Method for producing a drip irrigation line

Plastic and nonmetallic article shaping or treating: processes – Direct application of electrical or wave energy to work – Extrusion molding

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C264S171110, C264S211130, C264S347000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06403013

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to a method for producing a drip irrigation line, containing a plurality of self-regulating flow-reducing element for drip irrigation.
Drip irrigation tubing is in widespread use for the delivery of water and fertilizer dissolved therein to the roots of plants requiring same. Drip irrigation saves water by reducing evaporation of water in comparison to spray irrigation. Furthermore, the water is delivered at a slow rate, allowing the plant to absorb the moisture before its loss, either through evaporation or through seepage into the soil below root level.
The water pressure within irrigation tubes can vary considerably. While the source of pressure variation can be dealt with by the installation of a suitable pressure control valve at the inlet point of the irrigation tube, larger variations which are difficult to control occur due to the length of a typical irrigation system. The pressure near the inlet point is certain to be considerably higher than pressure at the far end of a long tube.
Diaphragm type emitter units have been developed to meet the problems posed by line pressure variations. Such units are exposed to line pressure, so that high line pressure on a flexible diaphragm restricts a flow passage, while low pressure releases the diaphragm to allow full use of the flow passage, thus achieving a self-regulating flow that remains substantially constant at all pressures encountered during normal operation.
A further benefit of diaphragm-type emitters is their tendency to be self cleaning. Small solid particles entrapped in the flow path when restricted by the diaphragm at a time of high pressure will be cleared out by the fluid flow when pressure is reduced and the diaphragm is non-restrictive.
Drip irrigation emitters are described in the several US Patents.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,728,042 discloses a tube internally fitted with flow control inserts having an outer chamber extending over a significant portion of the tube circumference. The inserts include a pressure responsive flow controller, a pressure reducing pathway formed by the insert, and an air pocket spring defined by the insert for cooperation with a pressure responsive flow controller.
External emitters are described and claimed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,279,462, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,294,058 and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,443,212. These emitters use a diaphragm for pressure regulation, but flow direction is perpendicular to the tube axis, they have no labyrinth and as their form and assembly method is quite different from the internal type which is the subject of the present invention, these types of emitters need not be further discussed herein.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,330,107 discloses a drip irrigation system which comprises a water conduit and a series of cylindrical one-piece pressure compensating emitters inserted therein. Each emitter has a body of a flexible elastic material, inlet means being connected to a labyrinth flow passage defined between the outer periphery of the emitter body and the inner surface of the conduit. The flow passage passes through a deformable part of the emitter body opening into a peripheral channel leading to an orifice. The deformable part is acted on by water pressure and co-acts with the inner surface of the water conduit.
Each emitter is symmetrical about the peripheral channel in the middle of the emitter body length. Inlets, the flow passage, and a deformable part are located on each side of said channel.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,586,727 discloses a flow reducer device which includes a body member, assembled inside a conduit, having a flow regulating region formed with a cavity extending through the body member. The cavity is closed at its ends by a deformable diaphragm, preferably an elastomeric sleeve. Conduit water pressure causes the sides of said sleeve to be deformed towards or away from each other in order to regulate flow. The emitter is a three-part assembly-inlet, diaphragm tube and outlet.
Furthermore, many previous emitters have a separate diaphragm and a separate cover to hold said diaphragm to an emitter body, which greatly increases the assembly and manufacturing cost of such emitters.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,824,025 there is described and claimed a one-piece in-line pressure compensating drip irrigation emitter, comprising an emitter body of flexible elastic material, having a plurality of inlet means in communication with the interior of the conduit line and deformable flow regulating means including a tubular member diametrically transvering the cylinder of the irrigation emitter unit, however said patent is limited to cylindrical emitter units which are adapted to be inserted in a tubular fluid-carrying conduit line which forms an outer sleeve around said emitter unit, as seen in FIGS. 1 and 2 of said patent and in which the emitter body is provided with a plurality of inlet means necessitated by the fact that it is totally surrounded by the conduit line.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,203,503, corresponding to Israel patent 93,255, describes and claims a drip irrigation line comprising:
a continuous tube having a plurality of flow-reducer elements spaced longitudinally of the tube;
each of said flow-reducer elements comprising a strip formed with an inlet chamber of a predetermined depth at one end having an inlet opening, an outlet chamber of said predetermined depth at the opposite end having an outlet opening, and a flow-reducer path between said two chambers;
said strip of each flow-reducer element being further formed with a connecting passageway, of a depth less than said predetermined depth, between, and axially spaced from said flow-reducer path and said outlet chamber;
said connecting passageway including a wide groove of a depth from the inner face of the tube less than that of said predetermined depth, and a narrow groove, of a depth from the inner face of the tube greater than that of said wide groove but less than that of said predetermined depth, extending through a part of said wide groove;
at least the portion of the strip forming said connecting passageway being of elastomeric material.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,203,503 there is described the possibility of producing the flow-reducer elements from a plurality of different materials, injection-moulded during separate shots in a single mould, at least one of which materials is an elastomeric material, e.g., the flow-reducer element can be made of elastomeric material, while the remainder of the element is made of a non-elastomeric plastic materials, such as polyethylene or polypropylene.
Alternatively, each strip is of elastomeric material for the complete length of the flow-reducer path and of the connecting passageway, which enables the flow-reducer elements to be produced by a one-shot moulding operation.
In both cases, it is described that a plurality of the flow-reducer elements are first injection moulded onto the continuous strip and then the tube is extruded while concurrently feeding and bonding the continuous strip, and its flow-reducer elements to the inner face of the extruded tube.
In both of said patents and many other patents using the same technique of heat welding of the emitter units to the inner surface of the irrigation tube during the extrusion of the tube, little or no attention is directed to the attributes of the emitter to, on the one hand, assure effective heat welding to the continuous tubing, and on the other hand, to assure the existence of appropriate elastic properties in the emitter units.
It has now been discovered that drip irrigation lines of improved properties can be prepared by utilizing self-regulating emitter units made from a thermoplastic material, injection-moulded as a single unit, which material is cross-linked for improved elasticity, however in which said cross-linking is effected after the elements have been heat-welded within said tubing.
Thus, the present invention provides a method for producing a drip irrigation line, comprising a continuous tubing with spaced-apart drip outlets and a plurality of self-regulating emitter elements for drip irrigation arranged therein,

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