This application claims priority of German application No. 10 2007 023 054.2 DE filed May 16, 2007, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The present invention relates to an ear mold for a hearing device with a receiver, having a receiver connector including a first snap-fit element at the sound outlet, and an adapter, which is inserted directly into the ear mold and which has a second snap-fit element, which is snapped into the first snap-fit element in a manner such that it can be released. A hearing device here refers in particular to a device that can be worn on the ear, such as a hearing aid, a headset, headphones, etc.
Hearing aids are wearable hearing devices, which serve to assist the hearing impaired. To satisfy the numerous individual requirements, different models of hearing aids are available, such as behind-the-ear hearing aids (BTE) and in-the-ear hearing aids (ITE) as well as concha hearing aids and completely-in-the-canal hearing aids (CIC) for example. The hearing aids listed by way of example are worn on the outer ear or in the auditory canal. Also available on the market are bone conduction hearing aids and implantable or vibrotactile hearing aids. Here the damaged hearing is stimulated either mechanically or electrically.
The essential components of hearing aids are in principle an input converter, an amplifier and an output converter. The input converter is generally a sound receiver, e.g. a microphone, and/or an electromagnetic receiver, e.g. an induction coil. The output converter is generally in the form of an electro-acoustic converter, e.g. a miniature loudspeaker, or an electromechanical converter, e.g. a bone conduction receiver. The amplifier is generally integrated in a signal processing unit. This basic structure is shown in
BTE hearing aids are frequently provided with an external receiver unit. This external receiver unit is inserted into the ear canal and receives its electrical signals from a hearing aid main unit worn behind the auricle.
The external receiver unit generally consists of an ear mold, in which a loudspeaker or receiver is secured. The receiver is snap-fitted in the ear mold for example. To this end the receiver has a receiver connector, which forms a snap-fit connection with the ear mold. Both components of the snap-fit connection are typically made of polyamide.
The problem with such receiver units is that with higher amplifications, for example over 40 dB, the output sound is frequently fed back, so that the hearing aid wearer experiences an unpleasant whistling. Such feedback also occurs in particular with wear, when receivers are replaced repeatedly in the mold.
The publication WO 2004/025990 A1 discloses a hearing aid with an external receiver. The external receiver consists of a loudspeaker, which can be inserted into a soft earpiece with the aid of an adapter. The loudspeaker housing has a lug, which enables it to latch into the adapter. The material of the earpiece is softer than that of the adapter.
The adapter material is in turn softer than that of the loudspeaker housing.
The publication DE 86 11 816 U1 also describes an adapter device for hearing aids to be worn in the ear canal. An ear olive made of an elastic plastic is intended to be snap-fitted onto an adapter. A sound outlet connector of the hearing aid is snapped into a cone of the adapter. The adapter consists of a fairly elastic plastic.
The publication U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,976 also discloses a connecting piece connecting a sound tube to an earpiece. A plug seals the connecting element off from the earpiece.
The object of the present invention is therefore to prevent feedback with external receiver units of hearing devices as far as possible.
According to the invention this object is achieved by an ear mold for a hearing device with a receiver, having a receiver connector including a first snap-fit element at the sound outlet, and an adapter, which is inserted directly into the ear mold and which has a second snap-fit element, which is snapped into the first snap-fit element in a manner such that it can be released, and a seal, which surrounds the receiver connector completely, is made of a more elastic material than the receiver connector and the adapter and is fitted between the receiver connector and the adapter.
The seals advantageously compensate for manufacturing tolerances of the adapter and the receiver connector, so that sound can no longer penetrate through between the adapter and the receiver connector outward. It is thus possible to prevent feedback effectively even for high amplifications.
The adapter is preferably made of polyamide or a similarly hard plastic. The same applies to the receiver connector. In contrast the seal should be made of rubber, silicone or a similarly elastic material for example. This hard-soft-hard material combination allows a sealing effect to be achieved, which provides the required feedback suppression. The seal also protects the receiver from cerumen, dirt and sweat.
The seal can be held in the adapter due to its form. This prevents the seal slipping from the adapter, when the receiver is pulled or pushed out of the adapter.
According to one particular embodiment the seal is injected into the adapter using a 2-component injection molding technique. This can reduce manufacturing outlay and logistics outlay in some circumstances.
The receiver connector can also have a conical surface and a shoulder forming the first snap-fit element on the largest circumference of this surface, with which shoulder the second snap-fit element of the adapter engages. This allows a defined position of the receiver connector in the adapter and the required sealing effect to be achieved.
The second snap-fit element can have three snap-fit lugs for example, these being distributed at regular intervals on the circumference of the adapter. These snap-fit lugs can be sprayed easily onto the adapter and ensure an adequate connecting force. They can also be released with a corresponding configuration.
The seal can also have a cylindrical segment, in which a cerumen protector is secured. In particular the cerumen protector can be secured in the cylindrical segment for example in a friction-locked manner. This gives the seal a further functionality, namely that of holding the cerumen protector.
The present invention is described in more detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The exemplary embodiment described in more detail below represents a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
1. “HOLDING”: It should be possible to secure the external receiver 11 in the ear mold 10 so that it can be released multiple times.
2. “SEALING”: The external receiver 11 should be protected from cerumen, dirt, sweat, etc. It should also be secured in the ear mold 10 in an acoustically sealed manner, so that no sound can penetrate outward.
3. “OSCILLATION DAMPING”: The oscillations of the receiver 11 in relation to the ear mold 10 should be damped. This applies even more to high-performance receivers, which execute relatively large movements or natural oscillations.
4. “RECEIVER PROTECTOR HOLDER”: The ear mold adapter 12 also advantageously has the functionality of cerumen protector holder at the same time.
According to the invention the four requirements set out above are satisfied by a two-part ear mold adapter 12. Such an ear mold adapter 12 is shown in
The soft seal 13, made for example of rubber or silicone, satisfies the sealing, oscillation damping and receiver protector holder requirements as set out in points 2 to 4 above.
In the example selected here the receiver 11 has a conical receiver connector 19. This has a sound outlet 25 at its center, from which the conical surface 20 extends. At the largest circumference of the conical surface 20 the receiver connector 19 has an undercut 21 or shoulder. The receiver 11 is inserted into the ear mold adapter 12 according to the arrow 22.
A longitudinal section of the ear mold adapter 12 and the receiver 11 is shown in
The converter 24 is connected electrically to the signal line 15. On the output side the converter 24 emits the sound into a tubular sound outlet 25, which is formed by the receiver connector 19. The conical surface 20 and undercut 21 can be seen on the receiver connector 19.
The sectional diagram of the ear mold adapter 12 also shows a casing in the form of the hard adapter shell 17, which also has the snap-fit function. To this end the adapter shell 17 has snap-fit lugs 26. The funnel-shaped seal 13 is located inside the adapter shell 17. It has a conical inner surface, which corresponds to the conical surface 20 of the receiver connector 19.
The adapter shell 17 has a hole 27 on the sound output side, into which hole 27 a tubular segment of the seal 13 is inserted. The cerumen protector 14, which is itself configured as roughly funnel-shaped, is inserted into the tubular segment of the seal 13 from the sound outlet side. Since the seal 13 is made of a rubber-type, soft elastic material and the cerumen protector 14 has a rather larger external diameter than the internal diameter of the tubular segment of the seal 13, the cerumen protector 14 is held in the ear mold adapter 12 by the seal 13 in a friction-locked manner.
The seal 13, a soft component, can be configured for example as an insert with a form-fit or can be fixed by means of adhesion directly in the hard component, the adapter shell 17. Alternatively the two components 17 and 13 can also be produced by means of 2-component injection molding in one work process.
The active ear mold shown above in conjunction with
Because the receiver is not snapped directly into the ear mold but is inserted into an opening in the ear mold with the aid of an adapter, it is possible to insert a plurality of receivers of different shapes and sizes into the ear mold.
The seal also has the advantage that external receivers with considerably greater amplification than those without a seal can be deployed. It is thus possible to achieve amplifications in the region of 65 dB with the inventive active ear mold. The seal also has the advantage that it can be replaced in the event of wear (e.g. embrittlement), if it is designed as a so-called “service part”. This ensures that the fixing system between the receiver and ear mold is also sealed adequately in the long term.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 023 054.2 | May 2007 | DE | national |