This application is a United States national phase application based on PCT/EP2013/00840 filed Mar. 19, 2013 which claims the benefit of German Patent Application No. DE 10 2012 012 402.3, filed Jun. 25, 2012. The entire disclosures of the above applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The invention concerns a flat wiping cloth according to the preamble of patent claim 1.
Flat wiping cloths are known in the prior art, which are placed on so-called flat mops and used for the cleaning of surfaces. The flat wiping cloths are used in particular for the cleaning of floors.
Such a flat wiping cloth is known, for example, from the German patent application with file number DE 10 2011 107 648.8.
However, such flat wiping cloths are ill suited to cleaning regions and corners adjoining the relatively large surfaces being primarily cleaned, especially floors.
Such a region might be, for example, a tile baseboard which borders a tile floor.
With the known flat wiping cloths, the person doing the cleaning would not clean such a baseboard.
Either the flat wiping cloth would remain flat on the floor, so that only the narrow marginal regions of the flat wiping cloth would make contact with the vertical surfaces and only a partial cleaning would occur, such as the floor molding along a horizontal strip, or the housecleaner would attempt to bring the main cleaning surface of the flat wiping cloth as much as possible in contact with the vertical baseboard by placing the flat wiping cloth along the vertical direction.
But the latter process would have the drawback of the flat wiping cloth also touching the wall regions bordering the baseboard and possibly damaging, soiling or loosening the wall paint, since the width of the flat wiping cloth is usually larger (100 to 150 mm) than the typical widths of a molding strip (around 20 to 70 mm).
Given this background, a flat wiping cloth is known from DE 31 39 245 A1, which has an elongated base, with the base having a main cleaning surface and at least one cleaning lip which can swivel relative to a base region of the main cleaning surface.
The at least one cleaning lip can swivel about at least one desired swiveling region.
The base of this flat wiping cloth has a base fabric or backing fabric of warp and weft threads on which pile threads 1 to 2 cm in length are secured. Accordingly, the prior art shows a flat wiping cloth with a base fabric carrying additional threads.
These pile threads project to the outside. Such pile threads can rather easily discharge particles, since their free projecting ends cannot particularly easily secure particles.
Therefore, the known flat wiping cloth is ill suited for use in clean rooms. By a clean room is meant in the sense of this document a room in which the particles in the air are controlled in terms of size and number.
Furthermore, this flat wiping cloth has only limited service life, since individual pile threads can rather easily become detached during washing processes.
Therefore, the problem of the invention is to configure and modify a flat wiping cloth of the kind mentioned above so that it removes dirt from corners and edge regions adjoining large areas being cleaned with particular effectiveness, and it releases as few particles as possible into the room being cleaned, while having long service life.
The present invention solves the aforementioned problem with the features of patent claim 1.
According to the invention, it has been discovered first of all how to create very broad and long projecting lip regions thanks to a desired swiveling region, which have a large region of overlap with a baseboard. The cleaning lips are part of the main cleaning surface, this part being able to swivel relative to a base region of the main cleaning surface. This base region is positioned preferably on the floor. In addition, it has been discovered that the base must have a sheetlike textile material, or it must be made from such a textile material, which releases as few particles as possible into the room being cleaned.
The prior art discloses base fabrics and pile threads which are directed toward a surface being cleaned. The prior art encompasses all sheetlike textile materials having so-called pile threads. In the case of velour, velvet, plush, tuftings and other textiles with three-dimensional structure, a thread system running perpendicular to the surface is defined as a pile. In the sense of this document, a base fabric is a backing fabric on which threads, especially pile threads, are flocked, sewn on as a fringe, tufted as yarn or yarn loops, or woven in.
According to the invention, on the contrary, a sheetlike textile material is used which has no projecting pile threads. Thus, according to the invention, all textile materials are used except for pile fabric, flocked fabric, or fabric with a fringe sewn on. A sheetlike textile material is used which consists of an essentially two-dimensional structure or a fiber/yarn arrangement. According to the invention, a sheetlike textile material is used in which the main direction of the yarns or fibers is oriented within the textile surface.
Surprisingly, the sheetlike textile material has much less tendency to give off particles than that of pile fabrics. Moreover, the production costs are relatively low. For the same surface weight and starting material, pile fabrics are the most expensive, woven somewhat better, knitted even better, and nonwoven are the best. The sheetlike textile material is relatively easy to work with. A pile fabric, on the other hand, requires increased attention and handling during production on account of its thickness and two-sided nature. The former advantages of pile fabrics, namely the stability and high water uptake capacity, can be compensated rather problem-free by the use of microfibers in woven, knitted, and nonwoven materials.
Accordingly, a flat wiping cloth is specified that removes dirt especially effectively from corners and edge regions adjoining large surfaces being cleaned, wherein it releases as few particles as possible into the room being cleaned, while having a long service life. Consequently, the stated problem is solved.
In particular, the possibility exists of providing a surface with sections of pure microfibers, which realizes a high water and dirt uptake, but also large friction. The possibility exists of providing sections with coarse yarns (e.g., NON-microfibers), so that there is less water and dirt uptake, but also less friction. The sections can be provided in the form of stripes, as is done today with many knitted fabrics, for example, by knitting five courses with microfibers and two courses with other yarns all the time.
The sheetlike textile material could be formed as a knitted, a crocheted, a woven or a nonwoven fabric. These sheetlike textile materials have very few threads or fibers which project by a free end in the direction of a surface being cleaned. Therefore, they give off very few particles into their surroundings. This holds in particular for the use of endless fibers or filament yarns.
The base could consist entirely of the sheetlike textile material. Such a base has good material uniformity.
A desired swiveling region could be fashioned as a seam, about which the cleaning lip can swivel. A seam can be incorporated permanently and in very definite manner in the base.
A desired swiveling region could be fashioned as glue or welded strips or sewn-on strips about which the cleaning lip can swivel. Such a desired swiveling region can be formed quickly and at low cost.
A desired swiveling region could be fashioned as a thinned-out material section, about which the cleaning lip can swivel. In this way, one can save on material.
The cleaning lip could protrude 5 to 50 mm from a core region, into which a mounting or a support flap of a wiping cloth holder can be inserted. Such a cleaning lip can be especially easily applied or swiveled.
At least one cleaning lip could have different widths along its length. The width of the cleaning lips can be the same, but also different around the circumference of the flat wiping cloth. The cleaning lip need not necessarily have the same width along its entire length. In this context, trapezoidal or triangular cleaning lips are also conceivable. In this way, even complex structures can be properly cleaned.
The base could have two long sides and two short sides, forming a cleaning lip on only one long side. The forming of only one cleaning lip causes only a slight manufacturing cost.
The base could have two long sides and two short sides, forming a cleaning lip each on one long side and two short sides. In this way, a U-shaped cleaning lip arrangement is created.
The base could have two long sides and two short sides, forming a cleaning lip each on the long sides and the short sides. This will create an encircling cleaning lip arrangement.
At least one pocket could be arranged on the base, into which a mounting of a wipe cloth holder can be inserted. Thanks to this specific configuration, a so-called “butterfly” or “pocket” mop for example can be connected to the flat wiping cloth. Such a wiping cloth holder has two support flaps which can swivel relative to each other and which can be inserted into two pockets of the flat wiping cloth. The pockets are arranged on the long ends of the elongated base of the flat wiping cloth.
Tabs could be arranged on the base, which can be inserted by force locking or form fitting into receiving arrangements of a wiping cloth holder. For this, the tabs are arranged in the region of the long ends of the elongated base. The tabs can be placed around a support flap of a wipe cloth holder such that the flat wiping cloth is subjected to tension. The tabs can be inserted into clamp-like gaps on the support flaps of a wipe cloth holder. Thus, there is a form-fitting connection between the tabs and a support flap of a wipe cloth holder.
Sheetlike regions could be coordinated with the base, which can be placed with form fitting against receiving regions of a wipe cloth holder. In this context, it is specifically conceivable to form receiving regions on the underside of a support flap of a wipe cloth holder. The receiving regions could interact with the sheetlike regions on the base so that a hook and eye closure is formed.
A wipe cloth holder could have a flat wiping cloth of the kind specified here.
The flat wiping cloth specified here is especially suitable for use in a clean room, since the sheetlike textile material gives off only very few particles and holds up even after many washing processes.
By a clean room is meant in the sense of this document a room in which the particles in the air are controlled in terms of size and number.
In the sense of this document, a yarn is a linear textile which is made from several staple fibers twisted together. Such a yarn is a so-called staple fiber yarn. A yarn is also a linear textile which is made from several endless fibers that are laid/twisted together. Such a yarn is a so-called filament yarn. A twine is a linear textile which consists of at least two yarns twisted together.
In the sense of this document, a thread is a linear textile structure which is fashioned as a yarn or a twine. This encompasses both staple fibers and filament yarns or filament twines.
The drawings show
The cleaning lip 5a is part of the main cleaning surface 4′. The cleaning lip 5a, like the base region of the main cleaning surface 4′, is at first turned toward the floor, but it can be swiveled relative to the floor and to the base region, while the base region remains on the floor.
The base 3′ has a sheetlike textile material, not having a base fabric with attached threads in any portion of the main cleaning surface 4′.
The sheetlike textile material can be fashioned as a knitted, a crocheted, a woven or a nonwoven fabric. The base 3′ consists of the sheetlike textile material. The desired swiveling region 6a is fashioned as a seam 7a, about which the cleaning lip 5a can swivel.
The cleaning lip 5a protrudes 5 to 50 mm from a core region 8′, into which a mounting or a support flap 9 of a wipe cloth holder 2 according to
The features described thus far in regard to
The base 3′ of
On the base 3, 3′, 3″, 3′″ of the flat wiping cloths 1, 1′, 1″, 1′″ depicted here there are arranged two pockets 12, 12′, 12″, 12′″ each, into which the one mounting or the one support flap 9 of the wipe cloth holder 2 can be inserted.
The flat wiping cloths 1, 1′, 1″, 1′″ shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 012 402 | Jun 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/000840 | 3/19/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/000836 | 1/3/2014 | WO | A |
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