This invention relates in general to artificial turf systems of the type used in athletic fields, ornamental lawns and gardens, and playgrounds.
Artificial turf systems are commonly used for sports playing fields and more particularly to artificial playing fields. Artificial turf systems can also be used for synthetic lawns and golf courses, rugby fields, playgrounds, and other similar types of fields or floor coverings. Artificial turf systems typically comprise a turf assembly and a foundation, which can be made of such materials as asphalt, graded earth, compacted gravel or crushed rock. Optionally, an underlying resilient base or underlayment layer may be disposed between the turf assembly and the foundation. The turf assembly is typically made of strands of plastic artificial grass blades attached to a turf backing. An infill material, which typically is a mixture of sand and ground rubber particles, may be applied among the vertically oriented artificial grass blades, typically covering the lower half or ⅔ of the blades.
This invention relates to a turf underlayment layer configured to support an artificial turf assembly. The underlayment layer comprises plurality of panels, each panel comprising a core with a top side and a bottom side. The top side has a plurality of top projections. The top projections form top side water drainage channels. The panels have edges, with the edges of one panel abutting the edges of adjacent panels, thereby forming a drainage path between adjacent panels. The panel edges have vertical support extensions that extend into the drainage paths between adjacent panels. The vertical support extensions have an upper surface for supporting an artificial turf assembly overlying the turf underlayment layer, and the panel edges having one or more complementary indentations corresponding to vertical support extensions of adjacent panels. When the panels move toward each other, thereby closing drainage paths between adjacent panels, the vertical support extensions are received in the corresponding indentations.
According to this invention, there is also provided a turf underlayment layer for supporting an artificial turf assembly. The turf underlayment layer includes a plurality of panels assembled together. Each panel includes a core, a top side having a plurality of projections, and a bottom side, the top projections forming top side water drainage channels. The panels have edges, with the edges of one panel abutting the edges of adjacent panels. The panel edges have a non-linear shape, with the non-linear shape of the panel edges being complementary to the non-linear, non-interlocking shape of adjacent panel edges. At least one of the panel edges has one or more drainage projections, the drainage projections spacing the abutting panel edges apart, with the resultant spacing of the edges of abutting panels forming a drainage path at the intersection of the abutting panels. The drainage paths are non-linear because of the non-linear shape of the panel edges.
According to this invention, there is also provided a turf underlayment panel suitable for assembly with additional turf underlayment panels to form a turf underlayment layer for supporting an artificial turf assembly. The turf underlayment includes a core, a top side having a plurality of top projections, and a bottom side, the top projections forming top side water drainage channels. The panels have edges, with the edges suitable for abutting the edges of adjacent panels, thereby forming a drainage path between adjacent panels. The edges of the panel have vertical support extensions that extend from the panel, the vertical support extensions having an upper surface for supporting an artificial turf assembly overlying the panel. At least one of the panel edges has one or more complementary indentations corresponding to vertical support extensions of adjacent panels, wherein when the panel is assembled with an adjacent panel, the vertical support extensions can be received in indentations in the adjacent panel.
Various aspects of this invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment, when read in light of the accompanying drawings.
The artificial turf system shown in
The artificial turf assembly 12 includes strands of synthetic grass blades 20 attached to a turf backing 22. An optional infill material 24 may be applied to the grass blades 20. The synthetic grass blades 20 can be made of any material suitable for artificial turf, many examples of which are well known in the art. Typically, the synthetic grass blades are about 5 cm in length although any length can be used. The blades 20 of artificial grass are securely placed or tufted onto the backing 22. One form of blades that can be used is a relatively wide polymer film that is slit or fibrillated into several thinner film blades after the wide film is tufted onto the backing 22. In another form, the blades 20 are relatively thin polymer films (monofilament) that look like individual grass blades without being fibrillated. Both of these can be colored to look like blades of grass and are attached to the backing 22.
The backing layer 22 of the turf assembly 12 is typically water-porous by itself, but is often optionally coated with a water-impervious coating 26A, such as for example urethane, for dimensional stability of the turf. In order to allow water to drain vertically through the backing 22, optionally the backing can be provided with spaced apart holes 25A. In an alternative arrangement, the water impervious coating is either partially applied, or is applied fully and then scraped off in some portions, such as drain portion 25B, to allow water to drain through the backing layer 22. The blades 20 of grass fibers are typically tufted onto the backing 22 in rows that have a regular spacing, such as rows that are spaced about 2 centimeters to about 4 centimeters apart, for example. The incorporation of the grass fibers 20 into the backing layer 22 sometimes results in a series of spaced apart, substantially parallel, urethane coated corrugations or ridges 26B on the bottom surface 28 of the backing layer 22 formed by the grass blade tufts. Ridges 26B can be present even where the fibers are not exposed.
The optional infill material 24 of the turf assembly 12, when applicable, is placed in between the blades 20 of artificial grass and on top of the backing 22. If the infill material 24 is applied, the material volume is typically an amount that covers only a bottom portion of the synthetic grass blades 20 so that the top portions of the blades stick out above the infill material 24. The typical purpose of the optional infill material 24 is to add stability to the field, improve traction between the athlete's shoe and the play surface, and to improve shock attenuation of the field. The infill material 24 is typically sand 24A or ground up rubber particles or synthetic particulate 24B or mixtures of these, although other materials, including natural material, can be used.
When the backing layer 22 has holes 25A or a porous section 25B for water drainage, then some of the infill material 24 is able to wash or filter through the backing layer porous section 25B or the backing layer drainage holes 25A and onto the turf underlayment layer 14. This infill migration, or migration of the infill constituents, is undesirable because the depletion of the infill material 24 results in a field that doesn't have the initially designed stability and firmness characteristics. Excessive migration of the infill material 24, or the infill constituent components, to the turf underlayment layer 14 can create a hard layer which makes the whole turf system less able to absorb impacts.
The turf underlayment layer 14 is comprised of expanded polyolefin foam beads, which can be expanded polypropylene (EPP) or expanded polyethylene (EPE), or any other suitable material. The foam beads are closed cell (water impervious) beads. In one optional method of manufacture, the beads are originally manufactured as tiny solid plastic pellets, which are later processed in a controlled pressure chamber to expand them into larger foam beads having a diameter within the range of from about 2 millimeters to about 5 millimeters. The foam beads are then blown into a closed mold under pressure so they are tightly packed. Finally, steam is used to heat the mold surface so the beads soften and melt together at the interfaces, forming the turf underlayment layer 14 as a solid material that is water impervious.
Other methods of manufacture can be used, such as mixing the beads with an adhesive or glue material to form a slurry. The slurry is then molded to shape and the adhesive cured. The slurry mix underlayment may be porous through the material thickness to drain water away. This porous underlayment structure may also include other drainage features discussed below.
The final EPP material can be made in different densities by starting with a different density bead, or by any other method. The material can also be made in various colors. The resulting underlayment structure, made by either the steam molding or the slurry mixing processes, may be formed as a water impervious underlayment or a porous underlayment. These resulting underlayment layer structures may further include any of the drainage, deflection, and interlocking features discussed below.
In the embodiment illustrated in
Optionally the bottom side 36 includes a plurality of bottom side drainage channels. Also, optionally, the underlayment panel 14 includes drain holes 37 connecting the top side water drainage channels to the bottom side water drainage channels for fluid communication between the panel top side 34 and bottom side 36.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As can be seen in
An optional feature of the underlayment panels is one or more drainage projections 48 that extends from the edge of the panels 32A, 32B, 32C, and 32D. The drainage projections 48 maintain the separation of adjacent panels from each other, thereby helping to define the width of the drainage path 39. The drainage projections are crushable so that they can accommodate movement of adjacent panels toward each other when caused by thermal expansion or other forces or mechanisms. In contrast to the vertical support extensions 40, the drainage projections 48 do not have corresponding recesses 44 in the adjacent panel.
There is another mechanism that can be used to support the turf assembly 12 and prevent it from sagging or dropping into the drainage path. As shown in
The principle and mode of operation of this invention have been explained and illustrated in its preferred embodiment. However, it must be understood that this invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically explained and illustrated without departing from its spirit or scope.
This application is a continuation patent application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/667,072, filed Oct. 29, 2019; now U.S. Pat. No. 11,111,636, issued Sep. 7, 2021. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/667,072 is a continuation patent application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/114,858, filed Aug. 28, 2018; now U.S. Pat. No. 10,458,075, issued Oct. 29, 2019. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/114,858 is a continuation patent application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/157,528, filed May 18, 2016; now U.S. Pat. No. 10,060,082, issued Aug. 28, 2018. The disclosure of these applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
8236392 | Sawyer | Aug 2012 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20210395956 A1 | Dec 2021 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 16667072 | Oct 2019 | US |
Child | 17468140 | US | |
Parent | 16114858 | Aug 2018 | US |
Child | 16667072 | US | |
Parent | 15157528 | May 2016 | US |
Child | 16114858 | US |