U.S. patent application number 12/339164 was filed with the patent office on 2010-06-24 for low flush toilet with bowl venting.
Invention is credited to Zi Liang Wu.
Application Number | 20100154107 12/339164 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 42263969 |
Filed Date | 2010-06-24 |
United States Patent
Application |
20100154107 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
Wu; Zi Liang |
June 24, 2010 |
Low Flush Toilet with Bowl Venting
Abstract
A sanitary toilet employs a soft flat tube at the outlet neck at
the outlet of the toilet bowl. This soft flat tube extends through
the drain opening into the sanitary drain to permit passage of
waste into the sanitary sewer drain. A water inlet pipe produce a
water spray or jet into the bowl, and a valve limits the flow of
water to about 0.3 to 1.0 liters per use. The toilet has a vent
inlet within the toilet bowl beneath the seat, a blower that
induces a flow of air into the vent inlet, and an exhaust conduit
from the blower that discharges to a vented space outside the
bathroom. The unit may be formed of a micrite material.
Inventors: |
Wu; Zi Liang; (Rome,
NY) |
Correspondence
Address: |
BERNHARD P. MOLLDREM, JR.
224 HARRISON STREET, SUITE 200
SYRACUSE
NY
13202
US
|
Family ID: |
42263969 |
Appl. No.: |
12/339164 |
Filed: |
December 19, 2008 |
Current U.S.
Class: |
4/420 |
Current CPC
Class: |
E03D 11/02 20130101;
E03D 11/18 20130101; E03D 9/05 20130101; E03D 2201/40 20130101 |
Class at
Publication: |
4/420 |
International
Class: |
E03D 11/00 20060101
E03D011/00 |
Claims
1. A sanitary toilet for use in a bathroom having a drain opening
in a floor of the bathroom which leads to a sanitary drain, the
toilet including a bowl having a seat at an upper side thereof and
a drain outlet at a lower side, the exit having a neck at its under
side facing the drain opening; means for attaching the toilet to
the floor of the bathroom and sealing over the drain opening of the
sanitary drain, and supporting said bowl and seat above the floor
of the bathroom; a soft flat flexible tube fitted onto the neck at
the outlet of the toilet bowl, and extending through said drain
opening into said sanitary drain; the soft flexible tube being
biased into a normally flat condition to seal against vapors rising
through it from said sanitary drain, but being adapted to open to
permit passage of waste materials and liquids therein to allow the
same to pass into the sanitary drain.
2. The sanitary toilet of claim 1, comprising a water inlet pipe
connected to a source of water outside said toilet, and having a
spray facility within said bowl to provide a water spray into said
bowl to rinse waste matter therefrom into said soft flat flexible
tube, and a valve mechanism to turn on a water flow for a limited
time through said water inlet pipe.
3. The sanitary toilet of claim 2, valve limits the flow of water
to about 0.3 to 1.0 liters per use.
4. The sanitary toilet of claim 1, comprising a vent to remove
disagreeable odors from the toilet before they enter the bathroom,
including a vent inlet within the toilet bowl beneath the seat; a
blower for inducing a flow of air into the vent inlet, and an
exhaust conduit from the blower to a vented space outside the
bathroom.
5. The sanitary toilet of claim 4, wherein said seat has a toilet
seat for seating a person thereon when using the toilet, and a lid
covering the toilet seat when not in use, and further comprising a
switch for switching on said blower when said toilet seat lid is
lifted.
6. The sanitary toilet of claim 4, comprising a presence switch for
turning the fan on, and wherein said presence switch includes a
presence detector for detecting the presence of a person seated
upon said toilet seat.
7. The sanitary toilet of claim 1, wherein at least said toilet
bowl is compression molded of a micrite stone material.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention is directed to sanitary toilets, and is in
particular concerned with toilets that have a reduced water
consumption as compared with traditional siphon-type flush toilets,
and is also concerned with toilets that can vent off bathroom odors
before they escape from the toilet bowl.
[0002] Typically, modern toilets have a tank that holds a quantity
of water (six liters to sixteen liters) and which discharges the
water quickly into the toilet bowl to cause the bowl to siphon and
flush away the urine, feces, or other waste matter in the bowl.
[0003] This type of toilet is notorious for wasting water, both
during the flush and through leakage from the tank past leaky flush
valves.
[0004] The flushing operation causes the water to flow past a trap
to reduce the static hydraulic pressure, to suck the water in the
bowl past the trap, and into the sewer drain pipe. This consumes a
minimum of about six liters of water, and in some toilets as much
as sixteen liters.
[0005] Considering a typical large city, such as Beijing (twelve
million individuals) with each individual on average having one
bowel movement per day and six urinations per day, and considering
that a standard toilet consumes at least six liters per flush,
i.e., a daily water consumption per person of 36 liters, it follows
that the water needed in a large city for flushing of toilets is
432 million liters daily, or about 158 billion liters annually.
[0006] On top of this, a great quantity of water is lost between
flushes due to toilet valve leaks. All of the water consumption
adds to the wastewater that needs to be treated in the municipal
sewage treatment facility. Also, each homeowner and property owner
needs to pay for water usage, including the water consumed by
flushing and leakage of toilets.
[0007] Moreover, urine tends to be alkaline, and a quantity of an
acid, such as sulfuric acid, needs to be added to the toilet to
control buildup of deposits in the toilet and drain pipe, and to
control the pH of the wastewater so it can be properly processed.
This can involve as much as 70,000 tonnes of sulfuric acid for a
large city, such as Beijing.
[0008] Also, normal or standard flush toilets fail to deal with the
problem of bathroom odors. Fetid odors arise from the fecal matter
during a bowel movement. The odors escape from the toilet bowl and
enter the air within the bathroom. Then the air from the room needs
to be vented outside to reduce the unpleasant smell. No one has
previously thought to vent the space within the toilet bowl to
remove the odors before they enter the general atmosphere of the
bathroom.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0009] Accordingly, it is an aspect of this invention to provide a
sanitary toilet with significantly reduced water consumption, and
which avoids the drawbacks of the prior art.
[0010] Another object is to provide a toilet of simple construction
which allows the waste matter to pass to the sewer drain, but does
not allow malodorous sewer gases to rise from the sewer drain
pipe.
[0011] A further object is to provide a sanitary toilet which
avoids water wastage from dripping or leaking out of the toilet
tank.
[0012] A still further object is to vent off malodorous vapors from
the toilet bowl, before those vapors can enter the air in the
bathroom.
[0013] According to an aspect of this invention, a sanitary toilet
with low water consumption characteristics is provided for use in a
bathroom, where the bathroom has a drain opening in the floor of
the bathroom that leads to a sanitary drain. The toilet resembles a
standard flush toilet in that it has a toilet bowl and the bowl has
a seat at its upper side and a drain outlet at a lower part. In
this case, the outlet has a neck at its under side facing the drain
opening. Usual means are provided for attaching the toilet to the
floor of the bathroom and sealing over the drain opening of the
sanitary drain, and for supporting the bowl and seat above the
floor of the bathroom. In the toilet of this invention, rather than
a usual siphoning water trap, the toilet employs a soft flat
flexible tube that is fitted onto the neck at the outlet of the
toilet bowl. This soft flat tube extends through the drain opening
into the sanitary drain. The soft flexible tube is normally biased
into a flat condition to seal against vapors rising through it from
sanitary sewer drain, but opens to permit passage of waste
materials and liquids therein to allow the same to drain into the
sanitary sewer drain.
[0014] Favorably, a water inlet pipe is connected to a source of
water outside the toilet, and has a spray end or spray ring within
the toilet bowl to produce a water spray or jet into the bowl, to
rinse waste matter into and through the soft flat flexible tube. A
valve mechanism turns on the water flow for a limited time through
said water inlet pipe. Preferably, the valve limits the flow of
water to about 0.3 to 1.0 liters per use.
[0015] In order to keep the malodorous bathroom fumes from the
general atmosphere in the bathroom the toilet is favorably provided
with a vent to remove disagreeable odors from the toilet before
they enter the bathroom. To this end, the toilet has a vent inlet
within the toilet bowl beneath the seat, a blower that induces a
flow of air into the vent inlet, and an exhaust conduit from the
blower that discharges to a vented space outside the bathroom. In a
favorable embodiment, the seat of the bowl has a toilet seat for
seating a person thereon when using the toilet, and a lid covering
the toilet seat when not in use. A switch associated with the
toilet seat lid for turns the blower on when the toilet seat lid is
lifted. Alternatively, the toilet can have a presence switch for
turning the fan on, and/or for turning on the water flow. In that
case, the presence switch can include a presence detector for
detecting the presence of a person seated upon the toilet seat.
[0016] For a durable, and stain resistant product, which is
economical to manufacture, the toilet bowl and other components may
be compression molded of a micrite stone material.
[0017] These and other objects, features, and advantages of the
invention will become apparent from the following detailed
description of selected preferred embodiments, which is to be read
in connection with the accompanying Drawing:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0018] FIG. 1 is an elevational view, partly cut away, of a
sanitary toilet according to one embodiment of this invention.
[0019] FIG. 2 is a plan view of the bowl of the sanitary toilet of
this embodiment.
[0020] FIG. 3 is a detail view showing the soft flat flexible tube
employed in this embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0021] With reference to the Drawing Figures, FIG. 1, is a
sectional elevation view of one exemplary embodiment of a sanitary
toilet arrangement 10 in accordance with the present invention.
This toilet arrangement 10 includes a bowl portion 12 and a tank
portion 14 which is seated at an upper rear part of the bowl
portion 12. The toilet arrangement 10 has a similar outward
appearance to a traditional or standard siphon-type flush toilet,
and is adapted to be mounted on the floor of a standard bathroom
over the entry to the sanitary drain pipe that is located in the
bathroom floor.
[0022] The bowl portion 12 has a lower side 16 that is installed
against the bathroom floor. Here, FIG. 1 shows the sanitary sewer
drain pipe 18, having a closet flange or closet ring 20 at its
upper end, and a wax seal ring 22 installed on the closet ring 20.
The bowl portion has an outlet opening 24 that mounts onto the wax
seal ring 22, to contain any vapors from the sewer drain pipe 18
and prevent them from escaping into the atmosphere in the
bathroom.
[0023] In this embodiment, the bowl portion has a toilet bowl 26,
generally shaped as a funnel, with a seat portion 28 at its round
open top side, and an outlet, in the form of a narrow neck 30, at
its lower end. Here a toilet seat 32 is mounted on the seat portion
28 to provide user comfort, and there is a toilet lid 34 which is
hinged to open for use, as shown.
[0024] A soft flat flexible tube 36 is mounted over the neck 30 of
the bowl 26, and this extends down through the closet flange 20 and
into the sanitary sewer drain pipe 18. The tube 36 is a flat
resilient member, formed of a rubber-like polymer which normally
holds itself flat with opposed sides against each other, to prevent
fumes and vapors from passing up from the sewer drain pipe 18.
However, the tube 36 opens in the presence of urine or other liquid
to allow the matter to drain out and into the drain pipe 18.
[0025] A strap or claim 38 in the form of an annular member, holds
the upper end of the flat tube 36 onto the outlet neck 30 of the
toilet bowl 26, as shown, e.g., in FIG. 2.
[0026] A ventilation conduit 40 is shown having an inlet end
located within an upper part of the bowl 26, near the upper end.
The conduit passes beneath the tank portion 14, and then connects
with a blower or suction fan 42 situated within the tank portion.
Here, it should be noted that the tank portion is "dry" and does
not contain flush water, unlike the standard flush toilet. A fan
motor 44 turns on to drive the fan 42 when needed, and an outlet
conduit 46 leads from the fan, out of the tank portion 14, to a
discharge point outside the bathroom. In some applications, the
discharge point can be at the sewer vent stack pipe, although it
could be any vent discharge point outside the room and preferably
venting outside the building.
[0027] Also shown here is a water tube, 50 which is hooked up to a
convenient source of water, such as the main cold water pipe for
the bathroom. The tube 50 has a valve 52, shown schematically,
which is turned on and off via a control to be described. A spray
head 54 provides a water spray or water jet that flows into the
toilet bowl 26 for a limited time when the toilet is used to help
rinse urine or other waste matter from the bowl and through the
outlet neck 30 and flat tube 36 into the sanitary sewer drain pipe
18. Here, the spray head 54 is in the form of a ring placed at the
inner periphery of the bowl 26, with spray openings around its
circumference (See FIG. 2).
[0028] In this embodiment, there is a magnetic member 56, i.e., a
permanent magnet, situated on the toilet lid 34, and this member 56
actuates a magnetic switch 58 atop the tank 14 when the lid 34 is
opened. This switch 58 can be used to turn on the ventilation
blower motor 44. Also shown here is a presence sensor 60, which can
use IR technology or sonic technology, for example, to detect the
presence of a person seated on the toilet. This presence sensor can
then provide a signal to the valve 52 to turn on the flow of water
through the tube 50. This can occur when the person is seated, or
when the person leaves.
[0029] Alternatively, the ventilation fan and/or the water flow can
be turned on by actuating a manual switch (which may be designed to
resemble the standard flush handle of a siphon-type flush toilet).
The water that is consumed can be shut off after some predetermined
time elapse, or can be shut off when a predetermined quantity of
water has passed through the tube 50.
[0030] Fecal matter in the toilet bowl typically rinses down and
through the flat tube 36 without difficulty.
[0031] With the toilet arrangement of this invention, only a small
quantity of water is consumed in a given use. Typically, only 300
ml to one liter of water is needed for spraying to rinse urine or
other waste matter from the bowl 26. Overall, with this invention
it is possible to reduce the water usage by a factor of twenty.
Also, there is no leakage of water from the tank past a flap valve
or ball stopper, as is the case in many conventional flush
toilets.
[0032] The flat flexible tube reliably passes waste matter through,
and does not experience the jamming or clogging that is often the
case with siphon-type toilets. This eliminates a maintenance
problem of clearing the clogged toilet, or in mopping up spillover
from the clogged toilet, which is a frequent occurrence with the
standard toilet.
[0033] The design and profile of the toilet of this invention lends
itself to manufacture by compression forming of a micrite stone
material, which has been shown to have superior properties for
sanitary toilets, in comparison with metal (steel or cast-iron) or
conventional porcelain or other ceramics, marble, or stone.
[0034] Ceramic toilets have exhibited may drawbacks, such as
radioactive contamination, short life of glaze color, color fading,
production expense, and high consumption of water during the
manufacturing process. Also the manufacture of the standard flush
toilets from ceramic materials, e.g., porcelain, can have a high
wastage or rejection rate (typically between 30% and 60%), and the
materials can usually not be recovered or recycled.
[0035] Therefore, because the toilet of this invention can be
manufacture using the technique known as micrite glass
agglutination, a superior product can be manufactured at a much
reduced cost, both to the maker and to the environment.
[0036] The micrite product has properties of excellent wear
resistance, rich color which is long lasting and non-fading, and is
relatively impervious to harmful chemicals such as acids and
alkalines. The micrite glass sanitary equipment is formed by a
ramming or compression in a mold, followed by a high-temperature
process (to crystallize the material) and then an annealing step
for stress-relieving. The micrite product thus has improved impact
resistance, is non-absorbent, has a higher albedo and a cleaner,
brighter, more colorful appearance than is possible with ceramic or
metal toilets. The micrite formation process involves no organic
materials, and so is not subject to discoloration, and the porosity
is much lower, so that in the moist bathroom environment the units
are highly resistance to acids, alkalis or other reagents. The
micrite process is also less prone to surface cracks than natural
stone, porcelain, or marble.
[0037] While the present invention has been described with one or
more selected specific preferred embodiments, it should be
understood that the invention is not limited to those precise
embodiments. Rather, many modifications and variations would
present themselves to persons skilled in the art without departure
from the scope and spirit of this invention, as defined in the
appended claims.
* * * * *