Conventional body supports are found in a wide variety of shapes and sizes, each of which is adapted for supporting one or more body parts of a user. As used herein, the term “body support” includes without limitation any deformable element or structure adapted to support one or more parts of (or the entire body of) a human or animal in one or more positions. Examples of body supports include but are not limited to mattresses, pillows, and cushions of any type, including those for use in beds, seats, and other applications.
Body supports are often constructed entirely or partially out of foam material. For example, polyurethane foam is commonly used in many mattresses, pillows, and cushions, and can be used alone or in combination with other types of cushion materials. In many body supports, viscoelastic material is used, providing the body support with an increased ability to conform to a user and to thereby distribute the weight or other load of the user. Some viscoelastic body support materials are also temperature sensitive, thereby also enabling the body support to change firmness based at least in part upon the temperature of the body part(s) supported thereon.
Polyurethane foam inherently has characteristics that define design limitations for manufacturers of body supports desiring to use the foam for particular applications. For example, some body supports include one or more layers of foam in which uniform characteristics of the foam throughout the thickness of the foam is not necessarily a design objective. Modifying the layers of foam to enhance physical and thermal properties could aid in making the foam layer(s) and/or body support suitable for a particular application. This is particularly the case when one or more of the layers of the body support include viscoelastic foam material, which can dramatically change firmness and shape in use.
Although the number and types of body supports constructed with one or more layers of foam continue to increase, including those having one or more layers of foam comprising viscoelastic foam, the capabilities of such materials, including taking advantage of their physical and thermal properties, are often underutilized. comprising viscoelastic foam, the capabilities of such materials, including taking advantage of their physical and thermal properties, are often underutilized.
Based at least in part upon the limitations of existing body supports and the high consumer demand for improved body supports in a wide variety of applications, new body supports and material modifications for body supports are welcome additions to the art.
In some embodiments of the present invention, a body support having at least one layer of reticulated or non-reticulated viscoelastic foam is provided, and includes at least one surface upon which a viscous gel has been applied to modify at least one characteristic of the viscoelastic foam.
Some embodiments of the present invention provide a method of producing a body support including the steps of directing one or more nozzles toward a surface of a layer of reticulated or non-reticulated viscoelastic foam, spraying a viscous gel from the nozzle(s) upon the surface of the layer of viscoelastic foam, and permitting the gel to set on the layer of viscoelastic foam. In some embodiments, this method further includes permitting the gel to penetrate the surface of the layer of viscoelastic foam to occupy an interior of the layer of viscoelastic foam to a desired depth below the surface.
Other aspects of the present invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
Before the various embodiments of the present invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that phraseology and terminology used herein with reference to order or importance (e.g., “first”, “second”, and “third”) are used herein and in the appended claims for purposes of description, and are not alone intended to indicate or imply relative order or importance unless otherwise specified.
A body support 10 according to an embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in
The body support 10 illustrated in
With reference again to the illustrated body support 10 of
The body support 10 illustrated in
Also in some embodiments, the viscoelastic foam of the body support 10 can comprise reticulated viscoelastic foam. Reticulated foam (viscoelastic or otherwise) is a cellular foam structure in which the cells of the foam are essentially skeletal. In other words, the cells of the reticulated foam are each defined by a plurality of apertured windows surrounded by cell struts. The cell windows of reticulated foam can be entirely gone (leaving only the cell struts) or substantially gone. In some embodiments, the foam is considered “reticulated” if at least 50% of the windows of the cells are missing (i.e., windows having apertures therethrough, or windows that are completely missing and therefore leaving only the cell struts). Such structures can be created by destruction or other removal of cell window material, or preventing the complete formation of cell windows during the manufacturing process of the foam.
With continued reference to the embodiment of
Viscous gel can be used to modify and enhance both the physical and thermal properties of the viscoelastic foam. The viscous gel applied to the viscoelastic foam provides a way of modifying the foam after its manufacture to increase desired properties of the viscoelastic foam and articles made from the viscoelastic foam, including without limitation an increase in the density of the article (by increasing the mass of the foam on which the gel is deposited), an increase in the bulk heat capacity or other property of the viscoelastic foam, and the like. The viscous gel can also or instead alter the softness or “feel” of the body support 10, such as in cases where the viscous gel cures or otherwise hardens to a significantly firmer and/or less flexible state.
In the illustrated construction of the body support 10, the viscous gel 32 is applied by spraying the viscous gel from one or more spray nozzles (not shown) directed toward the upper surface 12. In this manner, a substantially even and well-distributed coating of viscous gel 32 can be applied to the upper surface 12, and in some embodiments can penetrate to a depth within the viscoelastic foam at least partially due to the spray force. In these and other embodiments, the viscous gel 32 can penetrate to a depth within the viscoelastic foam based at least in part upon the porosity and/or pore sizes within the viscoelastic foam.
As used herein, the term “gel” refers to a gel elastomer—a highly viscoelastic polymer gel that is flowable prior to setting, and that assumes a deformable and elastic shape when set. The inventor has discovered that a polyurethane gel can produce excellent results in some applications. For example, the viscous gel 32 can be a polyurethane gel. In some embodiments, the viscous gel has a hardness of no greater than about 90 Shore OOO and no less than about 10 Shore OOO at room temperature (i.e., 21-23 degrees Celsius). In other embodiments, a viscous gel hardness of no greater than about 80 Shore OOO and no less than about 25 Shore OOO at room temperature can provide good performance results in a number of body support applications. In other embodiments, a viscous gel hardness of no greater than about 70 Shore OOO and no less than about 40 Shore OOO at room temperature can provide good performance results in a number of body support applications. All such measurements are made after any necessary set time of the viscous gel.
A desirable characteristic of some viscous gels used in embodiments of the present invention is the density of such gels, as the density of such gels can correlate to the overall elastomeric properties of the gels. In some embodiments, the viscous gel 32 has a density of no less than about 100 kg/m3 and no greater than about 1500 kg/m3. In other embodiments, a viscous gel density of no less than about 250 kg/m3 and no greater than about 1200 kg/m3 can provide good performance results in a number of body support applications. In other embodiments, a viscous gel density of no less than about 500 kg/m3 and no greater than about 1000 kg/m3 can provide good performance results in a number of body support applications. In yet other embodiments, a viscous gel density of no less than about 900 kg/m3 and no greater than about 1000 kg/m3 can provide good performance results in a number of body support applications. Also, in some embodiments, the viscous gel can have a complex viscosity of about 900 Pa at 1 HZ shear frequency and at 25° C. All such measurements are made after any necessary set time of the viscous gel.
In some embodiments, the viscous gel 32 is applied at or near room temperature (i.e., between about 15 degrees Celsius and about 20 degrees Celsius). However, in other embodiments, it may not be required to heat up the viscous gel 32 prior to applying the viscous gel 32 to one or more surfaces of the body support 10. However, it should be noted that in various embodiments, the viscous gel 32 can be applied within a broad range of temperatures above and below room temperature, such as between about 0 degrees Celsius and about 100 degrees Celsius.
The viscous gel 32 can be applied as a surface gel in some embodiments, and in other embodiments, the viscous gel 32 can penetrate the layer of viscoelastic foam into the interior of the viscoelastic foam to set and bond to struts of the viscoelastic foam cells. For example, in some embodiments, the viscous gel 32 permeates about 1-2 mm into the layer of viscoelastic foam. The amount of layer penetration can depend at least in part upon the properties of the viscoelastic foam used for the layer of the body support 10. For example, a deeper penetration (i.e., greater than 2 mm) can be provided in reticulated viscoelastic foam, whereas some non-reticulated viscoelastic foams provide little to no viscous gel penetration. In some embodiments, the viscous gel 32 penetrates the viscoelastic foam to a depth of at least about 5 mm. In other embodiments, the viscous gel 32 penetrates the viscoelastic foam to a depth of no greater than about 3 mm.
In some embodiments, spraying the viscous gel on the viscoelastic foam layer increases the density of the viscoelastic foam layer (by virtue of the fact that the gel increases the mass on or in the layer). In such embodiments, the density of the layer increases within the depth of viscoelastic foam penetrated by the viscous gel—in some embodiments without sacrifice of permeability of the viscoelastic foam layer. It will be appreciated that the gel can be spray-applied using one of many known spraying applications and systems.
In some embodiments, the viscous gel 32 acts as a medium to contain and transport other substances onto and/or into the viscoelastic foam, thereby further modifying the properties of the viscoelastic foam layer. For instance, and by way of example only, as shown in
The body support 110 shown in
In some embodiments, either or both layers 120, 126 are entirely or partially enclosed in a covering material (not shown), as described in greater detail above in connection with the illustrated embodiment of
The top layer 120 and the bottom layer 126 of the body support 110 comprise foam material, such as a polyurethane foam, latex foam, any expanded polymer (e.g., expanded ethylene vinyl acetate, polypropylene, polystyrene, or polyethylene), and the like, and can be reticulated or non-reticulated. In some embodiments, either or both layers 120, 126 comprise viscoelastic foam which can, in some embodiments, be temperature-sensitive to the body heat of a user, thereby changing in firmness in response to receiving the body heat of a user upon the body support 110.
The body 110 illustrated in
In some embodiments, a method of assembling the body support 110 illustrated in
As mentioned above, the body support 210 can have any number of layers of foam (and other materials, if desired) coupled together by an adhesive or cohesive bonding material, or in any other suitable manner. The body support 210 illustrated in
The description above regarding the viscous gel application (and manner of viscous gel application) to the top or underlying layers of a body support 10, 110 applies equally to the embodiment of
In the illustrated embodiment of
Although the invention has been described in detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments, variations and modifications exist within the scope and spirit of one or more independent aspects of the invention described.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Ser. No. 61/535,045, filed Sep. 15, 2011, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2012/055730 | 9/17/2012 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61535045 | Sep 2011 | US |