The invention relates to a floor mat for use at a standing workstation.
In general, working at a standing workstation is preferable to working at a sitting workstation, for example, at a desk. For an employee, it is particularly advantageous, on the one hand, if the opportunity for occasionally sitting, or leaning against a standing stool, is provided, and, on the other hand, if a place to stand is provided, opportunities which make it possible to work largely fatigue-free.
Fatigue while working in a standing position can substantially be reduced by a so-called active mat. Therefore, mats for standing workstations should be constructed so that they delay fatigue and also help prevent health problems in general.
However, although various mats are available for a standing workstation, they lead to fatigue of the feet and of the legs within a relatively short time. They often consist of a homogeneous PUR integral soft foam and/or, on their surface, they can comprise an arrangement of round disks, which, on the one hand, lead to a relatively safer footfall, and, on the other hand, have the effect of orienting the feet. Other mats in turn are provided with a hemispherical profile on the upper side. The mentioned designs on the surface are intended to delay foot and leg fatigue or at least reduce such fatigue.
However, for longer periods of work in a standing position at one place, these known mats are not suited for preventing fatigue and maintaining alertness and freshness, in spite of their surface design and softness, because the proprioceptors are not activated sufficiently. It is precisely a soft structure of the mat that is counterproductive in this regard. As time spent working in a standing position goes on, the person who is working in a standing position has the sensation of no longer feeling the legs and there is an increased need for another body posture—the person allows himself to fall into the closest armchair. Thus, excitation needs to be provided for the feet and legs if fatigue phenomena are to be prevented or at least delayed.
It is the object of the invention to provide a mat which helps reduce foot fatigue while working in standing position.
The object is attained according to the invention by the floor mat with a mat surface at a standing workstation, wherein a mat structure formed beneath the mat surface consists of an elastomer material, in which irregularly distributed elements are arranged, the consistency of which is harder than the consistency of the elastomer material of the mat structure.
In this context, it is advantageous that the elements with the harder consistency are provided by means of different materials and that the mat structure made of elastomer material extends essentially homogeneously on the mat surface.
The areas of different hardness, i.e., the elements, continuously apply different tactile excitations to the soles of the feet, as a result of which a monotonous planar continuous stressing of the sole of the foot is avoided. The constant excitation is perceived by the brain, which has to react and therefore remains attentive and awake longer.
As a result of the flat surface, it is avoided, on the one hand, that, with movement of the feet, the feet become remain accidentally stuck to the surface structures such as knobs or disks. On the other hand, due to the arrangement of the soft layer beneath the surface, it is achieved that the different hard areas can be perceived clearly by the feet.
The mat structure is arranged on a base part on/at which the elements are designed in the form of bumps.
The hard elements, forming separate inclusions, can be partially surrounded in the mat by the softer material and supported from below on a hard layer. As a result, the elements can then be perceived by the feet themselves when one stands on the mat wearing thick-soled shoes.
Advantageously, the bumps extend upward different heights. As a result, the foot experiences different pressure excitations.
If the elements which are harder than the material of the mat structure are designed to form three-dimensional bodies in the shape of cubes, cuboids, truncated cones, barrels of different dimensions, or the like, then the multitude of individual perceptions is increased, and the available excitations are numerous and highly varied, so that a great perception potential is offered. This can be increased further, in that the bodies are shaped regularly and irregularly, and arranged at a slant on a support layer. Naturally, regularly and irregularly shaped bodies can be arranged distributed over the mat surface.
Between the irregularly distributed elements, special free areas are advantageously arranged, the surface area of which is larger than the average distance apart of all the elements. As a result, an area without pressure is available for the foot, resulting in a certain variation of sensations. The mat structure is designed as an upper part of the floor mat with recesses formed therein, in which the hard elements (3) are accommodated.
The base part comprises a bottom layer and can be designed as a prefabricated component, which, as an insert part, is at least partially surrounded by foam during the production of the upper part.
Behind its peripheral margin, the upper part comprises an inward directed groove, in which the outer margin of the base part is accommodated. Moreover, the marginal area is designed with a peripheral bevel.
Other advantageous developments of the invention are characterized in the dependent claims and represented in greater detail below together with the description of the preferred embodiments of the invention in reference to the figures. The figures show:
a) the base part of the bottom mat with the elements according to the first exemplary embodiment arranged thereon, in a top view,
b) the base part of the floor mat with the elements according to the first exemplary embodiment arranged thereon, in a side view.
The different structural or material properties are provided by means of different materials, wherein the softer material of the upper part 8 is an elastomer foam material, which extends substantially homogeneously beneath the mat surface 4.
The upper part 8 is arranged on a base part 9, which is explained in further detail below.
A top view onto the mat 1′ according to the second exemplary embodiment is represented in
As can be seen from
The plate 13 provided in the upper part 8 to the side in the area of the bevel comprises two buttoning feet which can be buttoned into the recess 12 through a slit 16 cut out in the bevel.
In
Moreover, as shown by the side view of the upper part 8 reproduced in
The base part 9 of the floor mat with the elements 3 arranged thereon according to the first exemplary embodiment is represented in different views in
The inventive mat can be provided with an anti-slip arrangement. This anti-slip arrangement can consist of an application of a soft rubber layer. Depending on the subsurface, another arrangement can also be selected, which, in any case, ensures that the mat remains stationary.
The invention is not limited in its implementation to the preferred exemplary embodiments indicated above. Rather, numerous variants are conceivable, which use the represented solution even in designs that are of fundamentally different type. Thus, the shape of the bumps can deviate from the angular shape, the bumps can consist, for example, of spheres or other bodies with curved surfaces facing the foot.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2016 113 585 | Jul 2016 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2057171 | Van Der Pyl | Oct 1936 | A |
3434715 | Brantingham et al. | Oct 1966 | A |
5158073 | Bukowski | Oct 1992 | A |
5601900 | Doscher | Feb 1997 | A |
5787655 | Saylor, Jr. | Aug 1998 | A |
6219876 | Blum | Apr 2001 | B1 |
7670026 | Hawkins | Mar 2010 | B1 |
20020114926 | Malpass | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20080262579 | Berk et al. | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20110240212 | McMahan | Oct 2011 | A1 |
20140342126 | Oh | Nov 2014 | A1 |
20150374157 | Bone | Dec 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
102793454 | Nov 2012 | CN |
2123696 | Feb 1984 | GB |
Entry |
---|
International Preliminary Report on Patentability and Written Opinion dated Jan. 31, 2019 received in related International Application No. PCT/EP2017/066192 together with an English language translation. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20180020858 A1 | Jan 2018 | US |