O-ring valve 46.
The speed is then reduced to close valve 46 and a liquid having a density gradient of predetermined volume is fed light end first through passage 34 to chamber 17 via passages 15a, this liquid displacing water from chamber 17 through passages 16 to tube 33.
The rotor speed is then increased to open valve 46 centrifugally and a sample in a carrier is fed through tube 33. The carrier flows from passages 16 along the surface of the rotor member 14 and through passages 15b to the tube 34. The sample particles migrateradially across the chamber according to their densities. The sample particles may be removed by slowing the rotor to close valve 46 and by passing a dense solution along tube 34 via passages 15a, displacing sample via passages 16 and out of tube 33.
With a modified rotor construction, a sample may be continuously fed into and out of the rotor at high speed and under vacuum.
FIG. 4 shows a valve arrangement 47 which may be found to be preferable to O-ring valve 46. The valve arrangement comprises a ball 49 urged by a spring 48 onto a seating 50. When the centrifugal force has reached a certain design level, balls 49 are lifted off their seatings 50 to interconnect passages 8 and 15b.
I claim:
1. A centrifuge arrangement having a rotor and a fluid feed head for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from said rotor whilst the rotor rotates, the head comprising:
a first, stationary, portion defining first and second passages; a second portion rotatable with said rotor;
sealing means for effecting a rotary seal between said first and second portions;
a first tube providing a feed path between said first passage and said rotor and being axially clamped so as to be subjected to the axial sealing forces of said sealing means whilst being rotatable relative to at least one of said rotor and said second portion;
a second tube providing a feed path between said second passage and said rotor; and
mounting means of said second tube holding said second tube against rotation relative to said rotor and said second portion whilst permitting axial movement of said second tube relative to one of said rotor and said second portion.
2. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said second tube extends within said first tube.
3. An arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein said mounting means comprises a pin and slot coupling.
4. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, and comprising a fluid transfer member attached to said rotor for transferring fluid between said rotor and said tubes.
5. An arrangement as claimed in claim 3, and comprising a fluid transfer member attached to said rotor for transferring fluid between said rotor and said tubes, said pin and slot coupling acting between said fluid transfer member and said second tube.
6. An arrangement as claimed in claim 2, and comprising sealing means sealing said first tube relative to said rotor and said second portion and permitting rotation of said first tube relative to at least one of said rotor and said second portion.
7. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, and comprising cylindrical bearing surfaces by which said second portion is rotatably mounted relative to said first portion.

Claims (7)

1. A centrifuge arrangement having a rotor and a fluid feed head for supplying fluid to and removing fluid from said rotor whilst the rotor rotates, the head comprising: a first, stationary, portion defining first and second passages; a second portion rotatable with said rotor; sealing means for effecting a rotary seal between said first and second portions; a first tube providing a feed path between said first passage and said rotor and being axially clamped so as to be subjected to the axial sealing forces of said sealing means whilst being rotatable relative to at least one of said rotor and said second portion; a second tube providing a feed path between said second passage and said rotor; and mounting means of said second tube holding said second tube against rotation relative to said rotor and said second portion whilst permitting axial movement of said second tube relative to one of said rotor and said second portion.
2. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said second tube extends within said first tube.
3. An arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein said mounting means comprises a pin and slot coupling.
4. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, and comprising a fluid transfer member attached to said rotor for transferring fluid between said rotor and said tubes.
5. An arrangement as claimed in claim 3, and comprising a fluid transfer member attached to said rotor for transferring fluid between said rotor and said tubes, said pin and slot coupling acting between said fluid transfer member and said second tube.
6. An arrangement as claimed in claim 2, and comprising sealing means sealing said first tube relative to said rotor and said second portion and permitting rotation of said first tube relative to at least one of said rotor and said second portion.
7. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, and comprising cylindrical bearing surfaces by which said second portion is rotatably mounted relative to said first portion.
US00122663A 1970-03-10 1971-03-10 Centrifuge Expired - Lifetime US3765601A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1149170 1970-03-10

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3765601A true US3765601A (en) 1973-10-16

Family

ID=9987231

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00122663A Expired - Lifetime US3765601A (en) 1970-03-10 1971-03-10 Centrifuge

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US3765601A (en)
DE (1) DE2111228A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1340871A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USB422467I5 (en) * 1972-12-12 1975-01-28
US4011972A (en) * 1975-10-28 1977-03-15 Beckman Instruments, Inc. Continuous flow centrifuge apparatus
WO2009102743A2 (en) * 2008-02-13 2009-08-20 Beckman Coulter, Inc. Liquid sample collection device for zonal centrifugation rotor
US20100081553A1 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-04-01 Masaharu Aizawa Centrifuge
EP2883616A1 (en) * 2013-12-11 2015-06-17 Alfa Laval Corporate AB Valve for draining off gas from a centrifugal separator

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
LU82161A1 (en) * 1980-02-12 1981-09-10 Syglo Int Sa ROTARY JOINT STRUCTURE
UA73198U (en) * 2012-04-02 2012-09-10 Богдан Анатольевич Мартинюк Method for separating dispersed system
CN109332009B (en) * 2018-11-19 2020-07-14 重庆英特力科技有限公司 Desk type centrifugal device

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3103489A (en) * 1961-03-09 1963-09-10 Plot wl-mcrarifuge apparatus
US3191856A (en) * 1962-03-27 1965-06-29 Beckman Instruments Inc Centrifuge rotor
US3498532A (en) * 1967-06-19 1970-03-03 Mse Holdings Ltd Zonal centrifuge attachment

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3103489A (en) * 1961-03-09 1963-09-10 Plot wl-mcrarifuge apparatus
US3191856A (en) * 1962-03-27 1965-06-29 Beckman Instruments Inc Centrifuge rotor
US3498532A (en) * 1967-06-19 1970-03-03 Mse Holdings Ltd Zonal centrifuge attachment

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USB422467I5 (en) * 1972-12-12 1975-01-28
US3924804A (en) * 1972-12-12 1975-12-09 Wesfalia Separator Ag Centrifuge for the separation of mixtures of liquids
US4011972A (en) * 1975-10-28 1977-03-15 Beckman Instruments, Inc. Continuous flow centrifuge apparatus
CN101946084B (en) * 2008-02-13 2014-01-22 贝克曼考尔特公司 Liquid sample collection device for zonal centrifugation rotor
WO2009102743A3 (en) * 2008-02-13 2009-12-30 Beckman Coulter, Inc. Liquid sample collection device for zonal centrifugation rotor
US20100311560A1 (en) * 2008-02-13 2010-12-09 Beckman Coulter, Inc. Liquid Sample Collection Device for Zonal Centrifugation
WO2009102743A2 (en) * 2008-02-13 2009-08-20 Beckman Coulter, Inc. Liquid sample collection device for zonal centrifugation rotor
US8702577B2 (en) * 2008-02-13 2014-04-22 Beckman Coulter, Inc. Liquid sample collection device for zonal centrifugation
US20100081553A1 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-04-01 Masaharu Aizawa Centrifuge
US8475351B2 (en) * 2008-09-30 2013-07-02 Hitachi Koki Co., Ltd. Centrifuge having a seal mechanism
EP2883616A1 (en) * 2013-12-11 2015-06-17 Alfa Laval Corporate AB Valve for draining off gas from a centrifugal separator
WO2015086435A1 (en) * 2013-12-11 2015-06-18 Alfa Laval Corporate Ab Valve for draining off gas from a centrifugal separator
CN105792943A (en) * 2013-12-11 2016-07-20 阿尔法拉瓦尔股份有限公司 Valve for draining off gas from centrifugal separator
RU2635806C1 (en) * 2013-12-11 2017-11-16 Альфа Лаваль Корпорейт Аб Valve for discharging gas from centrifugal separator
CN105792943B (en) * 2013-12-11 2018-03-13 阿尔法拉瓦尔股份有限公司 For the valve from whizzer discharge gas
US10166552B2 (en) 2013-12-11 2019-01-01 Alfa Laval Corporate Ab Valve for draining off gas from a centrifugal separator

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB1340871A (en) 1973-12-19
DE2111228A1 (en) 1971-09-23

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5669636A (en) Floating seal assembly for a bearingless coolant union having air rotation capability
US11325136B2 (en) Seal assembly for a centrifugal separator
AU2017224168B2 (en) Centrifugal separator having an intermittent discharge system
US6267204B1 (en) Device for the supply of liquid under pressure to an element at a rotating axis
EP0925424B1 (en) Bearing isolator with air purge
US4654023A (en) Mechanical seal for casing of centrifugal separators
US3103489A (en) Plot wl-mcrarifuge apparatus
US3765601A (en) Centrifuge
US4629564A (en) Centrifugal separator with annular sealing means arranged around the rotor outlet for separated liquid
GB2298009A (en) Sealing arrangement for a coolant union having a floating seal assembly
US2679974A (en) Bearing construction for continuous centrifuge
US5885202A (en) Solid-bowl centrifuge with continuously variable liquid level
US3195809A (en) Continuous flow centrifuge having a rotary face seal
KR0150415B1 (en) Reverse filter centrifugal machine
US3122374A (en) Seal for rotating shaft with pressure responsive means
CA1185287A (en) Self-aligning mechanical face seal
US3126338A (en) Hermetically sealable mounting means
US3443747A (en) Fluid coupling for continuous flow centrifuge
US2554622A (en) Fluid conduit connections to centrifugal machines
US3942716A (en) Flow-thru vacuum bushing for ultracentrifuges
US4634416A (en) Outlet arrangement for a centrifugal separator
US3462076A (en) Self-cleaning centrifugal separator drum having an external piston valve
US3648926A (en) Liquid-solid separator
US4846728A (en) Floating seal arrangement for centrifugal separators and like rotating apparatus
US5487720A (en) Particle concentrator