This invention relates to a cleaning device for cleaning surfaces to be cleaned, for example a floor surface such as a flooring, a plastic tile, and a tatami mat inside a building and the like, surfaces of furniture, and so forth. More particularly, this invention relates to a cleaning device capable of removing dust, sand, and the like having sizes exceeding a predetermined size that have been difficult to remove by using conventional cleaning methods.
An example of a conventional cleaning device is shown in
In such a cleaning device according to the prior art, however, the size of dust entrapped between the fibers of the cleaning cloth is limited, and dust and sand having sizes exceeding a predetermined size cannot be removed from the surface to be cleaned using the cleaning device. The present invention is directed to solving such a problem, and to providing a cleaning device capable of reliably removing not only small dust but also dust and sand having sizes exceeding a predetermined size from the surface to be cleaned.
In certain aspects of the present invention, a cleaning device is provided comprising a cleaning portion having a cleaning surface and an opposing surface opposite the cleaning surface, a support arm having a handle portion, a pivot for affixing the support arm on the opposing surface, wherein the cleaning surface of the cleaning portion comprises an adhesive surface and a cleaning cloth surface, and wherein the adhesive surface and the cleaning cloth surface can individually come into surface contact with a surface to be cleaned. The cleaning device may also include a stopper for restricting movement of the handle portion relative to the pivot. The cleaning cloth surface can contact the surface to be cleaned when the support arm is tilted within a predetermined angle relative to the surface having the pivot, and the adhesive surface can contact the surface to be cleaned when the support arm is tilted beyond the predetermined angle relative to the surface having the pivot.
In the cleaning device according to the present invention, the cleaning surface of the cleaning portion comprises the adhesive surface and the cleaning cloth surface. The cleaning device is generally used while the cleaning cloth surface is brought into surface contact with the surface to be cleaned. When large dust that cannot be collected by this cleaning cloth is to be collected and removed, the adhesive surface is brought into surface contact with the surface to be cleaned. A user can change from the cleaning cloth surface to the adhesive surface easily by tilting the support arm beyond a predetermined angle from the surface having the pivot.
The invention is described with reference to the following Figures, in which
Hereinafter, the present invention will be explained with reference to the drawings.
The holding plate 14 is made of a rigid plastic material such as an ABS resin, for example. The flexible member 15 is made of a flexible material such as a rubber or foamed urethane. Besides the non-woven fabric that has been used for cleaning devices in the past, the cleaning cloth 18 can use woven fabrics such as a dust-cloth and a knitted fabric. The adhesive surface 17 must have tackiness to such an extent that it can adhere to the dust or the like having a size exceeding a predetermined size. Therefore, an adhesive is applied to the surface, or an adhesive tape is bonded, to form the adhesive surface 17. These cleaning cloth and adhesive surface are preferably replaceable. Further preferably, they are individually exchangeable.
The support arm 11 is interconnected to the cleaning portion 10 by the pivot 12. Movement of the support arm 11 is restricted by the stopper 19 provided next to the pivot 12 within a predetermined angle θ from the surface having the pivot. In other words, the support arm is freely movable within the range of this angle θ, where the cleaning portion stays parallel to the surface 20 to be cleaned at any angle within this range, so that the cleaning cloth surface 18 keeps surface contact with the surface 20 to be cleaned.
The support arm 11 can be freely tilted within the range of the angle θ. However, when the support arm 11 is tilted beyond this angle θ, the stopper 19 restricts the movement of the support arm 11, so that the support arm 11 cannot be tilted beyond the angle θ. When the stopper arm 11 is further tilted against the stopper 19, the cleaning portion 10 is tilted as shown in
As described above, the cleaning surface 18 can collect fine dust between the fibers and can remove the dust. However, this cleaning cloth surface 18 cannot collect the dust greater than a predetermined size. Therefore, this cleaning cloth surface 18 is used for ordinary cleaning and when the large dust gathered by the cleaning cloth surface 18 is collected, the support arm is tilted so that the adhesive surface 17 can be brought into surface contact with the surface 20 to be cleaned and the large dust is caused to adhere to the adhesive surface and is removed.
Switching between the cleaning cloth surface 18 and the adhesive surface 17 can be easily made during the cleaning operation by merely changing the tilt angle of the support arm. While the cleaning cloth surface 18 keeps surface contact with the surface to be cleaned, the adhesive surface is out of surface contact with the surface to be cleaned. Therefore, the cleaning cloth surface can freely come into sliding contact with the surface to be cleaned and its movement is not impeded.
As shown in
As shown in
In the cleaning device having the construction shown in
In the cleaning device having the construction shown in
In the cleaning device having the construction shown in
A commercially available cleaning device, a product of Kao K. K., having the construction shown in
In a cleaning device having the construction shown in
Evaluation of Cleaning Performance:
On flooring (wooden floor) were scattered as the dust 0.3 g of bread crumbs, 0.2 g of paper pieces and 0.3 g of cotton dust. While the cleaning cloth surface was brought into surface contact with the flooring, the cleaning cloth surface of each of the cleaning devices produced by Examples and Comparative Examples was passed once on the dust. Then, while the support arm was tilted, the adhesive surface was brought into surface contact with the flooring and the dust was collected. The dust collection operation by this adhesive surface was carried out three times. Next, the weight of the dust adhering to the cleaning cloth surface and to the adhesive surface was measured, and the dust adsorption ratio was calculated by the following equation to evaluate cleaning performance. Incidentally, because the cleaning device of Comparative Example 1 was not equipped with the adhesive surface, the dust collecting operation by the adhesive layer was not conducted.
The result of evaluation of cleaning performance is shown in Table 1 and
It could be seen clearly from the result that the cleaning devices not equipped with the adhesive layer in Comparative Examples 1 and 2 exhibited lower cleaning performance with respect to the dust having large sizes such as bread crumbs and paper pieces than the cleaning devices of Examples 1 to 4, and could not sufficiently collect the dust.
In the cleaning device according to the present invention, the cleaning surface of the cleaning portion comprises the adhesive surface and the cleaning cloth surface individually capable of coming into surface contact with the surface to be cleaned. The cleaning device is generally used while the cleaning cloth surface is kept in surface contact with the surface to be cleaned, and the adhesive surface is brought into surface contact with the surface to be cleaned when a large dust that cannot be collected by the cleaning cloth are collected. Switching of the cleaning cloth surface and the adhesive surface can be easily achieved as the support arm is tilted by a predetermined angle from a surface having a pivot.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2000-365737 | Nov 2000 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US01/43514 | 11/16/2001 | WO | 00 | 5/30/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO02/43555 | 6/6/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3656202 | Paton | Apr 1972 | A |
4349933 | Thompson | Sep 1982 | A |
5280664 | Lin | Jan 1994 | A |
5596787 | Stevens et al. | Jan 1997 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2 233 882 | Jan 1991 | GB |
9-164110 | Jun 1997 | JP |
9-173261 | Jul 1997 | JP |
10-290770 | Nov 1998 | JP |
11-128156 | May 1999 | JP |
11-137503 | May 1999 | JP |
WO 0027271 | May 2000 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040025271 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |