In construction, deck units are used to construct a deck system. A deck unit is comprised of one or more profiled forms made of steel that is handled as a single building component. Deck systems are simply a group of deck units that are fastened together in sufficient number to make the deck system of desired size.
The deck unit or deck system may support a layer of structural concrete in order to be used as a roof or floor, or a layer of lightweight insulating concrete in order to be used as a roof or may be used without the concrete.
Deck units include hat-shaped, profiled panels which are fastened to an exposed bottom panel to form closed cells within the deck units. The interiors of these cells may be used as air ducts, for running conduit for utilities and cabling, and to carry sound-absorbing materials.
Large open spaces, such as airport terminal areas and stadiums often have ceilings made of closed cellular deck systems. Often, these deck systems will also support hanging fixtures such as lighting, signs and sprinkler pipes.
There is a continual need for stronger deck systems that can span greater distances and have more capabilities while still possessing aesthetic qualities for public places.
The present invention is a deck unit comprising one or more top hat portions of various sizes and shapes joined to an exposed dove-tail bottom panel. The bottom panel includes at least one or more dovetail-shaped recess. A deck system is made by joining the present deck units.
Each deck unit includes a central hat-shaped panel with integral first and opposing second side laps of an attached bottom panel. The bottom panel is dimensioned to span the underside of one or more hat-shaped portions, and to have hidden side laps that nest with side laps of the hat-shaped portion. The deck units are fastened together to form the deck system. Importantly, the bottom panel has at least one “dove-tail”-shaped recess formed in it. These recesses, which may be concave upward or downward, provide additional strength to the deck unit and deck system, as well as a defined, confined recess in the bottom panel for use in concealing and running conduit and also in providing vertical support for lighting and other hanging type vertical loads when the present deck system is used as a roof/ceiling or floor/ceiling.
A feature of the present invention is the dove-tail shaped recesses formed in the bottom panel and throughout its length. The configuration of these dove-tailed panels and hat-shaped deck profiles together substantially increase stiffness to the deck system while providing the clean, plank-like appearance of the exposed underside of the deck system. Furthermore, the dove-tailed recesses provide additional capabilities to the deck system. Because the recess may be only partially closed, that is, it may have a narrow gap when viewed from below, it allows the deck system to support and conceal connections for exterior ceiling lighting and signage and aids in attenuating sound energy.
An advantage of the present system is that, from below, it has the appearance of planks, which especially in a large ceiling is aesthetically pleasing, while nonetheless providing functional spaces for acoustical materials and structural strength for the ceiling load over such long spans.
These and other features and their advantages will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art of metal deck system fabrication and construction from a careful reading of the Detailed Description of Preferred Embodiments, accompanied by the following drawings.
In the figures,
The present invention is a deck unit including at least one top-hat profile attached to a bottom panel for use in making a deck unit for a roof or floor. The bottom panel includes at least one dovetail-shaped recess. Adding the top hat profile to the bottom panel with dovetail recesses substantially increases the strength of the deck unit. The present deck unit can be joined together to form a deck system, which can be used with or without a layer of concrete depending on specifications for the application of use. A deck unit with more than one top hat profile attached to one bottom panel makes assembling the deck system faster, and the present description of embodiments of the present invention and accompanying drawings will show plural top hat profiles in each deck unit. However, the present deck unit may alternatively have just one or more than two top hat profiles.
Referring now to the figures, there is shown in
Although deck unit 8 is shown as having two individual top hat-shaped profiles 10, it may be made with one top hat profile 16. Top hat profiles 16 are integrally joined and both may be formed from a single profiled sheet of metal, preferably steel.
Each top hat profile 16 includes a top flange 22 integrally formed with two side walls 24, 26. Side walls 24, 26, may be nearly at right angles to top flange 22, but may be canted slightly outwardly from top to bottom as shown in the figures so as to be spaced slightly farther apart at the bottom of top hat profiles 16 and slightly closer together at top flange 22.
Top flange 22 may have one or more grooves 30 formed therein, trapezoidal in shape with the bottom 32 of groove 30 being smaller than the opening at the top of the groove 30, and side walls 36, 38 of groove 30 may be symmetrically flared outwardly in the upward direction. A groove 30 adds stiffening to top hat profile 16
Each top hat profile 16 has bottom flanges 42, 44, and each of them may have a bead 46, 48, formed therein to add stiffening. Deck unit 8 is formed by securing top hat profiles 10 on bottom panel 12. Each bottom flange 42, 44 of each top hat profile 16 of deck unit 8 is connected integrally to bottom panel 12 by a mechanical fastening process, such as by welding for example.
Bottom panel 12 is also preferably a profiled sheet of metal, such as steel, that covers the bottom openings of top hat profiles 10 of a deck unit 8 to define spaces or cells 50 therebetween. Bottom panel 12 also provides side laps 52, 54, for fastening adjacent deck units 8 together. Side laps 52, 54 are formed so that a side lap 52 of one bottom panel 12 nests within or interlocks with a side lap 54 of an adjacent bottom panel 12. By the term nesting, it is meant that the length of one side lap 52 fits within and follows closely with the length of the other side lap 54, that the contours of one side lap 52 follow closely in the same directions and has the same changes in direction as the contours of the other side lap 54. By the term interlocking, it is meant that a portion of one side lap 52, is crimped to the other side lap 54 so that the materials of which the two side laps 52, 54, are made penetrates each others boundaries.
Bottom panel 12 may be perforated so as to have an array of holes 58 formed therein for absorbing sounds (see
Bottom panel 12 has at least one, and preferably more than one, dove-tail shaped recesses 60 formed therein, and may have two dovetail recesses 60 for each top hat profile 16 of deck unit 8 in registration with each cell 50. Recesses 60 may be concave upward or concave downward. Recesses are concave upward when viewed from below bottom panel 12 as they extend into cells 50, as shown in
Bottom panel 12 at dove-tail recesses 60 provide a nearly-closed, well-defined, protected conduit for piping, wiring, cables, optic fibers or sound insulating material 62 (
In addition, employing bottom panels 12 with dove-tail recesses 60 attached to a top hat profile adds significantly to the strength of deck system 72 and allows for longer spans as well as greater functionality. Recesses 60 may be open and concave upward as illustrated in
The superior strength of the present invention over an otherwise similar bottom panel with dove-tail recesses alone, is illustrated by the following example. Assuming a uniform load of 30 pounds per square foot and using 20 gauge steel, the span limit of a dovetailed panel is 12.5 feet. With a 20 gauge steel top hat profile attached to the dove-tailed panel, the span limit for the same loading increases to 20.5 to 26.5 feet depending on the height of the hat profile.
In addition to its great strength, the present invention also adds to the functional aesthetics of a ceiling of a building covering a large area, such as an airport terminal or an arena. The concave upward dovetail recesses establish narrow gaps in the otherwise smooth panel liners to create a plank look from below. This plank look gives the viewer a better indication of the perspective of the area as well as provides an aesthetically-pleasing, clean-looking treatment to the ceiling. Concave downward dovetail recesses provide wider gaps which provide a similar visual effect. In both cases (concave upward and concave downward dove-tail recesses) the bottom panel also hides the sidelap connections between adjacent deck units.
Dove-tail recesses also provide a convenient way to suspend lighting fixtures and signage, to serve as a hidden chase way for electrical or plumbing purposes, and as a sound-absorbing chamber or place for inserting acoustic materials for absorbing sounds from below.
Those familiar with steel deck system construction will appreciate that many modifications and substitutions can be made to the foregoing preferred embodiments of the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention, defined by the appended claims.
Priority is claimed to U.S. provisional patent Ser. No. 61/296,620, filed Jan. 20, 2010, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61296620 | Jan 2010 | US |