Coastal Systems
Station Uses CAD and FEA to Design and Test Deep Sea Breathing Apparatus Valve
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Figure 1: After designing this valve in Solid Edge, Coastal Systems Station
engineers captured the exact geometry with ALGOR’s InCADPlus with
no file translation, creating a very fine surface mesh on which an accurate
finite element analysis could be performed.
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Coastal Systems Station, Naval Surface Warfare Systems Center in Panama City,
Florida, supports the U.S. Navy in the area of Littoral warfare, which includes
mine, amphibious and special warfare, underwater systems and diving and salvage
equipment. Recently, engineers at Coastal Systems Station designed a valve body
in Solid Edge and then captured the geometry with ALGOR’s InCADPlus
and performed finite element analysis with ALGOR to ensure that it could
withstand high pressures.
The valve is designed to control the flow of gases such as helium, nitrogen
and oxygen into the breathing loop of a deep sea diving rig that goes beyond the
limit of conventional scuba gear. For diving beyond traditional depths of
self-contained underwater breathing apparatus, a mixture of inert gases
including helium and oxygen is used to prevent potentially deadly conditions
such as oxygen poisoning, high pressure nervous syndrome and nitrogen narcosis.
The 7,500-psi valve connects two spherical 5,000-psi Inconel flasks to a
manifold that recirculates the gases. These components need to withstand high
pressures because the breathing system must contain a large amount of gas in a
compact area to provide sufficient life support for the duration required.
K-Monel material was chosen for the valve because it withstands pressure, is
self-extinguishing to avoid the possibility of oxygen fires, resists the
corrosive effects of seawater, and enables removal of the adjacent bottle
without galling the threads.
After removing a threaded area from the model in Solid Edge, Coastal Systems
Station engineers captured the geometry of the valve with ALGOR’s InCADPlus,
creating a very fine surface mesh (Figure 1). The surface mesh was subsequently
refined using ALGOR’s Merlin Meshing Technology to reduce the number of
elements in non-critical areas. The model was then automatically meshed in ALGOR
using the hybrid mesh option that combines bricks on the surface and tetrahedra
inside. The result was a model with approximately 40,000 elements, with the
majority of the elements on the surface, where accuracy is most critical.
A 7500-psi loading was applied to the inner surfaces and force loadings were
applied at each end to simulate the "pull" that adjacent components
exert on the valve. The model was restrained on one side at the extension nub
where the valve attaches to the high-pressure gas supply cylinder. This linear
static stress analysis simulated the basic internal pressure load and end
attachment loads (Figure 2). Coastal Systems Station engineers later analyzed
the model with additional loads replicating worst case forces that could be
induced onto the assembly during usage in order to produce a conservative
design.
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Figure 2: The ALGOR linear static stress analysis of the valve shown
here simulated the basic internal pressure load within the valve and end
attachment loads during operation in a deep sea diving rig. |
Prototypes of this valve have not only withstood laboratory hydrostatic tests
without any evidence of plastic deformation but are currently in use in
prototype diving equipment being tested. The computer-aided design and analysis
work of Coastal Systems Station engineers ensured that only one set of prototype
parts were required prior to manufacturing.
The appearance of tradenames in this document does not constitute endorsement
by the Department of Defense, the Navy, or the Coastal Systems Station Dahlgren
Division, Naval Surface Warfare Center.
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