The invention is a screw whose girth expands due to an internal chemical reaction initiated after it is inserted into a material.
There are several prior-art examples of anchoring screws wherein an anchoring fixture is first inserted into a material and then a conventional screw is threaded through the anchoring fixture causing it to expand and creating a firm anchoring relationship with the material into which it has been inserted.
In some cases, the anchoring fixture is made of a flexible polymer with ribbed exterior such that when the screw is threaded into it, the polymer expands in girth creating a strong frictional interface between anchoring fixture and material. In other cases, the anchoring fixture is metallic and is meant to extend beyond the material, such as sheetrock, such that when the screw is threaded into it, the shape is distorted causing a surface significantly larger than the hole through which it extends that is pulled back toward the face of the surface snugly anchoring the fixture in place.
All of these prior-art inventions make use of two components—the anchoring fixture and a screw. First the anchoring fixture must be inserted and then the screw is threaded into the fixture. In essence it is always a two-step process.
The invention herein disclosed is an expanding screw system in which the screw, itself, is both screw and anchoring fixture. As such, it requires only a single-step insertion.
The screw comprises a firm polymer structure with a disk screw head at one end and a tapered pointed tail end. The screw head may also be tapered so as to allow counter-sunk insertions. A cylindrical shaft extends from head end to tail end, and its external surface is threaded. The shaft contains a hollow portion parallel to its length and centered within the shaft. An aperture in the head forms a continuation of that hollow portion.
Once the screw is inserted in a material, and the head is firmly positioned against a face of that material, an internal chemical reaction is initiated wherein reagents expand in volume pushing against the shaft walls. The polymer screw expands in girth due to this internal pressure and the shaft's outer surface now presses more firmly against the material in which it is inserted. Once the chemical reaction is complete, the expanded reagents become solidified creating a firm anchoring of the screw within the material.
The tail end of the shaft may be enclosed or may be slotted such that reagent chemical-reaction expansion causes two or more petal structures to press against the surrounding material. Here, again, once the reaction is complete, the reagents solidify and the petal structures are pressed firmly against the surrounding material.
Because the screw is both screw and anchoring structure, a single insertion step is all that is required. Initiation of the chemical reaction is done by internally puncturing containers containing the separated reagents. This is done by inserting a metallic cylindrical tool into the aperture in the screw head and pushing it parallel to the shaft axis until it punctures both containers allowing the reagents to mix. The tool is then quickly retracted and the chemical reaction begins the reagent expansion process. Expansion begins within minutes of the mixing of the reagents. The tool may be a specially designed device or a thin, sharp object such as a needle or finishing nail.
Contemporary anchoring screw systems comprise two components—an anchoring subsystem and a screw subsystem. Applying these devices is a two-step process comprising insertion of an anchor portion followed by insertion of a screw.
The invention herein disclosed is an anchoring screw that comprises both anchoring portion and screw. As such, inserting the screw is essentially inserting both screw and anchoring portion.
As shown in
In
As applied, as shown in
As applied, as shown in
The embodiments as described are exemplary. They show both reagents present inside the expanding screw prior to insertion. Only one reagent might be contained within the screw and the second reagent could be added by an initiator tool with a hollow shaft and a reagent reservoir in its handle. In another embodiment, the screw may contain no reagents and both reagents are injected through the aperture using an initiator tool having two parallel shafts and separate reagent reservoirs in its handle. If used in a soft material, such as dry wall, the screw may be screwed into the material prior to chemical reaction and expansion. If used in a harder material, the screw is inserted into an existing channel wherein the screw slips snugly into the channel, prior to chemical reaction and expansion. Once expanded, the shaft threads press firmly against the material making for a tight, secure fit.
The chemical reaction causing the increased volume and internal pressure may be a polymerization process. One reagent could be a resin, such as isocyanate; and the other reagent could be a catalyzing agent such as polypol. Virtually any binary material combination that upon mixing causes a polymerization process to occur could be used to trigger the expansion result.
The screw systems shown in the drawing are exemplary. Screw heads could be disk or tapered. The head indentations could be a Phillips configuration, a single slotted one, hex-key format, and the like.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2378118 | Widrich | Jun 1945 | A |
2398633 | Gazda | Apr 1946 | A |
2525736 | Taylor | Jul 1946 | A |
3166971 | Stoecker | Jan 1965 | A |
3522756 | Wolff et al. | Aug 1970 | A |
3613495 | Podgursky | Oct 1971 | A |
3942407 | Mortensen | Mar 1976 | A |
4514125 | Stol | Apr 1985 | A |
4601625 | Ernst | Jul 1986 | A |
5997230 | Dodd | Dec 1999 | A |
7001124 | Panasik | Feb 2006 | B2 |
7008157 | O'Banion | Mar 2006 | B2 |
7266874 | Ernst | Sep 2007 | B2 |
8734497 | Goel et al. | May 2014 | B2 |
8920087 | Buder | Dec 2014 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20210215189 A1 | Jul 2021 | US |