Embodiments of the present disclosure generally relate to barrier structures, in particular, embodiments of the disclosure relate to a composite door system comprising a shell and a core.
Dwellings, buildings, or other like barrier structures, typically comprise doors, walls, floors, roofs, partitions, etc. Moreover, in many instances, it is desirable that the barrier structures provide safety, security, resistance from the elements, such as but not limited to providing protection from extreme weather conditions, unauthorized access by users, or the like. Hence, barrier structures are designed to withstand and resist a variety of physical impacts. There is a need for improved barrier structures, and in particular, improved door systems.
As will be described herein, the one or more composite door systems of the present disclosure may be utilized within a barrier structure, and may provide resistance to, and protection from, physical impacts, such as penetration from projectiles, as well as protection from fire, physical attacks, explosions, noise, medium and radio frequency radiation, etc. The composite door systems can be utilized in a variety of applications for barrier structures. The composite door systems may comprise a shell formed from a structural material, such as steel, other metals, composites, plastics, or any other material. The composite door systems may further comprise a core, which in some embodiments may be made of a composite material. The shell may be formed having a first face, a second face and a first side, as second side, and a bottom side operatively coupling the first face to the second face. The faces and sides may form a cavity in which a fill material may be provided. The shell may be manufactured and shipped to the installer or customer (e.g., to reduce costs during shipping), and the cavity of the shell may be filled on site with a liquid material that hardens into a solid material to form the core. As such, the top of the composite door system may be open to allow liquid material to fill the cavity within the shell. Alternatively, in some embodiments a top side may be provided that has one or more openings. The top side with the one or more openings may provide structural support to the shell (e.g., during shipping and filling of the cavity) while still allowing for liquid material to pass through the shell into the cavity. In some embodiments, the top side may comprise a plurality of openings. It should be understood that the first face, the second face, the first side, the second side, the bottom side, and/or the top side may be individual members (e.g., operatively coupled together, such as through a weld, or the like), or may be formed from one or more members (e.g., bent into the desired orientations and/or operatively coupled together, such as through a weld, or the like).
One embodiment of the invention comprises a composite door system. The composite door system comprises a shell comprising a first face, a second face, a first side member, a second side member, and a bottom side member. The first face, the second face, the first side member, the second side member, and the bottom side member form a cavity. The shell has one or more openings. The shell further has a fill material, wherein the fill material is provided through the one or more openings of the shell in a liquid material form and hardens to a solid form within the cavity.
In further accord with embodiments of the invention, the composite door system is a door.
In other embodiments of the invention, the shell further comprises one or more hardware housings operatively coupled to the shell. The one or more hardware housings are configured to resist flow of the liquid material. The one or more hardware housings are configured to receive hardware for the door.
In yet other embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings is a solid hardware housing. The solid hardware housing is machined in order to receive the hardware.
In still other embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings is a channel hardware housing. The channel hardware housing is formed from at least one side member of the shell.
In other embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings is a cased hardware housing. The cased hardware housing is configured to receive the hardware.
In further accord with embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings is a tubular hardware housing. The tubular hardware housing is configured to receive the hardware.
In other embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings is a plate operatively coupled the first face or the second face at a hardware location.
In yet other embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings further comprise one or more layers of projectile resistant material to provide additional projectile resistance where the hardware is located.
In still other embodiments of the invention, the hardware comprises mechanical hardware, electrified hardware, a lock, a handle, a hinge, a locking rod, a door closer, a door operator, an exit device, a mag lock, a camera, radar, a sensor, a detection device, a security device, a surveillance device, a knob, or a soft closing device.
In other embodiments, the invention, further comprises a top side member having a plurality of openings. The plurality of openings are configured to receive the liquid material and allow the liquid material to pass into the cavity.
In further accord with embodiments of the invention, the top side member comprises a channel with the plurality of openings. The channel is located between edges of the first face and the second face.
In other embodiments of the invention, the channel comprises a u-shaped channel formed form a web, a first flange, and a second flange, wherein the first flange the second flange are operatively coupled to the first face and the second face.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises a shell for a composite door system. The shell comprises a first face, a second face, a first side member, a second side member, and a bottom side member. The first face, the second face, the first side member, the second side member, and the bottom side member form a cavity. The shell has one or more openings, and the shell is configured to receive a liquid fill material through the one or more openings to form the composite door system when the liquid fill material hardens.
In further accord with embodiments, the invention further comprises one or more hardware housings operatively coupled to the shell. The one or more hardware housings are configured to resist flow of the liquid fill material. The one or more hardware housings are configured to receive hardware for the composite door system.
In other embodiments of the invention, the one or more hardware housings comprise a solid hardware housing, wherein the solid hardware housing is machined in order to receive the hardware. The one or more hardware housings comprise a channel hardware housing, wherein the channel hardware housing is formed from at least one side member of the shell. The one or more hardware housings comprise a cased hardware housing, and wherein the cased hardware housing is configured to receive the hardware. The one or more hardware housings comprise a tubular hardware housing, and wherein the tubular hardware housing is configured to receive the hardware. The one or more hardware housings comprise a plate operatively coupled the first face or the second face at a hardware location.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises a method of forming a composite door system. The method comprises forming a shell. The shell comprises a first face, a second face, a first side member, a second side member, and a bottom side member. The first face, the second face, the first side member, the second side member, and the bottom side member form a cavity. The shell has one or more openings. The method further comprises filling the cavity with a liquid material. The liquid material is provided through the one or more openings of the shell and hardens into a solid form within the cavity.
In further accord with embodiments of the invention, the method comprises shipping the shell after forming the shell to a site, and wherein the filling of the cavity occurs after the shell is received at the site.
In other embodiments, the filling of the cavity occurs at a facility that forms the shell, a distribution facility that ships the shell or the composite door system, or at an installation site.
In yet other embodiments, the method further comprises operatively coupling one or more hardware housings to the shell. The one or more hardware housings are configured to resist flow of the liquid material. The one or more hardware housings are configured to receive hardware for a door.
To the accomplishment the foregoing and the related ends, the one or more embodiments comprise the features hereinafter described and particularly pointed out in the claims. The following description and the annexed drawings set forth certain illustrative features of the one or more embodiments. These features are indicative, however, of but a few of the various ways in which the principles of various embodiments may be employed, and this description is intended to include all such embodiments and their equivalents.
Having thus described embodiments of the invention in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings.
The following detailed description teaches specific example embodiments of the invention; however, other embodiments of the invention do not depart from the scope of the present invention. The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “includes” and/or “including” when used herein, specify the presence of stated features, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.
As illustrated in
The sides and faces when operatively coupled together form a shell 80 having a cavity 114, and the cavity may be filled to create a core 90, such as filled using a fill material 140. The shell 80 may be made of any type of material (e.g., steel, plastic, composite, fiberglass, or the like). However, in some embodiments the shell 80 may be 24, 22, 20, 18, 16, 14, 12, 10, 8, or any other gage steel ranging between, overlapping, or falling outside of these values. In some embodiments, the fill material 140 may be a homogenous cementitious material (e.g., concrete, or the like), a composite cementitious material (e.g., including a mixture of cementitious material and/or other materials, such as fibers, foam, or the like). It should be understood that cementitious means any type of cement or other like material, such as traditional cement, fly ash, blast-furnace slag, limestone fines, aggregate, and/or other types of cementitious materials, alone or in combination with each other. The fill material 140, such as the composite cementitious material, may be much lighter than traditional homogenous cementitious material. For example, the fill material 140 may be 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, or the like percent lighter than traditional cementitious material, or range between, overlap, and/or fall outside of any of these values. It should be understood that the cementitious material may be inserted into (e.g., poured, or the like) into the cavity 114 in the form of a liquid fill material (e.g., completely liquid, liquid having particulates, and/or the like) which then hardens into a solid core 90.
The first side 106, second side 108, and/or bottom side 110 may be formed from members, which may have any type of shape, such as but not limited to a planer shape, a v-shape, u-shape, convex, concave, irregular, or any other type of shape. Moreover, it should be understood that regardless of the shape of the member, when the member is installed it may sit within the edges of the first face 102 and/or second face 104. As such, the members may form a channel 116 in any of the one or more of the sides 106, 108, 110, 112 of the shell 80. As illustrated in
Moreover, as discussed with respect to the bottom side 110, first side 106, and/or second side 108, the top side 112 may have any type of member of any shape, including any type of channel 116. For example, as illustrated by the cross-section view of the top side 112 of the composite door system 100 in
It should be further understood that in some embodiments the shell 80 may further comprises one or more support members to form a reinforced core (e.g., reinforced concreate core). The one or more support members may be vertical support members (as shown), horizontal support members (not illustrated), angled support members (not illustrated), or the like. The one or more support member may provide additional structural support for the composite door system 100. In some embodiments the one or more support members may be operatively coupled to the first face 102 and/or the second face 104 to provide additional support to the composite door systems 100. The one or more support members may be any type of shape, including, but not limited to z-shaped, c-shaped, L-shaped, truss shaped, corrugated shaped, tubular shaped (e.g., circular, oval, square, rectangular, or the like), non-uniform shape, or any other like shape. In some embodiments, the support members may be 22 gage z-shaped stamped steel members 232; however, it should be understood that any gage steel may be utilized (e.g., 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, or the like, or otherwise range between, overlap, and/or fall outside of any of the forgoing values). In some embodiments, the support members may be placed no more than 6 inches apart; however, in some embodiments, the support members may be placed 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, 16, 20, 24, or the like inches apart, or otherwise range between, overlap, and/or fall outside of any of the forgoing values. The one or more support members may be operatively coupled to the first face 102 and/or second face 104 through the use of a coupling, such as welds, fasteners (e.g., bolts, rivets, screws, or the like), adhesive, tape, epoxy, or other like couplings.
As illustrated in
It should be understood that the channels 116, such as the u-shaped members 120 may be described herein as a hardware housing 150. As such, the members, such as the u-shaped channel members 120 or the like, may provide locations in which to assemble hardware. The members provide a “mix guard” (e.g., “fill material guard”) to prevent cavity fill materials 140 from entering the locations designated for hardware installation. Furthermore, the members may provide structure to the composite door system 100 in order to allow for shipping of the hollow shell 80 without damaging the shell 80. In particular, using a top member at the top side 112, as opposed to an open top side 112 may provide improved structural support to the top side 112 of the shell 80. It should be further understood that the shell 80 may further have one or members operatively coupled between the first face 102 and/or the second face 104, which provides additional structural support to the shell 80 before the cavity 114 within the shell 80 is filled with fill material 140. The hardware housings 150 (e.g., the channels 116, or other hardware housings 150 described below in further detail) may be manufactured using FE (forced entry) and/or BR (Bullet Resistant) (collectively otherwise described herein as FEBR) resistant materials, composites, or the like to protect the hardware from projectiles, explosions, physical attack, or the like as described herein.
In other embodiments of the composite door system 100, other hardware housings 150 may be used to secure door hardware instead of using a channel, as described above. For example, the hardware housings 150 may comprise a solid hardware housing 160 as illustrated in
For example, as illustrated in
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
It should be understood that any type of hardware housing 150 may be located within any location of the composite door system 100 depending on the type of hardware and/or the location of such hardware. It should be understood, for example, as illustrated in
While the first face 102, second face 104, first side 106, second side 108, bottom side 110, and/or top side 112 may have surfaces that are smooth (or generally smooth, or substantially smooth, or the like), the faces and/or sides may have structural elements in the exterior surfaces (surfaces that can be seen) and/or interior surfaces (surfaces facing the cavity 114), such as corrugations, or the like, which provide structural support to the shell 80 before the cavity is filled with fill material 140.
It should be further understood, that depending on the desired application of the composite door system 100, there may be one or more additional layers that comprise of other materials, such as but not limited to water resistant or proofing layers, concreate layers, coatings, or the like depending on the operation and/or installation requirements for the composite door systems 100 and/or the barrier structures in which they may be used.
In some embodiments of the disclosure, the composite door systems 100 may include a window portion. The window portion may be transparent, semi-transparent, or non-transparent. The window portion may be described as a sidelight, transom, borrowed light, door light, sash window, roller window, louver, or any other like window. The window portion may be damage resistant (e.g., projectile resistant, element resistant—wind, attack resistant, fire resistant, blast resistant, or the like). The window portion may be made from any type of material such as glass, acrylic, polycarbonate, laminate, other type of material, or combinations thereof in one or more layers. The window portion may itself be damage resistant or the window portion may have a glazed layer that is damage resistant. As such, the window may have a UL level 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or the like rating. The window portion may be installed in the shell 80 of the composite door system 100 before shipping to the installer, or it may be installed on site by the installer. As such, the window may be installed within a window housing that is similar to, or the same as the hardware housings 150 previously described herein. The liquid fill material 140 may be poured into the cavity 114 of the shell 80 with the window installed or before the window is installed, and the liquid fill material 140 will flow around the window and/or the window housing in order to fill the cavity 114 of the shell 80. As such, one or more members may be located within the cavity 114 in order direct the flow of the liquid flow material 140 within the cavity 114. Alternatively, the shell 80 filled with the hardened fill material 140 may be retrofitted with a window portion, that is, after the fill material 140 hardens in the cavity 114 on-site, or within an installed composite door system 100 that is retrofitted after installation. Moreover, any window portions already installed within a composite door system 100 may be retrofitted with a glaze to improve the damage resistance of the window portion of the composite door system 100. The glaze may be made from a material that is the same as or similar to the materials of the window portion described above. Moreover, the glaze may be applied using any method, such as painted, heat sealed, applied as a sticker, or the like.
Regardless of how the composite door systems 100 are utilized, it should be understood that the composite door systems 100 are created and installed in accordance with the composite door system manufacturing and assembly process 400, as illustrated in
Block 420 of
Block 440 of
Block 470 of
Barrier structures 10, such as dwellings, buildings, partitions, and the like, typically comprise doors 14, walls 12 (e.g., panels), or the like, and in many instances, it is desirable that the barrier structures 10 provide resistance to and protection from physical impacts from projectiles. The projectiles may occur due to debris from extreme weather (e.g., hurricanes, tornados, severe thunderstorms, typhoons, or the like). Alternatively, the projectiles may be ballistics from firearms, ordnance, explosive devices, or the like. In still other embodiments, the projectiles may be a result of explosions that could occur due to gas, chemicals, or other like explosive materials. In still other embodiments the projectiles may be a result of destructive testing of products (e.g., crash testing of cars, blade out turbine testing, or performance testing of other products). Additionally, it may be desirable to have improved fire resistance, sound proofing, radiation protection, electromagnetic shielding, or the like.
Conventional FE (forced entry) and/or BR (Bullet Resistant) doors, otherwise described herein as FEBR door openings, use ballistic resistant materials such as steel armor, composite BR fiberglass, Kevlar, BR composites, or other like materials as part of the core components, all of which add weight to door. FEBR door openings utilizing these conventional materials can weigh 450-750 pounds depending on the size, core type and steel gauges used. This extreme weight increases the wear on the door opening hardware, increases the freight costs, installation and user handling risks and cost of ownership.
The conventional FEBR doors described above are not only extremely heavy, costly to transport, undesirably bulky and dangerous during shipping or should they fail during operation, but they also are potentially unable to provide the desired projectile resistance within the desired door sizes. The weight of conventional FEBR doors not only makes manufacturing, shipping, and installing the doors difficult and dangerous, but it also causes problems when operating the doors. For example, the doors are difficult for a user to move, and they cause detrimental wear and tear to the hardware components of the door, such as the hinges, door opening mechanisms, etc. degrading the operation of the doors and/or requiring replacement of the hardware components. The weight of these doors makes the freight and shipping costs for transportation extremely high, in particular, when these doors are shipped long distances (e.g., thousand(s) of miles), and moreover, this makes it difficult to quickly build temporary structures in dangerous locations that provide protection from projectiles. As such, conventional door products for FEBR and enhanced protection openings are approaching their performance limits.
The composite door systems 100 (for use in door openings) of the present disclosure alleviate the foregoing deficiencies with conventional doors, and also provide additional advantages. For example, the composite door systems 100 of the present invention provide improved security, enhanced threat protection, and use of more sustainable materials to reduce weight, waste, lower the cost of ownership and the impact on the environment.
First, the composite door systems 100 of the present disclosure provide outstanding resistance to and protection from a variety of physical impacts by projectiles. In particular, the composite door systems 100 are structured to provide various UL level protection from ballistic projectiles (e.g., firearm, or the like) and also protection from other projectiles such as debris or shrapnel. As such, the composite door systems 100 described herein may provide the desired FE (forced entry) and/or BR (Bullet Resistant) properties while providing reduced weights and/or improved shipping and/or installation processes. For example, the composite door systems 100 may have UL752 Level 1 (9 mm handgun) to UL 752 Level 10 (.50 Caliber Rifle) protection, and in particular embodiments UL752 level 1 (9 mm), UL752 level 2 (0.357 Magnum), UL752 level 3 (0.44 Magnum), UL752 level 4 (.30 Caliber Rife), UL752 level 6 (9 mm rifle), UL752 level 7 (5.56 mm), UL752 level 8 (7.62 mm), UL752 level 9 (0.30-06 rifle), UL752 level 10 (.50 caliber rifle), or the like protection, or have protection that ranges between, overlaps, or falls outside of these levels of protection. Furthermore, the composite door systems 100 may also be rated to withstand 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, or the like minutes of simulated “mob” attack, or range between, overlap, or fall outside of these levels of protection. As such, it should be understood that the barrier structures 10 described herein may be shipped and/or assembled on site in the desired location quickly and cost effectively, while providing the desired levels of projectile protection.
As an example, a door made from conventional projectile-resistive materials, such as armor steel or BR fiberglass core, weighs about 450-750 lbs. However, a door made from a composite cementious fill material may be 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, or the like percent lighter. As such, because the shells 80 of the composite door system 100 are extremely light weight, they may be shipped in greater quantities due to the reduced weight, and may be installed and/or replaced (should a door need replacing) using smaller equipment (e.g., trucks, smaller cranes, or the like) than would be required with comparable conventional steel armor, BR fiberglass, or other like conventional door material. Moreover, the composite door systems 100 can be retrofit in existing buildings. Furthermore, it should be understood that the shells 80 may be installed in the barrier structure 10 (e.g., the door shells may be installed first) for ease of installation before the fill material 140 is added to the shells 80. Consequently, regardless of the installation methods, the weight reductions of the present disclosure reduce freight costs (e.g., due to reduced fuel needs), lowers cost of ownership, and reduces operator risk, wear and tear on hardware and installation and/or maintenance.
Moreover, the composite door systems 100 of the present disclosure are also about 20% stronger than conventional projectile-resistive materials (e.g., concrete, or other like materials). As such, all things being equal (e.g., the size of the door, thickness thereof, or the like) the composite door systems 100 of the present disclosure may be 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, or the like percent stronger than a corresponding concreate system.
The composite door systems 100, as disclosed herein, utilize construction materials and alternate core materials, and are formed in a way that is environmentally friendly. For example, the materials of the shell 80 and/or core 90 may be made from recyclable and/or repurposed materials (e.g., 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, or the like percent recyclable and/or repurposed). Moreover, the steel used in the shell (otherwise described as a skin) may be made from recycled and/or repurposed materials (e.g., 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or the like percent recycled and/or repurposed). Furthermore, the composite door systems 100 may replace conventional FEBR core materials and/or adhesives that are petroleum based or produced from materials that are less environmentally friendly. In some embodiments, the composite door systems 100 may meet UL Environmental/Sustainable Solutions for GREENGUARD and GREENGUARD Gold certification. Additionally, the composite door systems 100 may meet compliance and third party validation for Environmental Product Declarations (EPD), DECLARE labels, Living Building Challenge requirements, and/or compliance to California Prop65.
The composite door systems 100 described herein reduce the cost of the end product and manufacturing methodology, and moreover, the composite door systems 100 reduce the environmental and resource costs when compared to conventional FEBR doors.
Unless otherwise defined, all terms (including technical and scientific terms) used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. It will be further understood that terms used herein should be interpreted as having a meaning that is consistent with their meaning in the context of this specification and the relevant art and should not be interpreted in an idealized or overly formal sense unless expressly so defined herein. Certain terminology is used herein for convenience only and is not to be taken as a limitation on the invention. For example, words such as “distal,” “proximal,” “upper,” “top,” “bottom,” “lower,” “left,” “right,” “horizontal,” “vertical,” “upper,” and “lower”, or other like terminology merely describe the configuration shown in the figures. The referenced components may be oriented in an orientation other than that shown in the drawings and the terminology, therefore, should be understood as encompassing such variations unless specified otherwise. It will be understood that when an element is referred to as “operatively coupled” to another element, the elements can be formed integrally with each other, or may be formed separately and put together. Furthermore, “operatively coupled” to can mean the element is directly coupled to the other element, or intervening elements may be present between the elements. Furthermore, “operatively coupled” may mean that the elements are detachable from each other, or that they are permanently operatively coupled together.
Although specific embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, those of ordinary skill in the art appreciate that any arrangement which is calculated to achieve the same purpose may be substituted for the specific embodiments shown and that the invention has other applications in other environments. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the present invention. The following claims are in no way intended to limit the scope of the invention to the specific embodiments described herein.
The present Application for a Patent claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/999,472 entitled “Composite Door Systems,” filed on Aug. 21, 2020 and issued into U.S. Pat. No. 11,560,750 issued on Jan. 24, 2023, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/890,980 entitled “Composite Door Systems,” filed on Aug. 23, 2019, both of which are assigned to the assignees hereof and hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62890980 | Aug 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16999472 | Aug 2020 | US |
Child | 18098497 | US |