This invention relates to a massage apparatus and, more particularly, to a massage device that employs shape memory wire as the moving elements.
The fact that there are many massage devices known in the prior art speaks to the need for massage mechanisms to augment and supplant traditional manual massages. The simplest devices consist of beads or smooth lugs strung on a plurality of cords and adapted to be used manually by holding the opposed ends of the assembly and dragging across the surface of the limb or body portion to be treated. Similar assemblies are designed as pads to be placed on chair seats or backs so that the user may sit against the beads or lugs and experience the protrusions of the objects pushing into the body portions in contact with the assemblies. These devices clearly are passive mechanisms that rely on the weight and movement of the user to gain the massage effect.
There is also known in the prior art a variety of massage mechanisms that are driven by electrical motors. Generally, these devices include cams or lugs mounted on shafts that rotates slowly to enable the lobes of those objects to slowly push into the flesh of the body portions impinged by the device. It is typically required to include a gear reduction system to transform the rapid rotation of the electrical motor into the necessarily slow rotation of the shaft. Such mechanisms are generally bulky and heavy, and therefore must be incorporated into a piece of furniture such as a dedicated “massage chair” or the like. Although mechanical massage devices are available as portable “massage pads” they tend to have substantial thickness in order to house the mechanisms, and therefore they occupy a substantial portion of the sitting space when used in an existing chair.
The most notable drawbacks of massage chairs are that they generate too much noise (the motors and gears in particular), they are not easily portable, due to their weight and bulk, and their massage motion can be experienced as repetitive, and as too forceful and aggressive. In addition, they tend to be costly, due to the extensive mechanical assemblies and electrical controllers.
The present invention generally comprises a massage apparatus that employs shape memory alloy (SMA) wire to create a massage effect when the SMA wires contract upon heating. The SMA wire operates through the mechanism of ohmic heating, and the waste heat developed by the wires is a synergistic element of the massage effect.
The massage apparatus includes a frame that is substantially rigid or slightly flexible and resilient, the frame defining a central opening, with a web of mesh cloth or fabric spanning the central opening. A plurality of SMA wire segments are extended to span the central opening directly adjacent to the cloth or fabric. Each wire segment may be housed in a tubing portion that protects the wire and modulates the heat emanating therefrom. The wire segments are joined at opposed ends to a power circuit that provides ohmic heating for the wires. The power circuit may include a current source and a programmable controller or the like that operates a MOSFET or similar power gating device. The controller may be programmed to pulse width modulate the current from the source to control the ohmic heating of the wires. As is known, the wires may be heated past their shape transition temperature, causing them to contract in length and to relax and extend when cooled.
A user of the massage device may rest a portion of the body (back, for example) against the mesh or cloth spanning the central opening. The SMA wires thus are caused to follow the curvature of the body portion and extend therealong. The wires may be actuated singly and sequentially, the contraction of each wire providing a compression of the body portion upon which it impinges. The compression is felt as a squeeze of the impinging flesh, and experienced as a massage stroke. At the same time, the heat required to activate the wire is conducted partially into the impinging flesh, providing warmth as well as a massage stroke. This process is substantially silent, unlike prior art powered massage devices.
The SMA wires may be operated sequentially to provide a massage “wave” that proceeds along the impinging flesh of the body portion, in a peristaltic manner. The massage wave may be directed so that it encourages blood flow in the body portion toward the heart, or for some purposes it may be reversed. The massage wave may also be directed laterally; that is, not necessarily respective of the blood flow direction.
The SMA massage device may be embodied as a portable device that is lightweight, so that it may be used in conjunction with an existing chair or bed. In addition, it may be used in a wheelchair to serve disabled individuals, and powered by a battery pack that is rechargeable. Likewise, the device may be employed in conjunction with aircraft or automobile and truck seats to treat drivers or passengers, and may be powered by the onboard vehicle power system.
Alternatively, the SMA massage device may be built into a chair as a portion of the chair back and/or seat construction, and may be powered by rechargeable battery pack or plug-in source. Likewise, the device may be incorporated in a bed construction.
The present invention generally comprises a massage apparatus that employs shape memory alloy (SMA) wire to create a massage effect. One embodiment of the SMA massage device comprises a portable assembly adapted for use with a wide range of existing chairs. As shown in
The combined effect of these curvatures of the frame 11, as shown in
The lumbar back massager includes a plurality of shape memory wire segments 21 (
As shown in
The segments 21 may be activated in any desired sequence; for example, they may be actuated serially and sequentially from top to bottom to provide a rolling, peristalsis-like massage motion. This sequence tends to provide a relaxing effect. Alternatively, the segments 21 may be actuated from bottom to top, tending to drive circulation toward the head and to be mentally stimulating to the user. Other sequences may be programmed into the power control circuit as desired. In addition, the segments may be activated in response to sensor input from biometric or neurometric sensors built into or attached to the mesh or fabric component 12.
In a preferred embodiment there are 2-6 SMA wires of 0.015″ diameter Flexinol™ each wire roughly 33″ long and terminated in a ‘lug’ 26 for ease of electrical connection. The SMA wires are preferably enclosed in a thin wall plastic tubing, such as Teflon™ or the like, to provide thermal protection so that the warm SMA wires do not melt the fabric or cause excessive heating that may be distracting to the user.
With regard to
Each wire may be heated for roughly 1.5-2.0 seconds using the microprocessor to provide signals that switch electrical current through the MOSFET switches. Voltage and duty cycle (if using Pulse Width Modulation) varies based on the desired effect and the exact length of the SMA wire. One desirable massage feeling is achieved by ‘rolling’ the compression of the mesh support from top to bottom: sequentially operating each individual SMA wire ‘zone’. There can be from 2 to 6 zones: each location targeted to provide compression independent of the adjacent zones.
Heating of the SMA wire is achieved by Joule heating, and the power source 31 may comprise batteries, AC adapters, automotive power circuits, or any other power source. In this case, the SMA wire segments are woven through or attached to the mesh 12 so that individual wires are constrained to provide motion largely normal to the woven mesh surface, and directly into the user's back muscle tissue.
The SMA wires can be wired in numerous configurations to provide optimal compression times vs desired force (which varies with wire diameter, and greater forces can be applied with larger wire diameters). Larger current is required for larger SMA wire diameters, and higher voltages are required for longer SMA wire lengths. Wires can be operated individually, in series, or in parallel, or combinations of these. As shown, the 4 ‘zones’ are actually created using only 2 SMA wires of roughly 66″ total length, with a center Ground-wire connection, and positive voltage applied at opposite ends of the wire.
More SMA wire zones can be added to create a rolling compression wave along the entire length of the mesh support. A ridged steel wire of roughly 0.125″ diameter of the frame 11 maintains the complex form of the fabric, allowing the SMA actuator to return under the spring restoring force of the taut fabric and the steel wire upon removal of current.
The rolling compression waves also produce heat, which is a very desirable ‘side effect’ of the SMA actuation, and the amount of heat generated can be controlled using additional layers of fabric, heating and cooling time controls, protective Teflon or other tubing thickness, and other means.
The wire segment arrangement shown in
The massage device of the invention may be embodied as a standalone assembly, or may be incorporated into any chair construction that provides a mesh or textile material forming a portion of the chair upon which the user supports a portion of the body. Likewise, the device may be embodied as an automobile accessory and used in conjunction with an automobile seat, with operating power provided by connection to a power port commonly available in most automobiles. The massage device may also be used in conjunction with aircraft seats in a similar manner.
It is also within the scope of the invention that sensors may be included within the device that permit temperature, SMA wire strain or stress monitoring, and other functions including tip/tilt sensors that may be utilized for safety purposes, for example.
With regard to
With regard to
When a voltage is applied between anchors 54a-54b, the SMA wire legs contract as described above with regard to previous embodiments; likewise, a voltage applied between anchors 56a and 56b will activate legs 53a and 53b. Due to the overlapping V arrangement, when a pair of overlapping V segments are energized simultaneously, large forces can be exerted on the frame, and consequently provide large normal forces to the mesh or fabric (to press into the back muscles of the user). Forces can be approximately doubled using this arrangement of SMA wires, providing a more forceful massage effect. The overlapping pairs of V segments 51 may be activated in a sequential manner, as described above, to provide a wave-like contraction moving through the massage device.
A further embodiment of the invention, shown in
The concept of SMA wires contracting and straightening and providing massaging motion to a mesh lumbar support frame can be further extended to a full body massaging ‘bed’. With regard to the embodiment in
With regard to
A plurality of SMA wire segments 111 are secured within the slipcover 101, and may comprise any of the arrangements shown in
The slipcover assembly 111 is placed over the chair back 102 by placing it in the open bottom end of the assembly 111, as indicated by the arrow and the dotted lines. The slipcover assembly is dimensioned to be received about the chair back 102 in a tight fit, so that the panels 103 and the SMA wire legs 112 and 113 extend generally taut across the chair back. The structural web components engage the side edges of the chair back 102 so that the SMA wire segments 111 are essentially anchored and span the chair back. Thus as a chair user leans back against the panel 103 and the chair back, the SMA wire segments 111 impinge on the back of the user and are positioned to apply a massage force normal to the back of the user. In addition, some of the heat of SMA activation is conducted to the back of the user, and the fabric of the panel 103 may be selected to attenuate that heating effect to whatever degree is desireable.
The foregoing description of the preferred embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed, and many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching without deviating from the spirit and the scope of the invention. The embodiments described are selected to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as suited to the particular purpose contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.
This invention may be embodied as a portable, lightweight, silent, electrically operated massage device for use with a wide range of existing chairs and other furniture. Alternatively, it may be embodied as a built-in device in chairs, beds, and similar furniture. It may also be used in conjunction with vehicle seating, such as automobiles, trucks, and aircraft, and in mobility appliances for disabled individuals who use wheelchairs and the like.
Not applicable.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2016/022852 | 3/17/2016 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/153917 | 9/29/2016 | WO | A |
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