Patent Number: 047175109
Section: description

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS As shown in FIG. 1, a drum-shaped cylindrical container 10 has an opening which, after charging of the container, for example with waste material, may be closed by a circular flanged lid or cover 11 which, suitably, is a press fit in the opening though it may be a screw closure if the opening 10a and the rim of the lid 11 are formed with suitable threads. The waste material placed in the container may be in the form of radioactive solid objects, whether scraps, pieces, or even artefacts for disposal, or in the form of bulk solids, such as spent filter material. At its centre, the lid 11 is pre-fitted before use with a screw-in adaptor or boss 12 leaving an opening which (see FIG. 2) initially is covered, and therefore sealed, by a planar skin or diaphragm 13 of metallic foil, this diaphragm being affixed over an inwardly directed annular face of the boss. A feed line 14 for the introduction of encapsulating medium has an end fitting 15. Formed in this end fitting at its extremity is an annular groove 16 encircling a central channel 17 through which a flow of the medium takes place. A bore 18 connects this groove with a tubular side arm 19 which connects to a vent line (not shown). For making connections to the feed and vent lines a nozzle device of plastics material 20 has an annular projection 20a for insertion with a push fit into the groove 16 of the end fitting 15. In this annular projection are several longitudinally extending bores 21 arranged in a ring at regular intervals to make a vent connection with the vent line connector 19. Also forming part of the device 20, and projecting in the other direction, is a nozzle 22 through which extends a central filling passage 22a communicating with the channel 17 of the fitting 15 when the nozzle device 20 is fitted thereto. On its outer surface, the nozzle device has two circumferentially extending grooves 23 and 24 to co-operate with an annular lug 25 in the boss 12 with a snap lock action. Thus, when filling is to commence, the nozzle device 20, having been previously push fitted on the end fitting 15 of the filling line, is first driven into the boss 12 to snap the lug 25 into the first groove 23 thereby holding the nozzle device in the boss and forming a seal which is proof against escape of contamination. Further pressure on the nozzle device to increase the penetration into the boss causes a second snap lock to be reached when the lug 25 snaps into the second groove 24 and in reaching this position (indicated in broken outline) the advancing tip of the nozzle 22 ruptures the diaphragm 13, the contamination-proof seal having been maintained by the contact of the deformable plastic nozzle device with the inner surfaces of the boss. The snap lock arrangement may of course be the opposite of that illustrated, i.e. with the grooves in the boss and the lug on the nozzle device. Cement used as an encapsulating medium can then be fed into the container, and air thereby displaced is allowed to proceed to the vent line connector 19 through the bores 21, the groove 16 and the bore 18. The flow of cement will tend to deflect into the container the fragments of ruptured diaphragm 13 to give free egress of contained atmosphere to the vent line and by this line to an absolute filter system (not shown). The filling with cement is continued until the nozzle device, including the passages 21, is also filled. At this point the feed line may be withdrawn, detachment of the end fitting taking place readily from the nozzle device which is therefore sacrificially left in place. As a final step, if desired, a cap may be placed over the upwardly projecting end of the nozzle device. It will be appreciated that the opening in the boss sealed initially by the diaphragm 13 combines the functions of filling and vent ports. Likewise that the nozzle device embodies unitarily the separate passages for connecting with this dual function opening. FIGS. 3 and 4 show a slightly modified boss 12, formed with two annular ribs 25a and 25b for co-operation with two resiliently projecting annular flanges 26 and 27 of a nozzle device 20 which is, thus, also slightly modified as compared in FIG. 2. As shown in FIG. 3, the nozzle device 20, fitted to the end fitting 15, is inserted into the boss 12 to a first position in which it is retained by a snap lock engagement of the resilient flange 26 behind the annular rib 25a. When the nozzle device 20 is pushed further, into a second engaged position as shown in FIG. 4, its forward end 22 ruptures the diaphragm 13 and its flanges 26 and 27 both become engaged by the two annular ribs 25a and 25b, to provide two ring seals therewith. Furthermore, in this modified form, the nozzle device 20 is given a slightly increased maximum diameter such that, in this second position, it is an interference fit in the boss 12 which deforms it at the region 28 to form a third ring seal. FIGS. 3 and 4 also show a modification in the end fitting 15, namely the provision within its annular groove 16 of a level-sensing probe 29 which, as each nozzle device 20 is fitted to the end fitting 15, is accommodated in one of the bores 21 thereof and, as filling of the container is completed, senses the rising surface level of the filling medium in the bore 21 and thereupon generates a signal which is employed to terminate automatically the feed of filling medium through the feed line 14 prior to removal of the end fitting 15 from the nozzle device 20 which is sacrificed and remains secured in the boss 12 and substantially filled with the filling medium which then solidifies. FIG. 5 shows a further modification in which the end fitting 15 is secured on the feed line 14 by a two-part separable "Hansen" coupling havign a part 30a on which the end fitting 15 is secured, a part 30b which is secured on the feed line 14, and a sleeve 30c slidable and spring-urged downwards (in FIG. 5) on the part 30b but movable upwards against the spring-urging to allow captive retainer balls 30d to disengage from a groove 30e in the part 30a and thereby allow the latter to separate from the part 30b. This enables a rapid check to be made, before the end fitting 15 is removed from the nozzle device 20, to confirm that the end fitting has not become radioactively contaminated during filling of the container. If a lack of contamination is confirmed, the part 30a may be re-fitted to the part 30b and the end fitting removed from the nozzle device 20. If, on the other hand, contamination of the end fitting 15 should prove to have occurred, it (and the coupling part 30a) may be left temporarily attached to the nozzle device 20 while the container is removed for a special decontamination procedure to be carried out, the contaminated end fitting 15 and attached coupling part 30a being replaced on the coupling part 30b by duplicates to allow filling of further containers to continue without delay.