1. Field
This disclosure relates to chair mats designed for use in both a seated position and a standing position.
2. Background
The need for vertical adjustment of a work surface for a work desk has long been recognized. Both the productivity and the comfort level of the user are increased if the height of the work surface can be adjusted to fit the needs of a particular individual. Elaborate arrangements for such height adjustments have long been prevalent in such diverse areas as operating tables and drafting tables. For some jobs the ability to switch between the standing and sitting position acts to relieve fatigue and improve productivity. If a work desk is to be adapted for use in both the standing and the sitting position, it is necessary to make a substantial vertical adjustment of the height of the work surface. Along with any adjustment in the height of the work surface, the switch between the standing and sitting position places different support demands on the worker.
Conventional work desk seating typically is supplied by a cushioned chair or stool that includes a spider floor support including a plurality of casters to allow for some movement of the seating device relative to the work desk. Often a desk chair mat is provided to facilitate that movement. While such a chair mat can be rectangular or square, some chair mats can have a main portion on which the desk chair rolls, and can include a forward lip portion which is adapted to extend partially into a desk well, and on which the feet of the person sitting in the chair can rest. A desk chair mat that is to be applied over carpeting is typically formed of a semi-rigid to rigid plastic, and has an array of short spikes on an underside thereof, which hold the mat firmly in place on the carpeting. While desk chair mats can be made without any such spikes, such mats tend to move relative to the carpet in response to movement of any desk chair on the top surface of the mat. Thus a carpet-engaging structure can be deemed desirable to achieve satisfactory performance on carpet surfaces, but may be unnecessary when used on smooth surfaced floors.
As indicated previously, most desk chair mats are formed of a semi-rigid to rigid plastic, which provides the desirable upper surface for easy movement of the casters or other rollers supporting a desk chair spider, but can be undesirably uncomfortable for any prolonged standing. Thus, there remains a need for a desk chair mat especially suited for use in both the sitting and standing position, particularly in conjunction with work desks adapted for use in both the standing and the sitting position.
A chair mat especially designed for use in both a sitting and standing position can be formed of a substantially rigid base having an upper surface and a lower surface. A fold line can be provided to separate a first portion of the base from a second portion of the base. A resilient cushion can be disposed on only a lower surface of the second portion of the base. The second portion can be movable about the fold line relative to the first portion between a first position where the cushion is downwardly facing and a second position where the cushion is upwardly facing. When the second portion is in the first position where the cushion is downwardly facing, the substantially rigid base can present a substantially continuously smooth upper surface providing for easy movement of any casters or other rollers supporting a desk chair spider. When the second portion is in the second position where the cushion is upwardly facing, the cushion can provide a compressible yet resilient portion that facilitates a comfortable standing working position for prolonged periods of time.
In one embodiment, the base can be a unitary one-piece sheet of molded plastic. The lower surface of the first portion of the base can be generally planar so as to be suitable for use on a smooth surface floor, such as tile or wood, or a roughened surface floor, such as a carpet. Optionally, the lower surface of the first portion of the base can include a plurality of ribs for use to engage either a roughened surface floor such as a carpet, or a smooth surface floor, such as tile or wood to minimize slippage. As another option, the lower surface of the first portion of the base can include carpet-engaging protrusions for use on a carpeted floor. In an example embodiment, the fold line can be included as part of the base, and can be formed by one or more regions of lesser thickness than the rest of the base, which will facilitate the displacement of the second portion relative to the first portion. In other embodiments, other forms of hinge mechanism can be used to facilitate the displacement of the second portion relative to the first portion. The base can be formed for example from any convenient semi-rigid or rigid plastic, such as PVC, polypropylene and other thermoplastics.
In an embodiment, the cushion can exhibit a 25% compression deflection in the range of between 30 and 35 psi. In an embodiment, the cushion can be secured to the lower surface of the second portion of the base for example by cementing, ultrasonically bonding or other similar fixed attachment, or by removable bonding materials such as strips, such as Velcro strips. In embodiments, the cushion can be formed, for example, from a foam polymer selected from TPU, EVA, PE, PP, PVC, and natural or synthetic rubber, with or without a protective or decorative skin coating. The cushion can also be formed from a plastic article mechanically designed to produce the desired compression deflection, selected from a material comprising PVC, EVA, Olefin, TPU, and natural or synthetic rubber, or alloys of the same. Alternatively, or in addition, the cushion can be formed to include an internal cavity within which a liquid, such as water or gel, and/or a gas, such as air, may be contained. The cushion can also be formed to be integral with the base, such as being formed between plys of a multi-ply thermoplastic base.
A feature of the chair mat is the dimensioning and positioning of the fold line so that it generally underlies a front edge of the desk with which it is used. This positioning has the advantage to allowing the user of such a chair mat to transform between the sitting position and the standing position without moving the first portion of the chair mat relative to the floor.
Another feature of the chair mat is embodiments of the fold line that include ribs and/or a foot. The ribs and the foot can be formed as integral part of the fold line, and/or the base to provide supporting structural members for the fold line to substantially maintain the positioning of the fold line with respect to the floor surface as a downward force is applied in the vicinity of the fold line by another object, such as a roller of a desk chair, and/or a human. The ribs can provide additional rigidity to the base so that the base does not bow, sag, or warp. The foot provides a rigid structural member contacting the floor in the vicinity between fold line and the cushion so that the cushion does not compress between the floor and the portion of the base adjacent to the foot, thereby avoiding undesirable displacement of the base towards the floor due to compression of the cushion adjacent to the fold line.
The above, as well as other features and advantages, will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiments when considered in the light of the accompanying drawings.
With reference to all the drawings, the same reference numerals are generally used to identify like components.
The fold line 18 can be a hinge mechanism that allows bending to facilitate displacement of the second portion 22 relative to the first portion 20. Thus, in an embodiment where the base 12 is formed as a unitary one-piece sheet of molded plastic that includes the first portion 20 and the second portion 22, the fold line 18 can be formed to provide repetitive bending by having one or more creases or score lines included in the base 12. In an embodiment, the fold line 18 in the base 12 can be formed by one or more regions 25 of lesser thickness than the rest of the base 12, as illustrated in
The fold line 18 can include a foot 26 and one or more ribs 28. The foot 26 can be one or more rigid structures protruding from the lower surface 16 of the base 16. In the illustrated embodiment, the foot 26 is integrally formed with the base 16. In other example embodiments, the foot 26 may be one or more separate structures, which are fixedly coupled with the base 12, for example by cementing, ultrasonically bonding or other similar fixed attachment means. As illustrated in
The second portion 22 can be movable about the fold line 18 relative to the first portion 20 between a first position where the cushion 24 is downwardly facing, as shown in
As illustrated in
The base 12 can be formed by a unitary one-piece sheet of molded plastic. The lower surface 16 of the first portion 20 of the base 12 can be generally planar so as to be suitable for use on a smooth surface floor. Optionally, in an embodiment, the lower surface 16 of the first portion 20 of the base 12 can include a plurality of protrusions 38, as shown in
Optionally, in another embodiment, the lower surface 16 of the first portion 20 of the base 12 can include a plurality of ribs 40, as shown in
The cushion 24 can be formed, for example, from a foam polymer selected from TPU, EVA, PE, PP, PVC, and natural or synthetic rubber, with or without a protective and/or decorative skin coating; or from a molded plastic article mechanically designed to give anti-fatigue properties and produced from a material comprising PVC, EVA, Olefin, TPU, and natural or synthetic rubber, or alloys of the same. Alternatively, or in addition, the cushion can be formed to include an internal cavity within which a liquid, such as water or gel, and/or a gas, such as air, may be contained. The cushion can also be formed to be integral with the base, such as being formed between two or more plys of a multi-ply thermoplastic base 12.
In embodiments, the cushion 24 can exhibit a 25% compression deflection in the range of between 30 and 35 psi. In addition, in embodiments, the cushion 24 can be fixed, or secured, to only the lower surface 16 of the second portion 22 of the base 12, for example, by cementing, ultrasonically bonding or other similar fixed attachment, or by removable attachment using snaps or bonding strips such as Velcro. In the example of removable attachment of the cushion 24, different thicknesses of cushions 24 may be coupled with the second portion 22 of the base 12, to adjust the distance the cushion 24 extends away from the lower surface 16 of the second portion 22 of the base 12. Further, in embodiments where the cushion 24 includes a cavity, the cavity may include a nozzle or orifice that allows adjustment of the amount of liquid or gas present in the cavity. A user can change the amount of liquid or gas present in the cavity to adjust the compression deflection of the cushion 24. In addition, or alternatively, the distance that the cushion 24 extends away from the lower surface 16 of the second portion 22 of the base 12 may be adjusted by changing the amount of liquid or gas present in the cavity.
Adjustment in the distance the cushion 24 extends away from the lower surface 16 of the second portion 22 of the base 12 can allow for adjustment of the second portion for use in both the first position where the user sits, and in the second position where the user stands as illustrated in
While various embodiments have been described, it will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that many more embodiments and implementations are possible within the scope of the disclosure. Accordingly, the invention is not to be restricted.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/944,251, filed Feb. 25, 2014, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61944251 | Feb 2014 | US |