The present invention relates to a shoe sole according to the preamble of patent claim 1 and to a walking device with a shoe sole according to claim 13.
A special shoe sole structure for walking devices is known by the name “Masai Barefoot Technology”, MBT for short, and also known under the Swiss Masai label. A characteristic feature of the MBT is a form of sole that is rounded convexly in the walking direction, with an inserted soft heel part, known as the “Masai sensor”. The midsole has a reinforcing element—known as a “shank”—integrated in it, which reinforces the midsole in such a way that it is substantially flexurally rigid even in the portion thereof that is above the soft heel part. The shoe sole structure of the MBT walking device, deliberately soft and made to act in a destabilizing manner for this reason, means that the foot loses the hold and support that is characteristic of physiological locomotion. This has an impact on major parts of the postural and supporting musculature, because the body must now be actively kept in balance. On account of these constantly required minimal compensating movements and adaptations of the musculature of the foot in seeking to maintain a stable standing position, wearing MBT walking devices achieves the effect of performing a kind of permanent coordination training and works additional parts of the musculature of the skeleton. In particular, neglected muscles are trained, posture and gait pattern are improved and the body is toned and shaped. Furthermore, wearing MBT walking devices can alleviate back, hip, leg and foot ailments and joint, muscle, ligament or tendon injuries as well as relieve hip and knee joints. On the one hand, the MBT walking device leads to improved blood circulation, and consequently to the foot being heated up, and, on the other hand, the shoe sole has a considerable thickness, with correspondingly good thermal insulating properties. There is therefore a need to provide a shoe sole that is better able to remove heat.
There is also the same need for shoe soles of a different structure, in particular shoe soles for sport shoes. For example, shoes of the “ClimaCool” series from the Adidas company have air openings on the sole.
An object of the present invention is to provide a shoe sole that has improved heat removal properties.
This object is achieved by a shoe sole that has the features of patent claim 1.
A midsole body has at least one air inlet opening in the heel region, and air outlet openings in the midfoot region and/or in the ball/toe region. The air inlet opening and the air outlet openings are connected to one another by means of a ventilation channel. This is covered by a cover on the side of the midsole body that is facing away from the outsole—on the upper side of said midsole body. This cover is elastically compliant, in the direction of the outsole, when under load during walking. Since the cover is elastic, it returns to its original form again when the load is relieved.
Consequently, the rolling motion during walking inevitably causes a constant exchange of air in the shoe sole, which leads to improved heat dissipation. The air ventilation thereby enforced has the effect that air enters the shoe sole through the air inlet opening and leaves again at the air outlet openings, which counteracts a buildup of heated air under the foot.
The heated air in the ventilation channel is forced through the air outlet openings by the compression of the sole, or the cover thereof, when the heel is put down, in a way corresponding to the subsequent rolling motion. In the course of the rolling motion, the heel region is relieved of load, which leads to fresh air being sucked into the ventilation channel through the air inlet opening. A rolling motion that is optimal for this purely mechanical principle, and associated optimal air ventilation, are achieved with shoe soles according to claim 9. With conventional shoe soles, it is unlikely that such efficient air ventilation can be achieved.
Further preferred embodiments of the shoe sole according to the invention are specified in the further dependent patent claims.
The invention is explained in more detail on the basis of exemplary embodiments that are represented in the drawing, in which purely schematically:
Furthermore, the midsole body 10 has in a midfoot region 24 and in a ball/toe region 26 in each case five air outlet openings 28, both on the shoe sole inner side and on the shoe sole outer side. Seen in the walking direction L, the midfoot region 24 adjoins the heel region 16 and the ball/toe region 26 adjoins the midfoot region 24, each of these regions extending approximately over one third of the length of the shoe sole.
The air inlet openings 22 and the air outlet openings 28 are connected to one another by way of a ventilation channel 30 formed by a depression in the midsole body 10. This channel has in the heel region 16 a heel portion 32 with two legs 34 arranged in a V-shaped manner. Each of these legs 34 leads to one of the two air inlet openings 22. Adjoining the heel portion 32, the ventilation channel 30 has a distributor portion 36, the main channel portion 38 of which, flow-connected to the legs 34 of the heel portion 32, runs up to the ball/toe region 26, in the longitudinal direction of the shoe S. Seen in the direction at right angles to the longitudinal direction of the shoe S, the main channel portion 38 is offset with respect to the longitudinal center of the shoe in the direction of the shoe sole inner side 18, to run under the inner instep.
Branch channel portions 40 branch off from both sides of the main channel portion 38, each of these branch channel portions 40 running to one of the air outlet openings 28.
Both the air inlet openings 22 and the air outlet openings 28 have a width of preferably at least 4 mm and a length that is preferably at least twice the stated width. Correspondingly, the ventilation channel 30 also has, measured in a direction at right angles to the upper surface 42, on the footbed side, of the midsole body 10, with respect to said surface a depth of preferably at least 4 mm. The width of the ventilation channel 30 is preferably greater everywhere than the depth, preferably at least twice as great.
On the side of the surface 42, the ventilation channel 30 is covered by an elastically compliant cover 52, which is not shown in
The midsole body 10 has on its underside, which is facing an outsole 44, a heel recess 46, in which a soft heel part 48 is arranged. Seen in the longitudinal direction of the shoe S, this soft heel part extends from the rear portion 14 of the heel region 16 to approximately the middle of the midsole 12 and runs over the entire width of the midsole 12 with an at least approximately constant cross section in the form of a convex-convex lens. In the unloaded state, the soft heel part 48 and the midsole body 10 keep the outsole in a form in which it is rounded in a continuously convex manner in the longitudinal direction of the shoe sole S, as is generally known from MBT walking devices. The soft heel part 48 has a greatest thickness of about 20 mm. Correspondingly, the greatest thickness of the midsole body 10 is approximately 30 mm.
It should be mentioned at this point that the midsole body 10 has a peripheral bead 50, which protrudes in the upward direction with respect to the surface 42. On the one hand, this bead serves for fastening the midsole 12 to an upper 56 and on the other hand the aforementioned cover 52 is arranged in the depression delimited by the surface 42 and the bead 50.
The soft heel part is preferably produced from an open-cell polyurethane elastomer foam (PUR Shore 30 C) and the midsole body 10 from a polyurethane elastomer (PUR Shore 58 C) or an ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA); this applies to all the embodiments shown.
The elastically deformable cover 52 for the ventilation channel 30 is preferably formed by an insole 54, which is placed onto the upper surface 42 of the midsole body 10 and extends on all sides as far as the bead 50 or the upper that is fastened to the midsole body 10 and is lying against the bead 50.
The embodiment of the insole 54 that is shown in
A further embodiment of the insole 54 is represented in
The supporting elements 60 or the supporting strips 62 consequently form an elastically compliant supporting layer 64 for the carrier layer 58.
In the case of the particularly preferred embodiment of the insole 54 that is shown in
An exploded perspective representation of a preferred embodiment of the shoe sole according to
A ventilation insert element 68, which in
In the arc portion 72, which in the integrated state comes to lie in the rear portion 14 of the heel region 16, a respective air inlet tube stub 82 protrudes from the outer wall part 80 in the direction of the shoe sole inner side 18 and in the direction of the shoe sole outer side 20. These stubs are flow-connected to the main channel portions 38′ and their outer free ends form the air inlet openings 22.
Correspondingly, in the midfoot region 24 and in the ball/toe region 26, air outlet tube stubs 84 protrude from the outer wall part 80 in the outward direction. These, too, are flow-connected to the assigned main channel portion 38′, form the branch channel portions 40 and, with their free ends, form the air outlet openings 28.
The ventilation insert element 68 is preferably produced from TPU with a Shore A hardness of 85 by the injection-molding process.
The reinforcing element 86, which is likewise preferably produced by the injection-molding process, has an upper, tongue-shaped, plate-like carrying part 88 and a V-shaped supporting part 90, protruding from the latter in the downward direction. Both the carrying part 88 and the supporting part 90 are of a double-walled form, the two walls respectively being fixedly connected to one another by way of ribs 92. In the state in which it is integrated in the midsole body 10, the carrying part 82 lies close to the surface 42, as the midsole body 10 in
The supporting part 90 is likewise stably formed, the rear leg 90′, seen in the walking direction L, of the supporting part 90 being shaped in a way corresponding to the heel recess 46 and this rear leg 90′ meeting the front leg 90″ at the front end, seen in the walking direction L, of the heel recess 46, where it forms a tilting edge 94.
The prefabricated reinforcing element 86 and the prefabricated ventilation insert element 68 may be placed in a cavity of an injection mold for the injection-molding of the midsole body 10, injection of PUR Shore 58 C, for example, taking place after the mold has been closed for the purpose of molding the midsole body 10. In this case, the injection mold may have supporting ribs for the channel wall 74 and slides engaging in the air inlet tube stubs 82 and the air outlet tube stubs 84, in order to prevent the ventilation insert element 68 from being compressed during the injection-molding of the midsole body 10.
As a result of the exploded representation, the midsole body 10 shown in
Furthermore,
Around the periphery, the insole 54 is enclosed by the relatively high bead 50. The carrier layer 58 of the insole 54 is preferably formed in the manner of a footbed and is correspondingly adapted to the thickness of the supporting layer 64. Furthermore, the surface 42 has between the outer wall part 80 and the bead 50 a continuous strip-like surface part 42′, both on the shoe sole inner side 18 and on the shoe sole outer side 20, so that the supporting layer 64 is supported peripherally along the bead 50 by way of the reinforcing element 86 in a wide middle portion over the entire length of the midsole body 10.
In
In the heel region 16, the sheet-like reinforcing element 86 runs in the midsole body 10 along the heel recess 46 and, in the midfoot region 24 and in a rear portion of the ball/toe region 26, seen in walking direction L, it runs in the interior of the midsole body 10 at a distance below the ventilation channel 30. Since the wall thickness of the midsole body 10 between the heel recess 46 and the surface 42 is much smaller in the heel region 16 than in the midfoot region 24 and the ball/toe region 26, the insertion of the reinforcing element 86 known from MBT walking devices could lead to an inadequate depth of the ventilation channel 30 in the heel portion 32. This is particularly clear from
In the case of a shoe sole according to
During walking with a shoe sole shown in the figures and described above, when the heel region 16 is put down during a step, on the one hand the soft heel part 48 is compressed, which greatly reduces shocks on the user's body, and on the other hand the cover 52 in the heel region 16 is also deformed in the direction of the midsole body 10. This leads to a local constriction of the cross section that is delimited by the midsole 10 and the cover 52, or the carrier layer 58 thereof, and is filled with air. As a result of the rolling action on the ground, this constricted cross section is displaced in the walking direction L over the midfoot region 24 into the ball/toe region 26. This shifting of the constriction from the heel region 16 into the ball/toe region 26 leads to the expulsion of air from the ventilation channel 30 through the air outlet openings 38, whereas, after tilting about the tilting edge 94, or the tilting edge formed by the midsole body 10 at the front end of the heel recess 46, the cover 52 or the insole 54 is relieved of load in the heel region 16, which leads to a widening of the cross section again behind the constriction as a result of the elasticity of the cover 52 or the insole 54, whereby fresh air is sucked into the ventilation channel 30 through the air inlet openings 22. During walking, air is consequently made to pass through the midsole 12 in a ventilating manner on the basis of a purely mechanical principle. This warmed-up air is expelled through the air outlet openings 28 while fresh, cool air is sucked in through the air inlet openings 22.
If the cover 52 or the insole 54 is of an air-permeable form, cool air is also correspondingly forced against the user's foot.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08014825.7 | Aug 2008 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP09/05959 | 8/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 3/10/2011 |