A. Field of the Invention
The invention is a mounting system for a clean room ceiling, a clean room ceiling utilizing the mounting system and a method of installing a clean room ceiling utilizing the mounting system. The ceiling may be non-walkable. The ceiling of the Invention matches the appearance from inside the clean room of a more expensive walkable clean room ceiling and also presents a better opportunity for cleaning and disinfection compared to a conventional non-walkable clean room ceiling. The ceiling of the Invention provides for more flexible installation than prior art non-walkable clean room ceilings, with less opportunity for installation error and hence less opportunity for loss and waste.
B. Statement of the Related Art
Clean rooms are used to control the environment and prevent contamination of product, equipment, materials and processes in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, life sciences and technology industries. A clean room may take the form of a building-within-a-building, with a clean room envelope within a larger building envelope. The larger building protects the clean room from the elements, contains mechanical systems serving the clean room and may provide structural support to the clean room. The clean room provides a discrete space in which the operator can separately control the temperature, humidity, cleanliness and air pressure.
A non-walkable clean room ceiling is not adequately robust to support adult human beings walking on the top of the non-walkable ceiling, but is adequate to segregate the clean room from the rest of the larger building. A non-walkable clean room ceiling may require catwalks or scaffolding to allow human operators to access mechanical systems on the top of the clean room or to access the clean room structure itself. Conversely, a walkable-ceiling clean room system will support human beings walking upon the top of the ceiling. The non-walkable ceiling has the advantage of significantly reduced cost compared to a walkable ceiling.
Clean rooms may utilize ceiling panels having a composite construction, with each composite panel composed of opposing steel skins bonded to a crenelated aluminum core. For reduced weight and cost, the composite panels are constructed to be as thin as possible, consistent with the structural requirements of the ceiling. For a non-walkable clean room ceiling, the thickness of the composite panels generally is less than one inch.
Prior art non-walkable clean room ceilings are supported in a manner similar to the familiar suspended ceiling; namely, a grid of T-shaped beams hangs from the larger building structure and ceiling panels are supported at their periphery by the top of the T-shaped beams.
The prior art non-walkable clean room ceilings present disadvantages. First, the intersection of each ceiling panel and each T-shaped beam presents a raised discontinuity where biological contaminants, such as microorganisms, may find refuge and have a better chance of surviving chemical cleaners and disinfectants. Second, the bottom portion of each T-shaped beam is readily visible from inside the clean room, identifying the ceiling as a less expensive and less sophisticated non-walkable ceiling. Third, the intersection between each adjacent pair of composite panels presents two raised discontinuities corresponding to each side of the T-shaped beam, compared to the intersection of two adjacent ceiling panels of a walkable ceiling, which can present a single shallow groove.
The invention is a mounting system for a clean room ceiling, which may be a non-walkable clean room ceiling, a clean room ceiling utilizing the mounting system and a method of installing a clean room ceiling utilizing the mounting system.
In the mounting system and clean room of the invention, a grid of T-shaped beams is suspended from the structure of a larger building. Each T-shaped beam includes an upright portion and opposing horizontal legs. The opposing horizontal legs in combination define a bottom side of the T-shaped beam. Composite panels are attached to the bottom side of the grid of T-shaped beams so that the edges of the composite panels adjoin and so that the composite panels in combination define a substantially continuous ceiling surface as viewed by an observer inside the clean room. The T-shaped beam is completely covered by the composite panels and the T-shaped beams do not present raised discontinuities inside the clean room. The junction between adjacent composite panels is substantially smooth and flush. A person inside the clean room perceives the junction between composite panels as a single shallow groove.
Because of the lack of raised discontinuities in the clean room ceiling, the mounting system of the invention results in a clean room ceiling that is easier to disinfect and that is more secure from biological contamination. The clean room ceiling also has the appearance from inside the clean room of a more expensive walkable clean room ceiling.
The top side of the composite panel may be attached to the T-shaped beams in any of several different means. For example, a channel may connect the composite panel to the T-shaped beam. The channel is attached to the top side of the composite panel. The channel defines a slot. A leg of the T-shaped beam is disposed within the slot and engages the channel. The leg of the T-shaped beam supports the channel and the channel supports the composite panel. The use of a channel defining a slot allows for float, or movement, in the location of the composite panel during installation, easing the task of installation and reducing the chances for error and waste during installation.
Fasteners or any other suitable attachment mechanism attach the channel to the composite panel. The fastener may comprise screws, rivets, staples, pins, adhesives, spring clips, thermal or chemical welding, soldering, brazing, or any other suitable fastener. As used in this document, the term ‘fastener’ means any mechanism known in the art to mechanically attach one object to another.
The channel may be a Z-channel. Each Z-channel features a first horizontal portion, a vertical portion and a second horizontal portion. The first horizontal portion is adequately wide to allow fasteners to join the first horizontal portion to the skin or core of the composite panel. The height of the vertical portion corresponds to the thickness of a leg of the T-shaped beam. The width of the second horizontal portion is adequate to engage the leg of the T-shaped beam. The Z-channel may be composed of steel, aluminum, a polymer, or any other material that may be attached to the top side of the composite panel and that has adequate strength to support the ceiling panel.
The Z-channel may extend substantially the length of a first edge of the composite panel. The use of the Z-channels along a first edge eases installation, allowing a single installer to install the composite panel to the T-shaped beams. The use of the Z-channel also hides the T-shaped beam, halves the number of junctions between ceiling components and allows adjacent ceiling components to be flush.
An elongated Z-channel is only one of multiple channel configurations that may support the composite panel from the leg of a T-shaped beam. The channel and slot may be defined by two or more shorter Z-channels in combination. The plurality of shorter Z-channels are separately attached to the top side of the composite panel and in combination engage the leg to the T-shaped beam and support the composite panel. Alternatively, the channel may not be a Z-channel and may have any other configuration that defines a slot when attached to the top side of the composite panel. As another alternative, the channel may define a slot only when the channel is in engagement with the leg of the T-shaped beam. For each embodiment, the channel may be composed of multiple smaller channels that, in combination, define a slot.
The channel and slot may be defined by a plurality of C-clips, with each of the C-clips attached to the composite panel. The top skin of the composite panel may define a plurality of openings corresponding to a location of the leg of the T-shaped beam. One arm of each C-clip may penetrate one of the plurality of openings, so that one arm of each C-clip is disposed between the top skin and the crenelated aluminum core of the composite panel. The engagement between the arm of the C-clip and the skin of the composite panel secures the C-clip to the composite panel.
As another alternative, the top skin of the composite panel may define the channel and slot. In this alternative, the top skin of the composite panel defines a plurality of tabs. An installer may separate each tab from the aluminum core of the composite panel to allow a leg of the T-shaped beam to fit between the tab and the remainder of the top skin. The installer may bend the tab to retain the tab, and hence the composite panel, to the bottom side of the T-shaped beam. The tabs alone may be sufficient to support the composite panel; however, to prevent the tab from disengaging from the T-shaped beam, the upright portion of the T-shaped beam may feature holes penetrating the upright portion. The installer may install pins through the hole penetrating the upright portion of the T-shaped beam. The pins prevent the tabs from deforming and releasing the legs of the T-shaped beam. As an alternative to pins, the installer may place one or more spring clips over the upright portion of the T-shaped beam. The spring clip prevents the tab from disengaging from the leg of the T-shaped beam.
Alternatives to the channels and slots described above may attach the composite panel to the bottom side of the T-shaped beam. For example, a plurality of spring pins may be disposed on the periphery of the top side of the composite panel. The location of each of the plurality of spring pins corresponds to the location of a pin-receiving slot in the corresponding leg of the T-shaped beam. Retention springs on the spring pins prevent the spring pins from unintentionally disengaging from the T-shaped beam. The long dimension of the pin-receiving slots may be parallel or transverse to the long dimension of the T-shaped beam to allow float in the installed composite panel. This alternative also allows the composite panel to be installed by one person from below.
As another alternative to the use of a channel, a curved spring may be disposed on the top skin of the composite panel proximal to the edge of the panel. The curved spring is configured so that when the composite panel is placed in engagement with the opposing T-shaped beams from below, a steeply curved portion of the curved spring engages the end of the leg of the T-shaped beam. Because of the steep curve, when the installer presses upward on the composite panel in the location of the curved spring, the leg of the T-shaped beam urges the curved spring laterally. When the widest portion of the curved spring clears the leg of the T-shaped beam, the spring tension returns the spring to its starting position and urges the composite panel against the bottom side of the T-shaped beam. This alternative also allows the composite panels to be snapped into place from below by a single installer.
In the method of the Invention, an installer will engage a slot defined by a channel on the top side of a composite panel to the corresponding leg of a first T-shaped beam, with the composite panel disposed on the bottom side of the first T-shaped beam. The engagement between the leg of the first T-shaped beam and the slot supports the composite panel below the first T-shaped beam. The installer then will place the top side of the composite panel in engagement with the bottom side of an opposing second T-shaped beam. The installer places one or more channels on top of the composite panel in engagement with the top side of a leg of the second T-shaped beam. The installer then attaches the channel to the top side of the composite panel. The first and second channels in cooperation secure the composite panel to the first and second T-shaped beams.
If other T-shaped beams intersect the top surface of the composite panel, as where the T-shaped beams are configured as a rectangular lattice, then other channels may be disposed on the top side of the composite panel to secure the composite panel to the other T-shaped beams.
While the edges of the composite panel may be parallel to the longitudinal axis of opposing T-shaped beams, other orientations of the composite panel are contemplated by the invention. For example, the composite panel may be secured to the T-shaped beams so that the edges of the composite panel are oblique to the longitudinal axes of the T-shaped beams. In addition, the T-shaped beam lattice is not required to be rectangular and may be of any shape, for example a parallelogram or irregular shape. The system of the invention therefore provides substantial flexibility in orienting and securing the composite panels to define the ceiling. The use of the Z-channels also allows for float in the location of the composite panels with respect to the T-shaped beams and provides adjustability of the location of adjoining panels.
Any of the above alternatives may be combined with any other alternative. For example, one side of a composite panel may be equipped with a fixed Z-channel attached by fasteners, while the other sides of the panel may be equipped with a curved flat spring.
The invention is a clean room ceiling system, a clean room ceiling 2 constructed using the system of the invention, and a method of constructing a clean room ceiling 2.
In each of the embodiments described in this document, T-shaped beams 6 are suspended from the building structure 8 and support the remainder of the clean room ceiling 2.
As shown by
From
The first and second composite panels 18, 20 include a top skin 26, an opposing bottom skin 28 and a core 30, shown by
From
In the embodiment of
From
As illustrated by
While the edges 22, 24 of the composite panels 18, 20 may be aligned with the T-shaped beams 6 as shown by
The flow chart of
The following is a list of numbered elements from the drawings.
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20030046892 | Albany | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20050142369 | Canady | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20060010812 | Jones | Jan 2006 | A1 |
20060064939 | Kelley | Mar 2006 | A1 |
20080229680 | Jahn | Sep 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170362829 A1 | Dec 2017 | US |