The present invention relates generally to personal protective equipment, and more specifically to protective facial shields.
The current COVID-19 outbreak demonstrates the significant demand for adequate personal protective equipment (PPE) for medical personal who risk potential exposure to contagions when treating infected patients. A face shield used in such context is conventionally composed of a panel of transparent polymeric material worn in curtain-like fashion hanging in front of the user's face via an attached supportive headband or visor worn at forehead level. The panel is curved in a horizontal direction across the wearer's face, so that a central region of the panel resides anteriorly of the wearer's face over the eyes, nose and mouth, and lateral regions of the panel curve posteriorly from this central region to at least partially cover the side of the face. The shield itself typically terminates at an upper edge of the panel situated at, or shortly above, the shield's attachment to the headband or visor, leaving at least part of the forehead and the user's hairline exposed, especially if a separate protective cap or other head cover is not also worn. Such inadequate coverage at the upper facial area, together with gaps left between the shield and the wearer's face where the lateral regions terminate at upright lateral edges of the panel, leaves the user at risk of exposure to droplets or aerosol particles emitted by a sneezing or coughing patient. More adequate coverage than that provided the shield itself thus conventionally requires donning of additional protective gear.
Accordingly, there is a need for improved solutions to address this and/or other shortcomings of conventional face shields.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a face and head shield comprising a transparent non-spherical dome or shell delimiting a hollow interior space for receiving facial and cranial regions of a user's head therein, said non-spherical dome or shell having a boundary edge thereof that delimits an opening of said hollow interior space through which said facial and cranial regions of said user's head are admitted into said hollow interior space, said opening having an elongated primary dimension measured in one direction thereacross and configured with sufficient length to accommodate a chin-to-crown measurement of the user's head in inferior-superior anatomical direction, and a shorter secondary dimension measured cross-wise to said primary dimension and configured with sufficient length to accommodate a narrower width measurement of the user's head in a lateral anatomical direction.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of protecting against exposure to a hazard, said method comprising obtaining a plurality of face and head shields each configured to cover both facial and cranial regions of a user's head, wearing a support frame on said user's head on an ongoing basis, and during said wearing of said support frame on said ongoing basis, intermittently swapping out a worn one of said plurality of face and head shields for a replacement one of said face and head shields.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for shielding facial and cranial regions of a user's head, said protective shield comprising a singular unitary piece of transparent material comprising an upper cranial portion arranged to overlie a top of the user's head, at least at a frontal scalp thereof, a lower facial portion arranged to hang downwardly from the cranial portion over the facial region of the user's head, and at a transitional region that joins said lower facial and upper cranial portions, at approximately forehead level when said protective shield is worn, a pair of inward protrusions jutting inwardly from the transitional region relative to surrounding inner surface areas thereof, and an airflow space whose width is delimited between said pair of inward protrusions, said airflow space having a widened lower end that coincides with bottom ends of said inward protrusions, and from which said airflow space tapers upwardly to a lesser width than said widened lower end.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for shielding facial and cranial regions of a user's head, said protective shield comprising a singular unitary piece of transparent material comprising an upper cranial portion arranged to overlie a top of the user's head, at least at a frontal scalp thereof, and a lower facial portion arranged to hang downwardly from the cranial portion over the facial region of the user's head, and in a cross-sectional measuring plane that is either a midplane that bisects the cranial and facial regions, or another plane that lies parallel to said midplane, a slope of the lower facial portion toward the bottom end of the dome or shell and a slope of the upper cranial portion toward the top end of the of the dome or shell are of divergent relationship to one another over an entirety of each of said upper cranial and lower facial portions.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for shielding facial and cranial regions of a user's head, said protective shield comprising a singular unitary piece of transparent material comprising an upper cranial portion arranged to overlie a top of the user's head, at least at a frontal scalp thereof, a lower facial portion arranged to hang downwardly from the cranial portion over the facial region of the user's head, said single unitary piece of see through material stiffening ridges formed therein at opposing lateral sides thereof in matching orientations extending rearwardly away from the facial region toward.
According to a further aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for worn use on a user's head to protect facial and cranial regions thereof, said protective shield comprising:
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for worn use on a user's head to protect at least a facial region thereof, said protective shield comprising:
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for worn use on a user's head to protect at least a facial region thereof, said protective shield comprising:
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for shielding facial and cranial regions of a user's head, said protective shield comprising a singular unitary piece of transparent material comprising an upper cranial portion arranged to overlie a top of the user's head, at least at a frontal scalp thereof, a lower facial portion arranged to hang downwardly from the cranial portion over the facial region of the user's head, and one or more support protrusions that are integrally formed in, or attached to, said cranial portion and jut downwardly from an underside thereof relative to surrounding surface areas of said underside of the cranial portion for resting of said support protrusions against the top of the user's head so as to support said surrounding surface areas in elevated relation over the top of the user's head to enable airflow therebetween.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a one-piece adjustable length headband for support of a protective shield on a users head, said headband comprising a singular unitary strip of foam material having al length dimension in which said strip of foam material is elongated relative to width and thickness dimensions thereof that are orthogonal to both one another and to said length dimension, said strip of foam material having opposing first and second ends between which said length dimension is measured, said strip of foam material having a barbed tail region spanning a partial length of the length dimension from the first end toward the second end, and a widened end region that resides adjacent the second end and is of greater measure in the width dimension than said barbed tail region, said strip of foam material being flexibly bendable in said length dimension to bring the first and second ends toward one another to form a closed loop, said barbed tail region being barbed on opposing sides thereof, and said the widened end region having at least one receiver opening therein through which the first end is insertable to engage the barbed tail through said receiver opening, whereupon the barbed sides of the barbed tail region resist pulling of the first end back through said receiver opening, thereby securing the headband in said closed loop, which is adjustable in size by pulling more of the barbed tail onward through said receiver opening.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a two-piece adjustable length headband for support of a protective shield on a users head, said headband comprising a first strip of foam material having a first pair of opposing ends separated from one another by a length dimension of said first strip of foam material, and a second strip of foam material having a second pair of opposing ends separated from one another by a length dimension of said second strip of foam material, one of two widthwise faces of the first strip having a respective piece of hook or loop fastener thereon adjacent each of the first pair of opposing ends, and one of two widthwise faces of the second strip having a respective piece of loop or hook fastener thereon adjacent each of the second pair of opposing ends that is matable with one of the hook or loop fasteners on the first strip, whereby the first and second strips are connectable face-to-face in end-overlapping fashion to form a closed loop, and at least one of the pieces of fastener is elongated in the length dimension of the respective strip of foam material to enable coupling together of the two strips in varying degrees of overlap to thereby adjustably size said headband.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of using, in combination, a protective shield for covering at least a facial region of a user's head, and a headband for worn support of said protective shield on said user's head, wherein said protective shield, at an elevation configured to reside at approximately forehead level on the user's head when worn, has a pair of inward protrusions jutting from surrounding inner surface areas of said protective shield at laterally spaced positions from one another so as to span toward and brace against a forehead of the user's head at laterally spaced positions thereacross when worn, and said headband comprises a length of foam coupled to terminal ends of said pair of inward protrusions for foam-padded abutment of the pair of inward protrusions against the forehead when the headband and protective shield are worn on the user's head, and the method comprises cutting out a section of said foam between said pair of inward protrusions to enable airflow through said cut out section of the headband when worn.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a protective shield for shielding facial and cranial regions of a user's head, said protective shield comprising a singular unitary piece of transparent material comprising an upper cranial portion arranged to overlie a top of the user's head, at least at a frontal scalp thereof, a lower facial portion arranged to hang downwardly from the cranial portion over the facial region of the user's head, and at a transitional region that joins said lower facial and upper cranial portions, at approximately forehead level when said protective shield is worn, at least one inward protrusion jutting inwardly from the transitional region relative to surrounding inner surface areas thereof, wherein, in a cross-sectional measuring plane that is parallel to a midplane that bisects the cranial and facial regions, at least a partial region of the lower facial portion has a linear slope, and at least a partial surface of a distal end each inward protrusion has a relative slope of obliquely oriented and downwardly convergent relationship to said linear slope of the lower facial portion.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
The figures of the illustrated embodiments show a face and head shield 10 composed of a singular unitary piece of transparent polymeric material formed into a three-dimensional non-spherical dome or shell that bounds three out of four sides of a hollow interior space within this dome or shell. At a fourth side of the dome or shell (referred to herein as a rear side), a boundary edge of the dome or shell delimits an opening through which a user's face is received into the interior space of the dome or shell in order to don the face and head shield in a working position. Once donned in such position, the shield protects both the entire facial region of the user's head, and a substantial cranial region thereof, from physical contact with potential hazards, for example droplet or aerosol carried contagions emitted by a coughing, sneezing or otherwise contagion-emitting patient under the medical care of the user. The same face shield may of course also be used for other protective applications.
In the first and second embodiments example, the boundary edge of the dome or shell resides in a singular flat plane, for example as would be seen if the dome or shell were placed boundary edge down atop a flat tabletop. This plane is used as a reference plane governing directions in which height and width dimensions H, W of the shield are measured orthogonally of one another. A third depth dimension D of the shield is measured in a third direction residing normal to this reference plane, and thus orthogonal to the height and width dimensions. The depth of the shield's interior space thus refers to measurement made perpendicularly from the plane of the shield's open rear side to an inner surface of the shield that resides oppositely of, and faces toward, said open rear side of the shield. The height and width of the shield are at their greatest in the aforementioned reference plane at the open rear side of the dome or shell. The height of the opening exceeds the width thereof, whereby the opening of the shield has an oblong shape having an elongated primary dimension and a shorter secondary dimension. As used herein, the top and bottom ends of the shield 12, 14 are those which are spaced apart by the longer primary dimension, while lateral sides 16, 18 of the shield are spaced apart by the smaller secondary dimension.
A rounded apex 20 of the shield's dome-like or shell-like shape, i.e. the area thereof at which the depth dimension D is at its greatest, resides nearer to the top end 12 of the shield 10 than to the opposing bottom end 14 thereof. From the rounded profile of the apex 20, the depth of the shield tapers toward the bottom end 14 of the shield, initially in a generally linear fashion for a majority of the distance from the apex 20 to the bottom end 14, before curving downward more aggressively just before the bottom end 14 in order to impart a rounded shape, rather than a sharp point, to the shield's bottom end. Likewise, the top end 12 of the shield is also slightly rounded in side-view profile, though at a relatively steep slope from the nearby apex 20. The depth of the shield is also curved in its end-view profile, in which both the apex 20 and the depth-tapered lower portion therebelow have a subtle curvature over a central majority of the shield's width, before the depth drops off more aggressively near the two lateral sides 16, 18. The relatively flat, but subtly curved central region of the shield's width spans across the user's face in the worn position of the shield, from which the more sharply curved side-adjacent regions of the shield will then turn posteriorly (rearwardly) of the user's face to cover at least the cheeks and temples of the user, and possibly also an entirety or partial fraction of the user's ears.
The forgoing shape of the shield 10 is symmetric in the width direction, i.e.
symmetric across a longitudinal midplane running in the height direction in orthogonal relation to the reference plane. On the other hand, the shield is asymmetric in the height direction, i.e. lacking symmetry across any transverse plane running in the width direction in orthogonal relation to the reference plane. By having a three-dimensional form that is of profiled shape in both end view (i.e. as viewed from either top or bottom end 12, 14) and side view (i.e. as viewed from either lateral side 16, 18), the shield is able to more comprehensively protect the user's head relative to the aforementioned conventional shields.
This improved protective coverage of can be seen in
In the first illustrated embodiment, the shield 10 is supported on the user's head by a headband style support frame 30 that is worn circumferentially around the user's head at forehead level. It will be appreciated that other known styles of support frame may alternatively be employed, for example using an eyewear-style support frame that is borne on the user's ears and bridge of the nose. In the headband example of the first illustrated embodiment, a front segment 32 of the headband that spans across the user's forehead features a set of one of more coupling elements 34A thereof, of which there are two in the illustrated example. Each coupling element 34A is shown carried at a forwardly protruding mounting area 36 of the front segment 32 that resides adjacent a respective lateral end of the front segment. Each mounting area 36 juts forwardly from a remainder of the segment 32 that fits in generally flush conforming fashion against the user's forehead. The protruding mounting area(s) are used to set the shield in anteriorly (forwardly) spaced relation to the user's face when worn, as shown in the figures, to allow airflow between the user's face and the shield. In the illustrated example, each coupling element 34A is a piece of hook or loop fastener.
A matching set of corresponding coupling elements 34B are provided on the shield at the inner surface thereof, and at an elevation at or near the apex 20, thus closer to the top end 12 of the shield than to the bottom end 14 thereof. In the illustrated example with two coupling elements per set, the spacing between the support frame's coupling elements 34A matches that between the shield's corresponding coupling elements 34B, of which the latter are situated at opposite ends of the shield's central region so as to reside near, but inward from, the lateral sides 14, 16 of the shield. Accordingly, elements 34B align with the support frame's coupling elements 34A that are worn at or near opposite ends of the user's forehead, thus residing near, but inward from, the user's temples. In the illustrated example, each of the shield's coupling elements 34B is a piece of hook or loop fastener matable with the respective hook or loop fastener 34A of the support frame 30. The illustrated embodiment thus represents a scenario in which the shield is removably attachable to the support frame 30, whereby the support frame may be worn on an ongoing basis, and repeatedly re-used, while the shield is instead intermittently swapped out for a replacement shield after each use (e.g. after each patient, in medical applications). Such replacement may be performed on a single-use disposable basis, where the worn shield is destroyed after use, rather than sterilized and re-used. It will be appreciated that releasable couplers other than hook and loop fasteners may be employed. In other embodiments, couplers capable of repeated attachment and detachment need not necessarily be used, for example in instances where the head frame is also treated as a one-time-use disposable product that is discarded together with the used shield.
As shown in
As shown in
In addition to the front bib and shroud,
The protruding distance of the two protrusions 40A, 40B measured from immediately surrounding areas of the shield's inner surface, or the corresponding recessed depth of the depressions 42A, 42B measured from immediately surrounding areas of the shield's outer surface, may be between 1 and 2 inches, and more particularly between 1.25 and 1.75 inches in some embodiments, for example measuring 1.5 inches in one particular non-limiting example. A protrusion axis A on which each protrusion 40A, 40B juts into the interior space of the shield may be at a slightly oblique downward angle relative to the slope at which an upper portion 46 of the shield spans between the top end 12 of the shield and the rounded apex 20. In the worn position of the shield, where the upper portion 46 thereof spans posteriorly from the top of the forehead over the scalp in a generally horizontal orientation, the protrusion axes A are thus angled at a slightly downward slope toward the user's forehead, though at a lesser downward slope than the angle of the shield's depth dimension D, which is perpendicular to the plane of the shield's rear opening.
For optimal comfort and/or gripping effect, a pad 48 of foam or other cushioning, grippy or sweat-absorbent material of distinct composition from that of the polymeric shield may be adhered to the terminal end of each protrusion 40A, 40B inside the interior space of the shield's dome or shell shape. In the worn position of the shield 10′, these terminal ends of the inward protrusions 40A, 40B abut against the user's forehead, whether directly, or indirectly through the optional pads 48. The protrusions thus serve as stand-offs for the purpose of maintaining the shield 10 in anteriorly (forwardly) spaced relation from the user's face in order to create an open air space therebetween for the comfort of the user. Incorporating these stand-offs directly into the shield itself simplifies the manufacture of the overall apparatus by which the shield is supported on the wearer, as the front headband segment 32 of the earlier embodiment can be omitted altogether, having been replaced by integrally formed features of the shield itself. As shown in
For the purpose of such connection between the shield and the strap 39, the coupling elements 34B used in the earlier embodiment to attach the central region of the shield's inner surface to the front segment of the two-piece headband 30′ may instead be relocated to the lateral sides 16, 18 of the shield for coupling with corresponding coupling elements on the flexible elastic strap 50 at or near the longitudinally opposing ends thereof. However, instead of the hook and loop fastener elements, any other coupling means capable of enabling attachment between the shield 10′ and the strap 39 may alternatively be used via cooperating features on these two components. In one alternative example, the ends of the straps may be fed through small slits in the sides of the shield 10′, so that the shield is frictionally held on the strap. Or a pair of holes may be provided in the sides of the shield for snap fit mating with male coupler features on the strap 39.
It will be appreciated that the same integral incorporation of stand-off protrusions into the shield itself may be used on shields of more conventional shape, and not just on the novel dome or shell-like shape of the inventive shield whose inner user-facing side is concavely shaped in both of the orthogonal height and width dimensions of the shield. It will also be appreciated that while the illustrated example employs two small protrusions 40A, 40B at laterally spaced locations across the inside of the shield, another embodiment could alternatively a singular wider protrusion that spans more of the shield's width to achieve sufficient contact area with the forehead to also maintain a consistent and uniform air space between the shield and the user's face. It will also be appreciated that in the illustrated vacuum formed example, the inward protrusions on the inner side of the shield are coexistent with matching recessed depressions at the outer side of the shield, it will be appreciated that these need not be case in the instance of other manufacturing technics (plastic molding, 3D printing, etc.), where protrusions one side need necessary coincide with depressions on the other.
A third embodiment of the head and face shield 10″ is shown in
In this embodiment, the shield may be supported by a full-circumference headband that spans around the wearer's entire head, with the front segment of the headband being adhesively bonded (e.g. with double sided tape) or otherwise fastened (e.g. via hook and loop fastener) to the terminal ends of the protrusions 40A′, 40B′. To guide proper alignment between the headband and the shield 10″, the illustrated example of the shield features a vertical alignment marker 43A lying upright on each side 16, 18 of the shield just outside the respective depression 42A′, 42B′ and a horizontal alignment marker 43B lying laterally across the terminal end of each protrusion 40A′, 40B′. In the illustrated embodiment, each marker 43A, 43B is an integrally formed narrow groove recessed in the exterior of the shield, thus coinciding with a protruding narrow rib on the interior of the shield.
The upper cranial portion 46 of the shield 10″ differs from that of the earlier embodiments in that instead of a smooth and continuous curvature in its side-to-side width profile (as viewed from the front or rear of the shield), its side-to-side profile instead has a corrugated central region. Here, two troughs 52A, 52B are recessed into the exterior of the shield on opposing sides of a singular airflow channel 54 of parallel relation to the two neighbouring troughs 52A, 52B. The troughs 52A, 52B and airflow channel 54 run longitudinally of the cranial portion 46 of the shield from the top end 12 of the shield's rear opening toward, but stopping short of, the apex 20 of the shield. A floor 56 of each trough defines a narrow strip-like seat for resting atop the wearer's scalp. A ceiling 58 of the airflow channel 54 is of elevated relation to the trough floors 56, as are the neighbouring areas 60 of the topside of the cranial portion 46 that reside outward of the two troughs 52A, 52B. Accordingly, when the trough floors 56 are seated atop the wearer's scalp, the channel ceiling 58 and neighbouring areas 60 are stood off from the wearer's scalp in spaced relation thereover. The troughs 52A, 52B and the airflow channel 54 are seamlessly integral parts of the preferably vacuum-formed (though optionally molded, or 3D-printed) shape of the shield itself.
The end of the airflow channel 54 that intersects the rear opening of the shield at the top end 12 thereof, and thus residing distally of the shield's lower facial portion 44, is referred to an as inlet end 54A of the channel 54, as it is this end through which airflow in induced through the airflow channel 54 during use of the shield. An inlet fitting 62 of materially distinct and separate construction from the shield itself is installed in the airflow channel 54 at the inlet end thereof, for example being adhesively bonded to the transparent polymeric material of the shield at the ceiling 58 and/or sidewalls of the airflow channel 54 by one or more pieces of double sided tape 64 (
A channel cover 64 is also defined separately of the shield itself, at least in the illustrated embodiment where the shield 10″ is vacuum formed. The channel cover 64 may be of the same material of the shield, or of distinct material composition therefrom. In the illustrated embodiment, the channel cover 64 is also adhesively bonded to the polymeric material of the shield, but at the undersides of the trough floors 56, for example using two elongated strips of double sided tape 66 each running along a respective perimeter of the channel cover 64. The channel cover 64 has an elongated strip-like shape spanning a nearly full length of the airflow channel 54, starting from the inlet end 54A or inlet fitting 62 thereof, but stopping short of an opposing outlet end 54B thereof (
The purpose of the airflow channel is illustrated in
The variant of
The bumped-out position of the lower facial portion 44′ relative to the overlying transitional apex or brow ridge 80 of the shield creates a broad external ledge 84 that spans across an entirety, or substantial entirety, of the width of the shield. This external ledge 84 resides at an elevation that is shared by the bottom walls of the two inward protrusions found on the interior of the shield. The topsides of these bottom walls of the inward protrusions define bottom floors 86 of the two matching depressions 42A, 42B in the exterior of the shield. The external ledge 84 is thus composed of these floors 86 of the two depressions, plus a shallower joining strip 88 that spans across the front of the brow ridge 80 and joins together the two depression floors 86. The external ledge 84 juts forwardly from the two depressions 42A′, 42B′ and the central brow ridge 80, and thus in the worn position of the shield, juts anteriorly outward from the wearer's face at a lower area of the forehead just over the user's eyes (e.g. at approximately eyebrow level). While the increased shield depth crated by the bumped-out shape of the lower facial portion 44′ allows loupes or a headlight to be worn under the shield, as described above, the external ledge 84 also creates an exposed external support surface that is uncovered by any other features lying overhead thereof, and on which loupes, a headlight or other accessories may optionally be mounted externally to the shield itself, instead of being worn beneath the shield.
This is schematically illustrated in
double-sided adhesive tape, may alternatively be employed for such mounting of a component to the external ledge 84, provided that the bonding or coupling strength thereof is sufficient to hold the accessory.
While the variant in
Another difference in the
The stationary cover component 96 is an elongated component that serves the same purpose as the one-piece channel cover 64 of
In a fully open position of the movable adjustment component 98, all of the vent openings 100A in the stationary cover component 96 are fully aligned with the matching vent openings 100B in the movable adjustment component 98, whereby the crown and/or scalp of the user's head are exposed to the airflow through the airflow channel 54. This can be used help cool the user, or alternatively to warm the user if the shield is being worn in a cold environment and the fan 69 is accompanied by a heater to increase the temperature of the force airflow through the channel 54. In a fully closed position of the movable adjustment component 98, each of the vent openings 100A in the stationary cover component 96 is unaligned with the matching vent opening 100B in the movable adjustment component 98. Instead, the vent openings 100A of the stationary cover component 96 are fully covered by solid areas of the movable adjustment component 98, i.e. closed areas that are materially intact between the vent openings 100B thereof. The movable adjustment component 98 may also be moved into intermediate positions in which the vent openings 100A of the stationary cover component 96 partially overlap with the vent openings 100B of the movable adjustment component 98, thereby achieving a partially open state of the two-piece channel cover 64′.
In the illustrated embodiment, both channel cover components 96, 98 are channel-shaped, thus having a pair of upright sidewalls 104A, 104B with a central bottom wall 106A, 106B spanning therebetween. The vent openings 100A, 100B of each component 96, 98 reside in the bottom wall 106A, 106B thereof, and the movable adjustment component 98 fits externally over the stationary cover component 96 at the underside thereof. Accordingly, the bottom wall 106B of the movable adjustment component 98 underlies the bottom wall 106A of the stationary cover component 98, and the sidewalls 104B of the movable adjustment component 98 neighbour the sidewalls 104A of the stationary cover component 96 at the exterior sides thereof. In the installed position of the airflow channel cover 64′, the sidewalls 104A, 104B of both channel cover components 96, 98 reside inside the airflow channel 54 of the shield, and run along the interior of the two sidewalls of the airflow channel 54. At the front end 62C of the inlet fitting 62′, the interior through-bore 62A thereof opens into the space between the two sidewalls 104A of the stationary cover component 96, as shown in
To maintain the slidably coupled relationship between the two components 96, 98, mating longitudinal ribs and slots may be provided on the interior of the movable adjustment component's sidewalls 104B and the exterior of the stationary cover components sidewalls 104A. It will be appreciated that the movable adjustment component 98 need not necessarily be a channel shaped component residing externally and beneath a slightly narrower channel-shaped stationary cover component 96. For example, the movable adjustment component 98 may instead ride atop the bottom wall 106A of the stationary cover component in the space between the sidewalls 104A thereof, provided that some part of the movable component 98 is accessible from outside the stationary cover component 96 to enable manipulation of the movable component's position along the stationary component.
The clip 94 of the inlet fitting 62′ is shown as an integrally attached clip, e.g. part of a plastic molded or 3D printed inlet fitting, though other means of attachment between the clip 94 and the body of the inlet fitting 62′ may alternatively be employed. The clip 94 has an elongated arm spanning forwardly from its attachment to the body of the inlet fitting 62′, and reaching past the front end 62C thereof in overhanging relation thereto. The clip arm has a terminal end tab 108 at its free end, a bottom tip 108A of which represents a lowermost point of the clip 94 in a normal default position thereof. Over at least a partial length of the overhanding portion of the clip arm that spans from the front end 62C of the inlet fitting 62′ to the terminal end tab 108, a series of tooth-like serrations 110 are provided on the underside of the clip arm. In a default position of the clip 94, the bottom tip 108A of the terminal end tab 108 resides at a lower elevation than a reference plane occupied by the top ends of the stationary sidewalls 104A of the air channel cover 64′. To install the inlet fitting 62′ and attached airflow channel cover 64′, the clip 94 is temporarily flexed upwardly from its default position, and the boundary edge of the shield's rear opening, and more specifically the portion of this boundary edge denoting the inlet end of the airflow channel 54, is slipped between the temporarily opened space between the reference plane and lifted clip. Once the inlet end of the airflow channel abuts the front end 62A of the inlet fitting, the clip 94 is released from its raised position, whereupon it will resiliently flex back downwardly toward its default position. This return of the clip 94 biases the bottom tip 108A of the end tab 108 down against the ceiling of the airflow channel 54, and likewise forces the serrations 110 down against the boundary edge of the airflow channel's inlet end, thus clamping the inlet fitting 62′ and attached channel cover 64′ in place in operable relation to the airflow channel. It will be appreciated that the particular design of the clip 94 and the particular area of the shield engaged thereby at or near the inlet end of the airflow channel 54 may vary from this particular example.
With reference to
In the illustrated example, the protruding depth of the flange 112 increases gradually over these channel-neighbouring areas in a centrally inward direction toward the airflow channel 54. As a result, this variable-depth section of the flange 112A forms a triangular gusset that serves to reinforce the shape of the airflow channel at the inlet end thereof.
Turning from
The overbent hooking portion 116 is resiliently flexible, which allows the returning upper span 116B to be temporarily flexed away from the originating lower span 116A such that the out-turned flange 112 of the shield 10′″ can be inserted between the two spans 116A, 116B of the overbent hooking portion 16 via the small gap 120 left between the stem 118 and the terminal end 116C of the overbent hooking portion 116. The returning upper span 116B will snap back into its default position closely adjacent the originating bottom span 116A, thus biasing itself against the front side of the shield's out-turned flange 112, thereby holding the flexible connector clip 114 on the shield 10′″. In this installed position of the connector clip 114 on the shield 10′″, the stem 118 of the connector clip's J-shaped profile reaches into the interior space of the shield 10′″ through the rear opening thereof, and lines the interior surface of the shield along a perimeter strip thereof around the rear opening of the shield, as shown in
The flexible connector clip, for example composed of a flexible polymeric material, is flexible in its elongated extrusion direction, allowing it to conform to the interior contours of the shield at this interior perimeter strip around the rear opening of the shield. In the illustrated example, the extruded length of the flexible connector clip 114 spans a majority of the perimeter distance around the rear opening, preferably spanning all perimeter areas thereof, except for the inlet end of the airflow channel and the neighbouring areas occupied by the gusset-shaped portions 112A of the out-turned flange 112. In embodiments lacking the airflow channel 54, the flexible connector clip 114 may span the entire perimeter of the shield's rear opening.
In either case, the flexible connector clip may be used to attach a shroud to the shield. For such purposes, an exposed outer side 118A of stem 118 (the side opposite the overbent hooking portion 116) is equipped with a deposit of hook or loop fastener material 122, whether a continuous strip thereof spanning the full extruded length of the flexible connector clip, or discrete pieces of fastener material attached at spaced apart locations therealong. The shroud is equipped with a mating deposit of loop or hook fastener material around the head opening of the shroud. Accordingly, fastening together of hook and loop material on the shroud and the flexible connector clip 114 is operable to secure the shroud to the shield. Inside the shield 10′″, additional hook or loop fastener material may be applied across the bottom of the airflow channel cover 64, 64′, and on the neighbouring internal areas of the shield on either side of the airflow channel, in order to also mate with the loop or hook fastener material on the shroud, thereby achieving fastened connection of the shroud around the entire rear opening of the shield. Double sided tape or snap fasteners may alternatively be used in place of the hook and loop fastener to similarly enable convenient quick assembly by a customer or end-user from initially separate components. Alternatively, the shroud and the flexible connector clip 114 may instead be combined into a singular unit by a manufacturer or supplier, for example where the shroud is pre-sewn, pre-bonded with suitable adhesive, or even heat sealed to the stem of the flexible connector clip 114. A shorter flexible clip occupying only a lower half of the shield's perimeter edge may be similarly used to attach a front bib to the shield, instead of a full-circumference shroud.
Rather than rely solely on the gripping action of the overbent hooking portion 116 to hold the connector clip 114 on the shield 10′″, an additional deposit of hook or loop fastener material 124 may also be applied to the opposing inner side 118B of the stem 118 (i.e. the side facing the overbent hooking portion 116), again whether as a continuous strip or discrete pieces, for mating with mating deposit of loop or hook fastener applied to the interior surface of the shield 10′″ at the perimeter strip thereof neighbouring the rear opening. Alternatively, rather than hook and loop fastener, double sided tape may be used to adhesively bond the inner side 118B of the stem 118 of the flexible connector clip 114 to the opening-adjacent perimeter strip of the shield's interior. In yet another alternative, depending on the polymeric materials used for the flexible connector clip 114 and the shield, it may be possible to heat seal or sew these two components together, for example at the manufacturer or supplier level, instead of relying on customer or end-user assembly with hook and loop fastener or double-sided tape.
Each recessed depression 132A, 132B is an elongated channel-shaped depression residing in an anterior region of the cranial portion that resides nearest to the facial portion 44 of the shield. Each channel shaped depression 132A, 132B and coincident downward protrusion 130A, 130B lies longitudinally of the cranial portion 46 of the shield in parallel relation to the airflow channel 54, and is therefore of elongated shape in the front-to-back or anterior-posterior direction in which the cranial potion 46 spans from its connection to the facial portion 44. The illustrated example features two channel-shaped depression 132A, 132 and two coincident downward protrusion 130A, 130B, which are symmetrically disposed on opposite sides of the centrally located airflow channel 54 that resides a bisecting midplane that cuts symmetrically and vertically through the facial and cranial portions 44, 46 of the shield (as shown by line D-D of
The downward protrusions 130A, 130B each protrude downwardly surrounding areas of the underside of the cranial portion 46, to an even lower elevation than the floors of the troughs 52A, 52B. The bottom of each downward protrusion 130A, 130B thus denotes a lowermost surface of the cranial portion, the purpose of which is best seen in
To also increase the available space for airflow at the top of the user's head for comfortable wear, the fourth embodiment differs from the earlier embodiments in the relative angle between the cranial portion 46 and the facial portion 44, as best shown in the cross-sectional profile of
Another unique angular relationship between features of the fourth embodiment is the angular relationship found between the linear majority of the facial portion 44 and a headband attachment surface found the terminal end of each inward protrusion 40A, 40B at the forehead level transition region, as measured in cross-sectional planes that are parallel to the bisecting midplane of the shield, but that are offset therefrom so as to cut vertically through the terminal end of either inward protrusions 40A, 40B. This is best shown in
Referring to
Another change in relative orientation of features in the fourth embodiment is in the relative orientation of the inner sidewalls 138 of the two forehead-level depressions 42A, 42B and coincident inward protrusions 40A, 40B at the transitional region of the shield, which also double as sidewalls of the upright brow ridge 80 that separate the two forehead-level depressions 42A, 42B. When the shield is worn, air can flow upwardly or downwardly over the wearer's forehead through the inside of the brow ridge 80 between the two external depressions 42A, 42B, i.e. through the open airflow space 140 (
The compressibility of the foam allows this tip-to-tip width of the barbed tail to be temporarily reduced, whereby the second end E2 of the strip and any number of the barb pairs can be forced through each of the receiver slots 206, whereafter the tip-to-tip width of the barbs forced through the slots 206 will return to its default width. At their full width, the barbs resist pulling of the barbed tail back through the slots. As shown in
To secure the headband 200 to the headband attachment surfaces 136B at the forehead level protrusions 40A, 40B of a shield, coupling elements 208 may be preinstalled on the outer face of the headband 200 at a mid-length, preferably full-width, area of the foam strip 210 that resides beyond the inner end of the barbed tail and will form the front section of the headband once installed on the shield, and/or installed on the headband attachment surfaces 136B of the shield. The illustrated example employs two pieces of double-sided tape 208 as the coupling elements, which are pre-attached to the foam strip of the headband at a lengthwise spacing from one another that matches the known distance between a shield's headband attachment surfaces. Each piece of tape includes a respective peel-away cover that is removed to reveal the tape come time for assembly of the headband onto a shield. In other examples, such double-sided tape may instead be applied to the headband attachment surfaces of the shield. In another example, hook fastener material may be applied to a first one of either the headband or the shield, and loop fastener material applied to the second one of either the headband or shield for cooperative mating of the hook and loop fastener materials when the time comes to secure the headband and shield together.
At least one of the pieces of fastener 302A, 302B, 304A, 304B is elongated in the length dimension of the respective strip of foam material to enable coupling together of the two strips in varying degrees of overlap to thereby adjustably size said headband. In the illustrated example, the two fastener pieces 304A, 304B on the second strip 300B are both elongated in the length dimension of that strip. The first strip has two coupling elements 308 installed a mid-region of its length at lengthwise spacing from one another that that matches the known distance between a shield's headband attachment surfaces, whereby the first strip is attachable to a shield at the headband mounting surfaces thereof to form a front section of the overall headband. Once again, each piece of tape 308 includes a respective peel-away cover that is removed to reveal the tape come time for assembly of the headband onto a shield. In other examples, such double-sided tape may instead be applied to the headband attachment surfaces of the shield. As described for the
Since various modifications can be made in my invention as herein above described, and many apparently widely different embodiments of same made, it is intended that all matter contained in the accompanying specification shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not in a limiting sense.
This application claims priority benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Applications 63/002,340 filed Mar. 30, 2020; 63/005,140 filed Apr. 3, 2020; 63/020,501 filed May 5, 2020; and 63/059,739, filed Jul. 31, 2020; each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/CA2021/050426 | 3/30/2021 | WO |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 63059739 | Jul 2020 | US | |
| 63020501 | May 2020 | US | |
| 63005140 | Apr 2020 | US | |
| 63002340 | Mar 2020 | US |