This is an international patent application under the Patent Cooperation Treaty which is based upon my parallel disclosure, including: the functional description and drawings submitted to the US Patent & Trademark Office, on the same filing date.
This patent application covers a new and original design in the statutory class of machines. This invention relates to the mechanism of applying UV light for disinfecting of aircraft interiors before the next flight with a new load of passengers. More specifically, this invention involves a unique method of applying ultraviolet light to the aircraft seat surfaces, which were in direct body contact from human seat occupants on the prior flight(s).
There are various methods of cleaning aircraft seats body-contact areas with various disinfectants. One of the closest methods to this invention is when the cleaning crew/person is walking the aisle, pushing a cart with above-the-seat positioned arms, emitting the UV light on the top of seats from above. But there are at least three major shortcomings with this method:
1. it requires an operator, a cleaning person(s) walking the aisles, often in hundreds of aircraft, several times every day, between each and every flight (very expensive labor cost).
2. it limits the time when the UV light is illuminating over each seat separately, resulting in very limited percentage of killed bacteria and viruses (means many viruses are still surviving).
3. it increases the downtime for the aircraft due to the manual labor, potentially decreasing the number of cycles for the aircraft per day resulting in lost revenue for the operator.
This design innovation is related and directed to the permanently installed (embedded) UV lights to be located and installed at:
When these permanently installed (embedded) UV lights are installed in the aircraft, then the disinfection starts with a flip of a remote on-off switch, by the flight attendant, when the airplane is empty (no passengers) between the flights. The switch could be safety proofed by being tied to the aircraft parking brake, allowing activation (disinfection) only upon the parking brake being set.
Such improved Embedded UV Disinfection System eliminates the need for expensive employment and training of numerous cleaning operators, to manually push the food-cart type devices in the aisles, while significantly increasing the time the UV light is illuminating on said body-contact areas of the seats, resulting in significantly longer “killing time” of any viruses laying on the seat.
This invention will result in much better (more effective) disinfection, and in a much safer flight for the next load of passengers.
As shown on the submitted drawings, the UV light can be emitted from any one, or from any combination of the two sources, or even from all of the following sources, for maximum protection:
Again, this UV light will be directed toward the seat exposed surfaces, to sterilize them, when the seats are not occupied between the flights.
It is the objective of this invention to provide a simple, lightweight, very dependable, and inexpensive method for maximum disinfection of aircraft seats, with said embedded UV light system that is ‘user-friendly’, easy to operate, more effective, and safe for use before each flight, for a much better protection of the flying public (otherwise exposed to international viruses and quick spread of infections (like the spread of the COVID-19 worldwide).
The attached drawings are self-explanatory. The UV lights can be installed in any single one, or in any combination of the following locations:
In the drawings, all of the above three (3) basic suggested locations are shown but it is not to be construed as the only locations. For example, the UV lights can be installed in the ceiling of the aircraft cabin as well, for as long as the UV light is directed down toward the top-exposed seat surfaces.
The new Aircraft Cabin Embedded UV Disinfection System is to be designed, built, flight-tested and certified by FutureFlite, Inc., having FAA-PAH (Production Approval Holder) Privileges for a long time, and having 40-years hands on experience in the aircraft interiors business world.
Although the description above and drawings submitted contain many specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of this invention but as merely providing illustrations to some of the presently preferred embodiments of this innovation. For example, the UV light can be directed both slightly forward, not only backward, and with the remote on-off-button not only near the front-end of the cabin, but even from the outside of that cabin of aircraft.
In yet another embodiment, it may be provided for disinfection of the passenger seats in bus, train, or in sea-going ferries, or in ocean-going cruise ship cabins.
Thus, the scope of this invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.