This invention relates to door latch devices, and more particularly to cover trims for a push bar of an exit device for a door, as well as to methods for their fabricating and installation.
A common complication of hospital care involves hospital-acquired infections from pathogenic microbes transmitted from and to hospital patients, staff and visitors via frequently touched environmental surfaces. Such surfaces, which include many types of commonly used door knobs and push plates, are recognized as reservoirs for the spread of such microbes notwithstanding hand hygienic and environmental cleaning practices for attempting to control infections.
It is well known that metallic copper surfaces are antimicrobial. See, for example, Michael G. Schmidt et al., “Sustained Reduction of Microbial Burden on Common Hospital Surfaces through Introduction of Copper”, Journal of Clinical Microbiology, v. 50, n. 7, pp. 2217-2223 (July 2012), concluding that “reducing the overall microbial burden on a continuous basis with the introduction of continuously active antimicrobial copper surfaces, as evidenced in this study and others, may provide a safer environment for hospital patients, health care workers, and visitors.”
A PowerPoint (registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation) presentation by Harold Michels (of Copper Development Association, Inc.), titled “Antimicrobial Properties of Copper Alloys and their Applications”, reports testing results on solid copper and a variety of copper alloys containing between 60% and 95% copper. These tests showed a greater than 99% continuous reduction of bacterial contamination for solid copper as well as for each of the copper alloys. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has currently issued public health registrations for antimicrobial copper to cover 479 copper alloys.
One type of frequently touched surfaces in hospital environments is the outer or touch surface of the push bar of an exit device secured to a normally latched hospital door. See for exampled, U.S. Pat. No. 4,167,280 of Godec et al., incorporated herein by reference. Although some door hardware made of copper alloys have been marketed, many push bars for door exit devices have been and are continued to be made of metals which have little or no antimicrobial properties, such as stainless steel and anodized aluminum. Consequently, a large number of such exit devices having non-antimicrobial push bars are installed in hospitals, schools and other public buildings.
According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cover trim for a push bar of an exit device for a door, which cover trim is easily affixed to the push bar without requiring the disassembly of components of the exit device. The cover trim provides a new touch surface for the push bar. In its preferred embodiment, the cover trim is made of antimicrobial material, preferably a copper alloy meeting the public health registration requirements of the EPA, such as antimicrobial copper-based alloys marketed under the CuVerro trademark (registered trademark of GBC Metals, LLC).
The cover trim preferably comprises an elongate member configured to fit over the front surface and top and bottom edges of the push bar, and to be affixed thereto. In the preferred embodiment, the cover trim is fabricated of an elongate metal plate which is somewhat resilient, and the plate's longitudinal top and bottom edges are rearwardly bent for grasping and being held by the longitudinal top and bottom edges of the push bar.
When installing the cover trim, the installer may place the cover trim to the push bar with the cover trim's top rearwardly bent edge portion along and over the top edge of the push bar. The installer then urges the cover trim downwardly against the push bar's front surface until the cover trim's bottom rearwardly bent edge portion, aided by the resiliency of the cover trim, grasps or snaps onto the bottom edge of the push bar. Alternatively, the installer may first place the cover trim's rearwardly bent bottom edge portion along and under the push bar's bottom edge, and then urge the cover trim upwardly against the push bar's front surface until the cover trim's bent top edge portion grasps or snaps onto the push bar's top edge.
Another aspect of the present invention includes a method of installing a cover trim to a push bar of an exit device for a door, comprising: providing an exit device including a longitudinally extending push bar having a front surface; providing a cover trim including a longitudinally extending member configured for covering the push bar's front surface when the member is affixed to the push bar; and affixing the member to the push bar without disassembling components of the exit device. The cover member is preferably configured for resiliently grasping the push bar; and during the affixing step, the member is placed onto and grasping the push bar. In a preferred embodiment, the cover trim member is fabricated of an antimicrobial material, such as copper or a metal alloy containing copper.
Hand touching of polished metal surfaces, including copper alloy surfaces, tend to leave fingerprint markings on such surfaces. According to a further aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method for processing metal objects, including the copper alloy cover trim of the preferred embodiment, for increasing fingerprint resistance of the object's touch surface, comprising: providing a metal object with a surface having a polished finish; abrasive blasting (preferably sand blasting) the surface to a matte finish; and then repolishing the surface to a polished finish.
The novel features believed to be characteristic of the invention, together with further advantages thereof, will be better understood by the following description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings in which preferred embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are for the purpose of illustration and description only and are not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention.
Turning first to
A preferred embodiment of a cover trim 22 is shown in
Turning to
The cover trim 22 is configured with a top rearwardly bent portion 26 along its top edge 28, and with a bottom rearwardly bent portion 30 along its bottom edge 32. In the preferred embodiment, the top rearwardly bent edge portion 26 extends rearwardly by an outside depth d (see
The actual dimensions 1, h, d, h′ and r of a particular example of the above described cover trim 22 are determined by the corresponding dimensions of specific push bars of exit devices marketed by various manufacturers. For example, when used with Von Duprin 98/99 Series Rim Exit Devices having a push bar 14 of horizontal length (between end caps 16) of approximately 23.25 inches and a height of approximately 2.218 inches, for a cover trim 22 fabricated of CuVerro copper-nickel alloy sheet of nominal thickness t=0.028 inch, the following nominal dimensions appeared appropriate for suitably installing the cover trim 22 to such push bar 14: 1=23.25 inches, h=2.248 inches, d=0.455 inch, h′=1.930 inches and r=0.117 inch.
Returning to
Alternatively, the cover trim 22 may be installed on the push bar 14 by first placing the cover trim 22 to the push bar 14, between the end caps 16, with the inside curve of the cover trim's longitudinal rearwardly bent bottom edge portion 30 grasping or captively engaging the push bar's bottom edge 40. The installer then urges the cover trim 22 upwardly against the push bar's front surface 24 until, aided by the resiliency of the cover trim 22, the cover trim 22 flexes as the inside curve of the cover trim's longitudinal rearwardly bent top edge portion 26 grasps or captively engages the push bar's top edge 38. In such alternative manner, the cover trim 22 is caused to snap onto and be retained by the push bar 14.
Affixation of the cover trim 22 to the push bar 14 is shown, in cross section in
The touch surface 44 of the cover trim 22 of the present invention may further have increased resistance to fingerprints, when fabricated in accordance with a method featured by the present invention. Such method, which is shown in block flow diagram of
As applied to the preferred cover trim 22 of the present invention, the providing step (46) includes providing a sheet of a metal alloy having a polished surface (preferably an antimicrobial copper alloy such as a copper-nickel alloy) and fabricating the cover trim 22 therefrom. The outside touch surfaces (front 24 and edge portions 26, 30) are then sand blasted to a matte finish (48), and those surfaces are repolished (such as by belt polishing) to a polished finish (50). One example of a polished finish in either or both of steps 46 and 50 is a satin finish, such as a No. 4 satin finish.
It has been found that the touch surfaces of copper-nickel alloy cover trim examples fabricated in accordance with this method have demonstrated increased resistance to fingerprint markings.
In the abrasive blasting step (48), particles other than sand may be utilized, for example glass beads or steel shot may be employed as blasting material.
Thus, there has been described a preferred embodiment of a cover trim for a push bar of an exit device for a door, which cover trim is preferably antimicrobial and may be easily installed on the push bar without disassembling any components of the exit device. There has been further described a method for increasing fingerprint resistance of metal object surfaces, and in particular the touch surface of the cover trim preferred embodiment. Other embodiments of the present invention and variations of the embodiments and methods presented herein may be developed without departing from the essential characteristics thereof. Accordingly, the invention should be limited only by the scope of the claims listed below.
This invention claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/855,787; filed May 23, 2013, incorporated in full herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2180670 | Erickson | Nov 1939 | A |
4167280 | Godec et al. | Sep 1979 | A |
4181335 | Thoren | Jan 1980 | A |
6645435 | Dawson et al. | Nov 2003 | B2 |
6817066 | Williams et al. | Nov 2004 | B1 |
7784208 | Thompson | Aug 2010 | B2 |
8375521 | Caron | Feb 2013 | B1 |
8695168 | Cepeda | Apr 2014 | B1 |
8714215 | Badgley et al. | May 2014 | B2 |
20020092132 | Kessler | Jul 2002 | A1 |
20060006678 | Herron, Jr. | Jan 2006 | A1 |
20110067308 | Hunt et al. | Mar 2011 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Harold Michels, “Antimicrobial Properties of Copper Alloys and Their Applications”, print-out of PowerPoint presentaltion at UCLA Medical Center, Dec. 13, 2010 (58 pages). |
Michael G. Schmidt et al., “Sustained Reduction of Microbial Burden on Common Hospital Surfaces through Introduction of Copper”, J.Clin.Microbial, 50(7):2217-2223 (May 2012. |
D. Blythe et al., “Environmental contamination due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aereus (MRSA)”, Journal of Hospital Infection, 38:67-69 (1998). |
S. Ole et al., “Contamination of room door handles by methicillin-sensentive/methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus”, Journal of Hospital Infection, 51:140-143 (2002). |
Ingersoll-Rand, “98/99 Series Rim Exit Devices”, Von Duprin Parts Manual (Jun. 2005). |
Yale, catalog p. 48, “architectural exit devices, accessories/options” (prior to May 2013). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140345087 A1 | Nov 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61855787 | May 2013 | US |