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WO1998014106A1 - Waste removal method for dry toilets - Google Patents

Waste removal method for dry toilets Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1998014106A1
WO1998014106A1 PCT/US1997/016787 US9716787W WO9814106A1 WO 1998014106 A1 WO1998014106 A1 WO 1998014106A1 US 9716787 W US9716787 W US 9716787W WO 9814106 A1 WO9814106 A1 WO 9814106A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
pipe
waste
wads
opening
wad
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/US1997/016787
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Robert D. Hawkins
James A. Hawkins
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to AU45854/97A priority Critical patent/AU4585497A/en
Priority to US09/269,445 priority patent/US6101641A/en
Publication of WO1998014106A1 publication Critical patent/WO1998014106A1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47KSANITARY EQUIPMENT NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; TOILET ACCESSORIES
    • A47K11/00Closets without flushing; Urinals without flushing; Chamber pots; Chairs with toilet conveniences or specially adapted for use with toilets
    • A47K11/02Dry closets, e.g. incinerator closets
    • A47K11/026Dry closets, e.g. incinerator closets with continuous tubular film for receiving faeces
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02ATECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02A50/00TECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE in human health protection, e.g. against extreme weather
    • Y02A50/30Against vector-borne diseases, e.g. mosquito-borne, fly-borne, tick-borne or waterborne diseases whose impact is exacerbated by climate change

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a method of waste removal to be used with dry toilets with disposable bowl lining material.
  • Toilets which cannot be connected to sewer mains or sewage treatment equipment usually have storage tanks which hold the accumulated waste until such time as it is convenient to pump the waste into a tanker truck for transport to another location where sewage processing is available.
  • This is a common procedure for mobile toilets as for example toilets installed in commercial airliners. Airliner toilets flush by using recirculated chemically treated waste water or by using a small amount of fresh water assisted by the pull of a vacuum.
  • the waste is either stored in tanks beneath each toilet or in remote tanks which hold the waste from several toilets. These tanks can be accessed through connections in the service panels underneath the plane. When the plane is serviced the waste water is drained or pumped into a tanker truck connected at the service panels.
  • the weight of water used to flush toilets and the weight of the associated tanks and pipes is undesirable in an aircraft since it reduces the available pay load.
  • the weight of water used in each recirculating airline toilet is approximately 68 kg.
  • the weight of water required to operate a vacuum toilet during a long flight is approximately 41 kg.
  • a dry toilet which 'flushes' using a thin bowl liner film as described in International Application No. PCT/US95/03004 uses no water but instead uses 5 grams of plastic film per flush or approximately 0.6 kg during a long flight. In an airliner with ten toilets this could result in an approximate weight saving of 400 to 700 kg. There would also be additional weight savings from the ehrriination of equipment required to handle and store waste water.
  • the weight saving advantage of a dry toilet is offset by the difficulty of removing the toilet waste conveniently from positions outside the plane.
  • the dry toilet waste combined with plastic film will not ordinarily flow through pipes to the service panel locations.
  • the film as well as other solid waste will cling to the walls of a pipe and will not be easily dislodged by gravity or by airflow. Disclosure of Invention
  • the inability of dry toilet waste to flow through pipes can be overcome by the present invention which provides a means by which waste from a dry, film-lined toilet can be processed so as to be readily transmitted through pipes to remote locations without the use of water.
  • This is accomplished by apparatus which compresses the liner material and the solid waste from each flush into a wad which expands when inserted into the pipe.
  • This expanded wad can be pushed along the pipe by the next wad and in turn by subsequent wads that are inserted in the pipe behind it. If the expanded wad conforms well to the sides of the pipe it will form a seal allowing the wads to be pushed through the pipe by air pressure.
  • the wad To form an effective air seal and be transmissible through pipe by air pressure the wad must have elasticity so that it can hold its shape and maintain light contact against the walls of the pipe. This elasticity results from the mechanical properties of the thin liner material which surrounds the solid waste and which when crumpled forms the bulk of the wad. For example, a rubber material would have too much elasticity and would unravel whereas metal foil would have too little elasticity and would not expand. A material such as high density polyethylene film has been found to be sufficiently deformable to retain the wad shape and has enough residual elastic expansion to effect an air seal.
  • a wad containing any significant amount of free liquid waste could collapse from the pressure of the liquid and lose its ability to seal the pipe. Therefore the toilet apparatus that forms the wad must first have means to drain liquid waste from within the liner before the wad is formed. This could be done firstly with a toilet bowl having a sloped bottom portion, as shown in PCT/US95/03004, into which liquid waste can drain away from the solid waste and then secondly, if necessary, by cutting the leading end of the liner sheet to allow the liquid waste to flow out of the liner and into a separate drain.
  • the soiled liner is conveyed into a piston chamber which is then enclosed to allow the piston to compress the liner containing the solid waste into a wad which when pushed further into the end of the adjoining pipe expands to fill the cross section of the pipe. Simultaneously the wad portion of the liner is cut free from that portion of the liner still in the bowl.
  • the mechanical piston force or alternatively the amount of differential air pressure required to move the wads through the pipe depends upon the total friction force that the accumulated wads have against the walls of the pipe. For a pipe that goes upward the effective weight of the wads would be added to the total friction force. For a pipe going downward the effective weight of the wads would subtract from the friction force.
  • the friction force that resists the motion of the wad along the pipe is proportional to the perpendicular force that the expanded wad exerts against the wall of the pipe. This can be minimised by using a pipe with a cross section no smaller than necessary to contain the fully expanded wad.
  • the elastic properties of the wad and its expanded size can be changed by altering the dimensions of the piston chamber and the exit port from the piston chamber into the pipe.
  • the compressed elasticity of the wads within the pipe may tend to force a portion of the last inserted wad back into the piston chamber thus reducing chamber capacity.
  • This effect can be reduced by incorporating into the wall of the exit port or into the wall of the pipe protruding surfaces which are angled to produce high resistance to the backward motion of the wads but little resistance to the forward motion.
  • the pipe can be designed to hold all the toilet waste accumulated during a long journey. At the end of the journey the waste could be quickly pushed out of the pipe by low pressure air and into a bag on the service vehicle positioned beneath the plane.
  • a quantity of toilets could be connected to a single manifold and be emptied simultaneously.
  • the separated liquid waste from a quantity of toilets could be stored in a single tank from which it could be drained into another tank on the service vehicle.
  • the solid waste is largely combustible material with mmirnal moisture content and therefore is readily incinerated.
  • the liquid waste has very Uttle solid content and has no added biocides and therefore could be disposed of in any foul water drain without interfering with biologically based sewage treatment processes.
  • a waste removal system for dry toilets with disposable bowl lining material comprising, a pipe having an entrance end and an exit end, apparatus at the entrance end for the insertion into the pipe of a compressed wad of toilet bowl liner material containing toilet waste, the compressed wad having elastic properties which cause it to expand against the walls of the pipe and to push against any wads previously inserted into the pipe thus causing them to move along the pipe to the exit end, further apparatus to receive the liner material containing toilet waste and to form it into the compressed wad and means for removing liquid waste from within the lining material before insertion into the pipe.
  • a means for the air pressure within the pipe near the entrance end to be made greater than the air pressure within the pipe at the exit end and thereby pushing the intervening wads of toilet waste along the pipe towards the exit end and subsequently into a collection device.
  • a toilet system for aircraft and other vehicles comprising: a dry toilet with disposable bowl lining material, means for separating the liquid waste from the solid waste, means for compressing the bowl lining material containing the solid waste into wads, means for inserting the wads sequentially into a pipe, means for ejecting the wads from the pipe into a separate collection device and means for draining the liquid waste into a separate collection device.
  • Figure 1 is a section view of the waste transmission pipe connected to the output end of a dry toilet having apparatus to compress the waste material into transmissible wads, and
  • Figure 2 is a section view of a waste removal terminal for aircraft toilets using the present invention.
  • a system for the transmission of waste from a dry toilet shown in Figure 1 has a toilet bowl 10 with bowl lining sheet 12 which when the toilet is flushed is conveyed from the toilet bowl 10 over an opening 14 in the topside of a piston chamber 16 and released so as to drop into the piston chamber 16.
  • a cover plate 18 lifts upward to clear the opening 14 while at the same time the piston 20 retracts to clear the piston chamber 16 for the receipt of soiled liner sheet 12 containing solid waste.
  • the outlet port 28 has a perimeter wall shaped to present a smooth inclined surface 42 to a wad 32 being pushed into the pipe 30 and a sharp restricting edge 44 to a wad 32 being pushed back into the piston chamber 16 by the accumulated elastic and friction forces of a quantity of wads 32 stored in the pipe 30.
  • FIG. 2 shows apparatus for removal of the toilet waste from a position outside the fuselage 50 of an airliner having dry toilets with disposable lining material.
  • the liquid waste from one or more toilets is collected in a holding tank 52 which is drained into a mobile tank 54 on a service vehicle by attaching a hose 56 and opening a valve 58.
  • the solid toilet waste enclosed in wads 32 of compressed lining sheet 12 and stored in pipes 30 is removed by connecting a source of air under pressure supplied through hose 60 to a fitting 62 on the fuselage 50. Pressurised air is then conducted through tubing 64 into the air inlet tube 38 of each toilet to be emptied.
  • the air pressure pushes the wads 32 through the pipes 30 into a central manifold chamber 66 having a bottom cover 68 which is opened to allow the wads 32 to drop into a collection bag 70 on the service vehicle.

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Vehicle Waterproofing, Decoration, And Sanitation Devices (AREA)
  • Detergent Compositions (AREA)

Abstract

A system for the removal of waste from dry toilet bowls (10) and other containers having disposable liner sheet (12) consisting of apparatus (16, 18, 20, 36) for forming elastic wads (32) from lengths of liner sheet (12) containing waste and for inserting the wads (32) through a port (28) into a pipe (34) and means (38) for introducing air pressure into the pipe (34) near the port (28) to propel the wads (32) along the pipe (34) towards the pipe exit (40).

Description

WASTE REMOVAL METHOD for DRY TOILETS
Technical Field
This invention relates to a method of waste removal to be used with dry toilets with disposable bowl lining material. Background
Toilets which cannot be connected to sewer mains or sewage treatment equipment usually have storage tanks which hold the accumulated waste until such time as it is convenient to pump the waste into a tanker truck for transport to another location where sewage processing is available. This is a common procedure for mobile toilets as for example toilets installed in commercial airliners. Airliner toilets flush by using recirculated chemically treated waste water or by using a small amount of fresh water assisted by the pull of a vacuum. The waste is either stored in tanks beneath each toilet or in remote tanks which hold the waste from several toilets. These tanks can be accessed through connections in the service panels underneath the plane. When the plane is serviced the waste water is drained or pumped into a tanker truck connected at the service panels.
The weight of water used to flush toilets and the weight of the associated tanks and pipes is undesirable in an aircraft since it reduces the available pay load. The weight of water used in each recirculating airline toilet is approximately 68 kg. The weight of water required to operate a vacuum toilet during a long flight is approximately 41 kg. A dry toilet which 'flushes' using a thin bowl liner film as described in International Application No. PCT/US95/03004 uses no water but instead uses 5 grams of plastic film per flush or approximately 0.6 kg during a long flight. In an airliner with ten toilets this could result in an approximate weight saving of 400 to 700 kg. There would also be additional weight savings from the ehrriination of equipment required to handle and store waste water.
The weight saving advantage of a dry toilet is offset by the difficulty of removing the toilet waste conveniently from positions outside the plane. The dry toilet waste combined with plastic film will not ordinarily flow through pipes to the service panel locations. In the absence of flushing water the film as well as other solid waste will cling to the walls of a pipe and will not be easily dislodged by gravity or by airflow. Disclosure of Invention
The inability of dry toilet waste to flow through pipes can be overcome by the present invention which provides a means by which waste from a dry, film-lined toilet can be processed so as to be readily transmitted through pipes to remote locations without the use of water. This is accomplished by apparatus which compresses the liner material and the solid waste from each flush into a wad which expands when inserted into the pipe. This expanded wad can be pushed along the pipe by the next wad and in turn by subsequent wads that are inserted in the pipe behind it. If the expanded wad conforms well to the sides of the pipe it will form a seal allowing the wads to be pushed through the pipe by air pressure. To form an effective air seal and be transmissible through pipe by air pressure the wad must have elasticity so that it can hold its shape and maintain light contact against the walls of the pipe. This elasticity results from the mechanical properties of the thin liner material which surrounds the solid waste and which when crumpled forms the bulk of the wad. For example, a rubber material would have too much elasticity and would unravel whereas metal foil would have too little elasticity and would not expand. A material such as high density polyethylene film has been found to be sufficiently deformable to retain the wad shape and has enough residual elastic expansion to effect an air seal.
A wad containing any significant amount of free liquid waste could collapse from the pressure of the liquid and lose its ability to seal the pipe. Therefore the toilet apparatus that forms the wad must first have means to drain liquid waste from within the liner before the wad is formed. This could be done firstly with a toilet bowl having a sloped bottom portion, as shown in PCT/US95/03004, into which liquid waste can drain away from the solid waste and then secondly, if necessary, by cutting the leading end of the liner sheet to allow the liquid waste to flow out of the liner and into a separate drain.
To form the wad the soiled liner is conveyed into a piston chamber which is then enclosed to allow the piston to compress the liner containing the solid waste into a wad which when pushed further into the end of the adjoining pipe expands to fill the cross section of the pipe. Simultaneously the wad portion of the liner is cut free from that portion of the liner still in the bowl.
The mechanical piston force or alternatively the amount of differential air pressure required to move the wads through the pipe depends upon the total friction force that the accumulated wads have against the walls of the pipe. For a pipe that goes upward the effective weight of the wads would be added to the total friction force. For a pipe going downward the effective weight of the wads would subtract from the friction force.
It can be desirable to minimise the fiction force to obtain the maximum storage capacity within the pipe without requiring high air pressure to move the accumulated waste material when the pipe is to be emptied. The friction force that resists the motion of the wad along the pipe is proportional to the perpendicular force that the expanded wad exerts against the wall of the pipe. This can be minimised by using a pipe with a cross section no smaller than necessary to contain the fully expanded wad. Alternatively, the elastic properties of the wad and its expanded size can be changed by altering the dimensions of the piston chamber and the exit port from the piston chamber into the pipe. As the accumulated friction in the pipe builds up then the compressed elasticity of the wads within the pipe may tend to force a portion of the last inserted wad back into the piston chamber thus reducing chamber capacity. This effect can be reduced by incorporating into the wall of the exit port or into the wall of the pipe protruding surfaces which are angled to produce high resistance to the backward motion of the wads but little resistance to the forward motion.
In an airliner the pipe can be designed to hold all the toilet waste accumulated during a long journey. At the end of the journey the waste could be quickly pushed out of the pipe by low pressure air and into a bag on the service vehicle positioned beneath the plane. To reduce servicing time a quantity of toilets could be connected to a single manifold and be emptied simultaneously. The separated liquid waste from a quantity of toilets could be stored in a single tank from which it could be drained into another tank on the service vehicle. The solid waste is largely combustible material with mmirnal moisture content and therefore is readily incinerated. The liquid waste has very Uttle solid content and has no added biocides and therefore could be disposed of in any foul water drain without interfering with biologically based sewage treatment processes.
According to a preferred aspect of the present invention there is provided a waste removal system for dry toilets with disposable bowl lining material comprising, a pipe having an entrance end and an exit end, apparatus at the entrance end for the insertion into the pipe of a compressed wad of toilet bowl liner material containing toilet waste, the compressed wad having elastic properties which cause it to expand against the walls of the pipe and to push against any wads previously inserted into the pipe thus causing them to move along the pipe to the exit end, further apparatus to receive the liner material containing toilet waste and to form it into the compressed wad and means for removing liquid waste from within the lining material before insertion into the pipe.
Further according to a preferred aspect of the present invention there is provided a means for the air pressure within the pipe near the entrance end to be made greater than the air pressure within the pipe at the exit end and thereby pushing the intervening wads of toilet waste along the pipe towards the exit end and subsequently into a collection device.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a toilet system for aircraft and other vehicles comprising: a dry toilet with disposable bowl lining material, means for separating the liquid waste from the solid waste, means for compressing the bowl lining material containing the solid waste into wads, means for inserting the wads sequentially into a pipe, means for ejecting the wads from the pipe into a separate collection device and means for draining the liquid waste into a separate collection device.
Brief Description of Drawings
This invention will be further described by way of example only, by reference to the accompanying and purely diagrammatic drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a section view of the waste transmission pipe connected to the output end of a dry toilet having apparatus to compress the waste material into transmissible wads, and
Figure 2 is a section view of a waste removal terminal for aircraft toilets using the present invention.
Best Mode for Carrying Out Invention
A system for the transmission of waste from a dry toilet shown in Figure 1 has a toilet bowl 10 with bowl lining sheet 12 which when the toilet is flushed is conveyed from the toilet bowl 10 over an opening 14 in the topside of a piston chamber 16 and released so as to drop into the piston chamber 16. At the start of the flushing cycle a cover plate 18 lifts upward to clear the opening 14 while at the same time the piston 20 retracts to clear the piston chamber 16 for the receipt of soiled liner sheet 12 containing solid waste. The retraction of the piston 20 releases the end of the liner sheet 12, which was pinched between the piston 20 and the topside of the piston chamber 16, thus allowing the liquid waste which has collected by gravity flow in the sloped portion 22 of the toilet bowl 10 to flow out of the open end of the liner sheet 12 and into the bottom of the piston chamber 16 and from there through the filter screen 24 and into the liquid waste drain 26.
When the soiled portion of the liner sheet 12 has been released over the opening 14 in the piston chamber 16 then the cover plate 18 is lowered onto the opening 14 thus enclosing the soiled portion of the liner sheet 12 within the piston chamber 16. The piston 20 then advances through the piston chamber 16 to compress the soiled liner sheet 12 thus creasing and deforming the liner sheet 12 so that when pushed by the piston 20 through the outlet port 28 and into the pipe 30 the compressed liner sheet 12 will form a wad 32 which is still sufficiently elastic to expand and contact the perimeter wall 34 of the pipe 30. When the piston 20 is fully advanced the liner sheet 12 is pushed by the piston 20 against a knife edge 36 which severs the liner sheet 12 and detaches it from the wad 32.
Repeating the flushing cycle will result in further wads 32 being pushed into the pipe 30 and thereby pushing the preceding wads 32 further along the pipe 30. At any time air under pressure can be introduced into the pipe 30 through an air inlet tube 38. Any wads 32 that have accumulated forward of the air inlet tube 38 will be pushed by the air pressure towards the pipe exit 40. Alternatively, movement of the wads 32 along the pipe 30 could be accomplished by lowering the pressure of the air at the pipe exit 40.
The outlet port 28 has a perimeter wall shaped to present a smooth inclined surface 42 to a wad 32 being pushed into the pipe 30 and a sharp restricting edge 44 to a wad 32 being pushed back into the piston chamber 16 by the accumulated elastic and friction forces of a quantity of wads 32 stored in the pipe 30.
Figure 2 shows apparatus for removal of the toilet waste from a position outside the fuselage 50 of an airliner having dry toilets with disposable lining material. The liquid waste from one or more toilets is collected in a holding tank 52 which is drained into a mobile tank 54 on a service vehicle by attaching a hose 56 and opening a valve 58. The solid toilet waste enclosed in wads 32 of compressed lining sheet 12 and stored in pipes 30 is removed by connecting a source of air under pressure supplied through hose 60 to a fitting 62 on the fuselage 50. Pressurised air is then conducted through tubing 64 into the air inlet tube 38 of each toilet to be emptied. The air pressure pushes the wads 32 through the pipes 30 into a central manifold chamber 66 having a bottom cover 68 which is opened to allow the wads 32 to drop into a collection bag 70 on the service vehicle.

Claims

1. A waste removal system for dry toilets and other containers having disposable lining sheet comprising; an elongated pipe having an internal wall with an opening at an entrance end and another opening at an exit end, apparatus for the insertion into the opening at the entrance end of a compressed wad of liner sheet containing waste, the compressed wad having elastic properties which cause it to expand against the circumference of the internal wall of the pipe and to push against any wads previously inserted into the pipe thus causing them to be move forward along the pipe towards the opening at the exit end, further apparatus at the entrance end to receive the liner sheet containing waste and to form the liner sheet into the compressed wad and means for the air pressure within the pipe at the entrance end to be made intermittently greater than the air pressure within the pipe at the exit end to the extent that the wads within the pipe are propelled out of the opening at the exit end and into a collection device.
2. A waste removal system for dry toilets and other containers having disposable lining sheet according to claim 1 wherein there is provided a means for removing a substantial portion of the liquid waste from within the lining sheet before the lining sheet is inserted into the opening at the entrance end of the pipe.
3. A waste removal system for dry toilets and other containers having disposable lining sheet according to claim 1 wherein a portion of the internal wall of the pipe near the entrance end is provided with a protrusion, the protrusion having a first side facing towards the entrance end and a second side facing towards the exit end, the first side having an inclined profile to assist the forward passage of the compressed wads over the protrusion towards the exit end and the second side having an abrupt profile to resist the backward passage of the compressed wads over the protrusion towards the entrance end.
4. A system for removing toilet waste from vehicles comprising: apparatus to wrap discrete amounts of waste in lengths of sheet material and to compress the lengths of sheet material containing the waste into wads, an elongated pipe capable of holding a quantity of the compressed wads, the pipe having an internal wall of approximately uniform circumference, the Circumference of the internal wall being of such size that the wad will press against the internal wall and thereby restrict air flow through the pipe, the pipe having an entrance opening inside the vehicle through which the wads are inserted into the pipe and an exit opening through which the wads can be removed from the pipe, the exit opening being accessible through the outer wall of the vehicle and means for the application of air pressure to push the wads held within the pipe into a collection device.
5. A system for removing toilet waste from vehicles according to claim 4 wherein there is provided apparatus for the separation of that portion of the toilet waste which is substantially liquid from that portion which is substantially solid.
PCT/US1997/016787 1996-10-02 1997-09-22 Waste removal method for dry toilets Ceased WO1998014106A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU45854/97A AU4585497A (en) 1996-10-02 1997-09-22 Waste removal method for dry toilets
US09/269,445 US6101641A (en) 1996-10-02 1997-09-22 Waste removal method for dry toilets

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9620550.5 1996-10-02
GB9620550A GB2323103A (en) 1996-10-02 1996-10-02 Waste removal method for dry toilets

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1998014106A1 true WO1998014106A1 (en) 1998-04-09

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ID=10800824

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1997/016787 Ceased WO1998014106A1 (en) 1996-10-02 1997-09-22 Waste removal method for dry toilets

Country Status (3)

Country Link
AU (1) AU4585497A (en)
GB (1) GB2323103A (en)
WO (1) WO1998014106A1 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2000045690A1 (en) * 1999-02-03 2000-08-10 Lautofa Samuel Iuli Disposable dry toilet
DE202007012920U1 (en) * 2007-09-14 2009-02-19 Winter, Helmut Waterless toilet
WO2009033479A2 (en) 2007-09-14 2009-03-19 Winter, Michael Cloxi, the mobile toilet without water
CN101358732B (en) * 2008-09-26 2010-06-02 清华大学 A garbage feeding and preheating drying device
IT201800003707A1 (en) * 2018-03-19 2019-09-19 Glamping Italia S R L DRY SANITARY / WATER VESSEL WITH PNEUMATIC REFRIGERATED STORAGE IN A SINGLE SEPARATE BODY

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3457567A (en) * 1967-06-28 1969-07-29 Jeremy F Criss Human waste disposal system
US4209034A (en) * 1978-03-04 1980-06-24 Electrolex GmbH Backwater tank for a building connected to a vacuum drain facility
US4346002A (en) * 1979-09-04 1982-08-24 Petzinger Manfred W A Waterless vacuum toilet
US4561132A (en) * 1983-03-14 1985-12-31 Lew Hyok S Air-vac toilet
US5193231A (en) * 1989-05-03 1993-03-16 Elisabeth Stender Lavatory having a dispenser for excrement bags and control and excrement bag for this purpose
WO1994010893A1 (en) * 1992-11-13 1994-05-26 Innovation - Ingenierie - Integration - Systeme Waster recovery and storage device

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2304127A (en) * 1995-08-04 1997-03-12 Robert Douglas Hawkins Waste system for toilets

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3457567A (en) * 1967-06-28 1969-07-29 Jeremy F Criss Human waste disposal system
US4209034A (en) * 1978-03-04 1980-06-24 Electrolex GmbH Backwater tank for a building connected to a vacuum drain facility
US4346002A (en) * 1979-09-04 1982-08-24 Petzinger Manfred W A Waterless vacuum toilet
US4561132A (en) * 1983-03-14 1985-12-31 Lew Hyok S Air-vac toilet
US5193231A (en) * 1989-05-03 1993-03-16 Elisabeth Stender Lavatory having a dispenser for excrement bags and control and excrement bag for this purpose
WO1994010893A1 (en) * 1992-11-13 1994-05-26 Innovation - Ingenierie - Integration - Systeme Waster recovery and storage device

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2000045690A1 (en) * 1999-02-03 2000-08-10 Lautofa Samuel Iuli Disposable dry toilet
DE202007012920U1 (en) * 2007-09-14 2009-02-19 Winter, Helmut Waterless toilet
WO2009033479A2 (en) 2007-09-14 2009-03-19 Winter, Michael Cloxi, the mobile toilet without water
CN101358732B (en) * 2008-09-26 2010-06-02 清华大学 A garbage feeding and preheating drying device
IT201800003707A1 (en) * 2018-03-19 2019-09-19 Glamping Italia S R L DRY SANITARY / WATER VESSEL WITH PNEUMATIC REFRIGERATED STORAGE IN A SINGLE SEPARATE BODY

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2323103A (en) 1998-09-16
GB9620550D0 (en) 1996-11-20
AU4585497A (en) 1998-04-24

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