Local Containment Boom and Standoff (Enviro Boom)
A Local Containment Boom and Standoff or Enviro Boom® is described in three embodiments all of which are immediately deployable: Boom Arms, a Dual Pole Standoff, and Dual Chamber Boom Arms. The Boom Arms comprise buoyant material covered with impermeable material with rigid sealed poles inside the Boom Arms. The Dual Chamber Boom Arms have an upper chamber for flotation material and lower chamber for water ballast. Both types of Boom Arms sit partially submerged to block oil from passing both over and under the Boom Arm. Boom Arms are immediately deployable for booming operations, pre-booming operations and quick response spill containment. Structure positioning magnets attach the Boom Arms, Dual Pole Standoffs or Dual Chamber Boom Arms to an aquatic structure. The Dual Pole Standoff comprises sealed poles with structure positioning magnets to stand off other booms, including traditional booms, from an aquatic structure.
This continuation-in-part application claims benefit under 35 USC 120 of commonly invented and copending, U.S. nonprovisional utility patent application Ser. No. 12/137,182, filed Jun. 11, 2008, named Containment Boom and Standoff, incorporated by reference in its entirety and claims benefit of commonly invented and copending PCT/US2009/045099 filed May 23, 2009.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENTNot applicable
REFERENCE TO SEQUENCE LISTING, A TABLE, OR A COMPUTER PROGRAM LISTING COMPACT DISC APPENDIXNot applicable
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION AND RELATED ARTThe field of the invention is Hydraulic Engineering. This invention enhances the quality of the environment by reducing floating oil spill damage to water and reducing harm to the local ecology.
PATENT DOCUMENT COMPARISONPliable closed cell material in sections has been used for flotation and containment purposes in containment booms for oil spill containment in various prior art devices. Bell et al. in U.S. Pat. No. 5,000,616A discloses a plurality of foam sections that are linked together and stacked when necessary for additional height purposes. The sections, once assembled are dragged or towed to a desired location and weighted and anchored in place around a ship for booming or pre-booming operations.
Nielson in U.S. Pat. No. 4,000,532 discloses the use of a free floating or anchored fender (or standoff) for providing a space between a containment boom and a vessel. Normal use would be with a boom rigged entirely around the ship with a number of the fenders of different sizes and shapes being required all the way around the ship. The number of fenders required depends on individual operational conditions such, for example, as current speed and direction, boom rigidity, boom tension and vessel length. This fender uses tension cables to build open planar structure and ternary structural systems. In order to effectively fender off an area such as a ship, each section of the ship must be analyzed for the dominant shape/feature of that part of the ship and the appropriate fender built for that section of the ship using calculations to determine the number and types of devices required.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe invention is an immediately deployable Local Containment Boom and Standoff. Several vital environmental quality objectives are met by having an immediately deployable Local Containment Boom and Standoff:
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- Less water is exposed to the dangers of a spill because a smaller area is contained and it is contained faster;
- Less people with less training and less cost of ownership are needed to deploy a Local Containment Boom and Standoff making it more likely to be purchased and more likely to be used and used properly;
- Less cost and less downtime are achieved because the Local Containment Boom can be set up in a smaller area, repositioned quickly when necessary and removed in less time, causing less total downtime for the vessel operations.
In order to claim the benefits of the invention, the following definitions should be applied to the invention and the use of the invention: We use the terms ‘Local Containment Boom and Standoff’ or ‘Local Containment Boom’ (also known as Enviro Boom, a registered trademark of Skyler Enterprises) to describe a new specific type of booming and standoff assembly where Boom Arms (see definition below) are secured in a ‘Local Containment Area’ (see definition below) rather than surrounding a ship. Boom Arms are inherently also standoff devices and do not require anchors or weights to hold them in place.
We use the term ‘Local Containment Area’ to mean′ an area to be pre-boomed in the immediate vicinity surrounding a fueling operation, ballast water discharge, or other ship operation that generally but not necessarily includes the side of the aquatic structure as part of the containment area. ‘Local Containment Area’ also refers to the area where emergency booming using the Local Containment Boom takes place. In an emergency, the immediately area of an actual spill or leak where pre-booming did not take place (such as at sea) can be quickly boomed by the Local Containment Boom where time is of the essence for limiting the spread of the damage from the spill or leak to the smallest area possible (local containment). A spill recovery kit containing the Local Containment Boom can be stored on board a ship and is available for immediate deployment rather than having a spill spread during the time to deliver and set up a traditional booming device.
We use the term ‘Boom Arm’ to describe a one arm of a dual Boom Arm assembly and ‘Boom Arms’ to describe a two Boom Arms or multiple Boom Arms used together. Boom Arms are inherently also standoff devices and do not require anchors or weights to hold them in place. We use the term Dual Pole Standoff to refer to one of the embodiments of the Local Containment Boom and Standoff where booming is being accomplished by some other means and the Dual Pole Standoff is being used as a standoff only.
We use the term ‘Immediately Deployable’ to refer to several aspects of the ease of using the Boom Arms and Dual Pole Standoffs and to the short amount of time (just a few minutes) needed to configure the Local Containment Area. One aspect of the ease of use is that few configuration skills are required to place the Local Containment Boom in the needed vicinity—just drop it in the water and connect it to the ship or other aquatic structure in a shape such as a triangle or square suitable to contain any spills or potential spills in the immediate vicinity of the operation using the Structure Positioning Magnets (see definition below) to hold the Boom Arms or Dual Pole Standoff against the aquatic structure. The Boom Arms and Dual Pole Standoffs are immediately deployable because they are small and lightweight compared to traditional booms and can be stored close to where they are needed such as on board a ship, in a service boat, or in a docking area and taken out of storage and put into service in minutes. Boom Arms are immediately deployable because one person can handle their small size (5 to 30 feet in length for one arm) and light weight (50-100 lbs. per dual Boom Arm configuration) and because the self-contained buoyancy and self-righting capabilities require no extra equipment for inflation and no weights or anchors are required. Immediately Deployable also refers to being able to lower the Boom Arms from the deck of a ship with lines into the water and using lines to position the Local Containment Boom in place for emergency operations to quickly contain spills that have already occurred without the use of extra personnel or an extra vessel to deploy the boom.
We define ‘Structure Positioning Magnets’ as the magnets that hold the Local Containment Boom against the ship or other aquatic structure without the structure having to contain any permanent or semi-permanent fixtures to hold the magnets and Boom Arms or Dual Pole Standoffs in place. One example of a structure positioning magnet is a 12 lb. magnet that has 600 lb. pull strength that is attached with mechanical connectors to each end of the Boom Arms or Dual Pole Standoff and the magnets attached to the ship or other aquatic structure. These structure positioning magnets can be moved vertically or horizontally along the side of the ship by a person in a service boat or by lines from the deck of the ship and adjusted as the ship rises and falls with the change in load that occurs with refueling operations or ballast adjustments or to adjust for weather or current changes.
One embodiment of the Local Containment Boom and Standoff, is the use of Boom Arms for pre-booming (containing potential floating oil spills) around an oil transfer operation or other potential spill operation or as part of an emergency response spill recovery kit. The Boom Arms act as their own standoff in this embodiment. Boom Arms are made of any suitable material such as four pound closed cell polyethylene foam where the Boom Arms are covered with a protective waterproof and oil impermeable material and this cover may also be used to connect between Boom Arms. The covering used may be one of the heavy duty vinyl materials that are specially formulated for booming or other suitable materials. Boom Arms fold together for storage and unfold for immediate deployment. Sealed poles inside the buoyant Boom Arms provide rigidity and keep the assembly upright in the water. The assembly has sufficient buoyancy during deployment in water so the top of the assembly will float high enough in water to block the passage of a floating oil spill over the top and a bottom of the assembly sitting low enough below the waterline to prevent a floating oil spill from going underneath. The invention self-rights itself when properly configured. Elements of the protective cover seal the assembly to the aquatic structure or seal the minimum number of assemblies together to contain a floating oil spill in a local area. Mechanical connectors on both ends of both sealed poles provide attachment means to other devices such as the structure positioning magnets which attach the assembly to an aquatic structure. These structure positioning magnets allow the assembly to be quickly placed where it is needed rather than having to encircle the entire ship like a conventional boom. Structure positioning magnets may be replaced by mechanical connectors when multiple Boom Arms are desired to form larger Local Containment Areas or other geometrical shapes of Local Containment Areas. Other devices such as a current vane, a wind vane and a strobe light can be attached to the mechanical connectors to make monitoring the booming operation easier. This embodiment can also be used as a standoff device to keep other containment booms at a sufficient distance from an aquatic structure during an oil transfer operation or after an accidental spill from other operations.
Another embodiment of The Local Containment Boom and Standoff is a Dual Pole Standoff (or fender) to stand off a separate containment boom a sufficient distance from an aquatic structure during an oil transfer operation or after an accidental spill from other operations. This embodiment does not act as its own boom (standoff only). Dual Pole Standoffs are pairs of buoyant sealed poles with mechanical connectors on both ends of both sealed poles that provide attachment means to other devices such as structure positioning magnets that attach the assembly to an aquatic structure with the sealed poles as two sides of a triangle using the aquatic structure as the third side. These structure positioning magnets allow the assembly to be quickly placed and held where it is needed rather than employing anchors, lines, cables or other devices like the prior art or rather than allowing the standoff to free float.
Another embodiment is Dual Chamber Boom Arms that use an upper chamber pre-filled with flotation material such as protectively wrapped closed cell polyethylene foam to keep the boom afloat and upright and a rigid lower chamber that uses ambient water as ballast to restrict the movement of the boom in the water making it more effective for resisting currents, wind, waves and other forces present at the surface of the water and just below the surface of the water. This embodiment acts as its own standoff. This embodiment is an assembly with a pair of Dual Chamber Boom Arms with mechanical connectors on both ends of both assemblies that provide an attachment means to other devices such as structure positioning magnets that attach the assembly to an aquatic structure. The rigidity of the ballast chambers allows the assemblies to act as two sides of a triangle using the aquatic structure as the third side. Other geometric configurations may also be used. These structure positioning magnets allow the assembly to be quickly placed and held where it is needed rather than employing anchors, lines, cables or other devices like the prior art or rather than allowing the standoff to free float as some of the prior art. The assembly has sufficient buoyancy during deployment in water so the top of the assembly will float high enough in water to block the passage of a floating oil spill over the top and a bottom of the assembly sitting low enough below the waterline to prevent a floating oil spill from going underneath. The assembly self-rights itself when configured properly. Elements of the protective cover seal the assembly to the aquatic structure or seal a minimal number of assemblies together to contain a floating oil spill in a local containment area or a higher number of assemblies together to use as a convention boom is used in a non-local area.
Optional features include attachable wind and current vanes to allow operators to monitor conditions in the containment area so that necessary adjustments can be made in a timely manner. An optional strobe light assists night crews in maintaining visual contact with the containment system.
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The above disclosure is sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to practice the invention, and provides the best mode of practicing the invention presently contemplated by the inventor. While there is provided herein a full and complete disclosure of the preferred embodiments of this invention, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction, dimensional relationships, and operation shown and described. Various modifications, alternative constructions, changes and equivalents will readily occur to those skilled in the art and may be employed, as suitable, without departing from the true spirit and scope of the invention. Such changes might involve alternative materials, components, structural arrangements, sizes, shapes, forms, functions, operational features or the like.
Claims
1. A Local Containment Boom and Standoff, embodied in Boom Arms comprising:
- a pair of connected buoyant Boom Arm sealed from the environment where the Boom Arm is formed of any suitable buoyant material where the buoyancy is not obtained by inflation or filling with any temporary material and a bore formed in the buoyant Boom Arm below a centerline of the buoyant Boom Arm with the bore of sufficient diameter to receive
- a pair of rigid poles, sealed from receiving water or oil, to be contained inside the bore of the buoyant Boom Arm where the sealed poles function to add strength and stiffness to the buoyant Boom Arm and to add weight to the buoyant Boom Arm to keep the buoyant Boom Arm upright in the water where the sealed pole can be formed of any metal, plastic, wood or other material of sufficient strength, buoyancy, and rigidity and sealed at the ends using any means employed by those skilled in the art;
- a plurality of linking magnets in mechanical connection with the back side of a Boom Arm protective cover that allows the assembly to magnetically attach folded together to store folded when not in use and to hold together during deployment and after deployment if desired, and
- a pair of structure positioning magnets with the associated magnet connectors where no associated base member is required to be permanently or semi-permanently attached to the aquatic structure where the structure positioning magnets hold the Boom Arms at a changing waterline of an aquatic structure where the Boom Arms forms two sides of a triangle when in the operating state with the third side of the triangle formed by the aquatic structure to provide a flexible local containment area at a spill site or a potential spill site where the Boom Arms are immediately deployable, where the Boom Arms do not surround an entire aquatic structure but only the local containment area, where the Boom Arms can be easily repositioned to allow for the changing waterline of the aquatic structure and changing needs of the containment area.
2. The Local Containment Boom and Standoff of claim 1, wherein multiple Boom Arms are used to form a local containment area where structure positioning magnets are used at the interface to the aquatic structure and the structure positioning magnets between Boom Arms are replaced with mechanical connectors so a non-triangular geometric containment area is formed with triangular cones or poles used to maintain a fixed angle between the Boom Arms.
3. A Dual Pole Standoff Assembly that is immediately deployable comprising:
- a pair of sealed poles wherein the sealed poles are be filled with a buoyant material, and each one of the sealed poles has a proximal end and a distal end, and
- a pair of mechanical connectors at each end of the pair of sealed poles wherein the pair of sealed poles are connected at the proximal ends with a plurality of mechanical connectors, and
- a pair of structure positioning magnets with the associated magnet connectors where no associated base member is required to be permanently or semi-permanently attached to the aquatic structure where the structure positioning magnets hold the Dual Pole Standoff to form sides of a geometric shape such as a triangle with one side of the geometric shape formed by the aquatic structure to provide a flexible local containment area at a spill site or a potential spill site where the Dual Pole Standoff is immediately deployable, where the Dual Pole Standoffs do not surround an entire aquatic structure but only the local area containment area, where the Dual Pole Standoffs can be repositioned to allow for the changing waterline of the aquatic structure and changing needs of the containment area.
4. A Local Containment Boom and Standoff, embodied in A Dual Chamber Boom Arms comprising:
- a pair of rigid Dual Chamber Boom Arms that are immediately deployable wherein a sealed upper Flotation Chamber is filled with a flotation material and a lower hollow Ballast Chamber to be filled with ambient water, and
- a plurality of Ballast Chamber Openings to allow ambient water to move in and out of the Ballast Chamber when the device is deployed in water and to allow the Ballast Chamber to be used as a storage area,
- a plurality of linking magnets in mechanical connection with
- a Dual Chamber Boom Arms back side protective cover that allows the assembly to magnetically attach folded together to store efficiently when not in use and to hold together during deployment and after deployment if desired, and
- a pair of structure positioning magnets with the associated magnet connectors where no associated base member is required to be permanently or semi-permanently attached to the aquatic structure where the structure positioning magnets hold the Dual Chamber Boom Arms at a changing waterline of an aquatic structure where the Dual Chamber Boom Arms forms two sides of a geometric shape (or more sides with multiple Dual Chamber Boom Arms) when in the operating state with one side of the geometric shape formed by the aquatic structure to provide a flexible local containment area at a spill site or a potential spill site where the Dual Chamber Boom Arms do not surround an entire aquatic structure but only the local area containment area, where the Dual Chamber Boom Arms can be repositioned to allow for the changing waterline of the aquatic structure and changing needs of the local containment area.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 17, 2011
Publication Date: May 12, 2011
Inventor: Sky Bleu Martin (Seattle, WA)
Application Number: 13/007,767