The present invention pertains generally to disposable sanitary barriers for temporarily covering the hand, and more particularly to a hand protection barrier dispenser for dispensing such barriers.
People today are becoming increasingly mindful of the sanitary conditions of public facilities such as public restrooms. While most people wash their hands after using such facilities, it is common knowledge that many people do not do so. This fact has been established by a number of studies that show that as many as thirty to forty percent of people using a restroom do not wash their hands prior to leaving the restroom. In addition, such studies have also shown that those individuals that do wash their hands, only about half use soap.
Thus, harmful bacteria may often be present on the hands of public restroom users, and such harmful bacteria can be and are left behind on the restroom door handle by such users as they are exiting the restroom. Bacteria can survive sufficiently long to be passed on to subsequent restroom users even though they have washed their hands by touching the door handle as they leave the restroom. Most public restroom users would be happier with the knowledge that they can leave a restroom without picking up bacteria from previous users unwashed hands that may have been left on the restroom door handle.
For years, public restroom users have been improvising ways to exit a public restroom without touching the door handle with their bare hands. For example, such users may use a paper towel or other material to form a barrier with which to grasp the restroom door handle as they exit the restroom. However, paper towels and the like are not necessarily available in all restrooms at all times, and often there is no convenient place near the door for the restroom user to dispose of the used paper towel. Also, the porous material of a paper towel may not provide restroom users with a high degree of confidence that a protective barrier is being provided between their hand and the restroom door handle, especially if their hand and/or the door handle is even slightly wet.
As might be expected, various potential solutions to this problem have been attempted in the past. One such potential solution over this improvised method is described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 6,925,763, to Stark et al. The Stark et al. patent provides a tissue dispenser and separate tissue receptacle that are both mounted on or near the door handle of a restroom door. Upon exiting the restroom, a restroom user may easily grasp a tissue from the tissue dispenser, use it to open the restroom door, and dispose of the tissue in the tissue receptacle. Of course, the sheets of tissue used in the Stark et al. patent do not provide a complete hand protection barrier.
At best, such a tissue sheet only provides a barrier for the front surface of the restroom user's hand. To provide even this protection, the restroom user must take a sheet of tissue from the dispenser and manipulate it to a position that covers the restroom user's hand so that no part of the restroom user's hand touches the restroom door handle. Many restroom users using the sheet of tissue do not take the time or care to properly position the tissue to provide an effective protective barrier.
A more complex potential solution to this problem is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,997,139, to Menard. The Menard patent provides a mechanical dispensing device that automatically dispenses a continuous sanitary covering for a restroom exit door handle. After each use of the door, the mechanical devise advances the sanitary covering to provide a new sanitary covering surface for the door handle. Although this solution may be effective, it is also much more mechanically complex and expensive to implement and is also at least potentially subject to mechanical failure.
Still another potential solution to this problem is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,912,728, to Panella. The Panella patent provides a hygienic pocket of material that may be placed on a restroom user's hand, and has an adhesive used to temporarily retain the hygienic pocket of material on the restroom user's hand while the door handle of a restroom door is being grasped. The hygienic pockets of material are dispensed from a dispenser that is only minimally disclosed. The hygienic pocket of material consists of two sheets retained together to define the pocket, with the sheet having the adhesive thereupon being longer than the other sheet. Dispensing such hygienic pockets of material that each include adhesive does not appear to be addressed by the Panella patent.
An improvement to these devices is shown in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2009/0200329, to Balkin et al., which was invented by the inventors of the present patent application and which is above-incorporated by reference parent of the present patent application. The device of the Balkin et al. patent application publication dispenses hand protection barriers from a roll of such hand protection barriers each having an opening therein and each connected to a subsequent hand protection barrier by a perforated connection. The dispensing mechanism dispenses the hand protection barriers through an opening in its housing, and opens each of the hand protection barriers as it is moved into position to be accessed through the opening in the housing. While this dispenser represented a substantial improved over the other devices referenced above, its mechanism is somewhat complex, making the device more expensive to manufacture and buy than is desired.
What is desired, therefore, is a simple, inexpensive, and yet effective hand protection barrier dispenser for use by public restroom users and the like to dispense hand protection barriers.
The subject matter discussed in this background of the invention section should not be assumed to be prior art merely as a result of its mention in the background of the invention section. Similarly, a problem mentioned in the background of the invention section or associated with the subject matter of the background of the invention section should not be assumed to have been previously recognized in the prior art. The subject matter in the background of the invention section merely represents different approaches, which in and of themselves may also be inventions.
The present invention takes the form of a hand protection barrier dispenser for dispensing hand protection barriers which may be located at any convenient location. The hand protection barrier dispensed by the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention is made of a thin, impermeable material such as plastic that defines a hand protection barrier. The hand protection barriers may be defined by a segment of plastic film that is folded in half and sealed on its sides, thereby leaving a single opening. The hand protection barriers may be dispensed from a stack of hand protection barriers that are removably mounted on a hand protection barrier dispenser in a manner allowing a single hand protection barrier to be dispensed at a time.
Such hand protection barriers provide a user-friendly way for restroom users to exit a public restroom without directly contacting a potentially germ covered restroom door handle. The hand protection barrier dispenser that is used to dispense these hand protection barriers from the roll of hand protection barriers may be mounted on a door, such as a public restroom door, adjacent to the door handle or knob, or on an adjacent wall. The hand protection barrier dispenser could of course also be mounted in other convenient locations where the dispensing of hand protection barriers is desirable. Examples of such other locations include locations in grocery store produce, meat, and bakery departments, as well as at self-service gas stations.
The hand protection barriers are dispensed from the stack of hand protection barriers located on the hand protection barrier dispenser, which may be mounted on a door, a wall, or some other support. The stack of hand protection barriers are dispensed individually, with the top one of the hand protection barriers in the stack being automatically opened by the hand protection barrier dispenser for donning by a user. The exposed hand protection barrier is supported in a position allowing a user to easily access it by slipping the user's hand into it and pulling it from the hand protection barrier dispenser, which action also exposes the next hand protection barrier in the stack, which is then in position to be dispensed.
In a first embodiment, a hand protection barrier dispenser for dispensing hand protection barriers from a stack of hand protection barriers each having an opening therein near a top end thereof has a housing that includes a receptacle in which the stack of hand protection barriers may be mounted for dispensing; a source of pressurized gas located in the housing; a valve located in the housing which is connected to the source of pressurized gas and which allows the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when the valve is in an open position and prevents the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when it is in a closed position; and at least one nozzle mounted in the hand protection barrier dispenser and connected to the valve to receive pressurized gas from the valve when the valve is in the open position and direct the pressurized gas toward the opening in a top one of the hand protection barriers in the stack of hand protection barriers in a manner that opens the top hand protection barrier to facilitate a user inserting the user's hand through the opening in the top hand protection barrier to don the top hand protection barrier; wherein the top hand protection barrier donned by a user may be removed from the stack of hand protection barriers by pulling the top hand protection barrier in which the user's hand is located away from the remainder of the stack of hand protection barriers.
In another embodiment, the hand protection barrier dispenser for dispensing hand protection barriers from a stack of hand protection barriers each having an opening therein near a top end thereof has a housing that includes a receptacle in which the stack of hand protection barriers may be mounted for dispensing; a source of pressurized gas located in the housing; a valve located in the housing which is connected to the source of pressurized gas and which allows the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when the valve is in an open position and prevents the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when it is in a closed position; and at least one nozzle mounted in the hand protection barrier dispenser and connected to the valve to receive pressurized gas from the valve when the valve is in the open position, the at least one nozzle being arranged in a position and configured to direct the pressurized gas toward the opening in a top one of the hand protection barriers in the stack of hand protection barriers in a manner that opens the top hand protection barrier to facilitate a user inserting the user's hand through the opening in the top hand protection barrier to don the top hand protection barrier; a system sensor that detects the proximity of a user's hand at a location adjacent to the opening of the top hand protection barrier in the stack of hand protection barriers; and an electronic system that operates the valve in response to a signal from the system sensor to provide pressurized gas to the at least one nozzle to open the hand protection barrier; wherein the top hand protection barrier donned by a user may be removed from the stack of hand protection barriers by pulling the top hand protection barrier in which the user's hand is located away from the remainder of the stack of hand protection barriers.
In still another embodiment, a hand protection barrier dispenser for dispensing hand protection barriers from a stack of hand protection barriers each having an opening therein near a top end thereof has a housing that includes a receptacle in which the stack of hand protection barriers may be mounted for dispensing; a source of pressurized gas located in the housing; a valve connected to the source of pressurized gas and allowing the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when the valve is in an open position; and a nozzle mounted connected to the valve to receive pressurized gas from the valve when the valve is in the open position and direct it toward the opening in a top one of the hand protection barriers in the stack of hand protection barriers to open the top hand protection barrier; wherein the top hand protection barrier may be removed from the stack of hand protection barriers by pulling it away from the remainder of the stack of hand protection barriers.
In a method embodiment, hand protection barriers each having an opening therein near a top end thereof are dispensed from a stack of such hand protection barriers by installing the stack of hand protection barriers in a receptacle in the hand protection barrier dispenser; providing a source of pressurized gas located in the housing; controlling the passage of the pressurized gas with a valve that is connected to the source of pressurized gas, the valve allowing the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when it is in an open position and preventing the passage of the pressurized gas therethrough when it is in a closed position; directing the pressurized gas through at least one nozzle receiving pressurized gas from the valve when the valve is in the open position toward the opening in a top one of the hand protection barriers in the stack of hand protection barriers in a manner that opens the top hand protection barrier to facilitate a user inserting the user's hand through the opening in the top hand protection barrier to don the top hand protection barrier; and pulling the top hand protection barrier in which the user's hand is located away from the remainder of the stack of hand protection barriers to remove the hand protection barrier donned by the user from the stack of hand protection barriers.
It will thus be appreciated that the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention may be mounted on or near a restroom door such that it is in a convenient location to dispense hand protection barriers to restroom users as they are about to leave the restroom. Such a hand protective barrier dispenser may be used in other applications, such as in grocery stores in the produce, meat, and/or bakery departments, to protect users' hands from direct contact with meat, fruit, vegetables, and/or bakery products, thereby enabling purchasers to purchase uncontaminated food. The hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention may also be used at self-service gas stations, to prevent gasoline, oil, or other substances from contacting the user's hands. Still another potential use of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention is use in cleaning pet liter containers.
It may therefore be seen that the present invention teaches a simple, inexpensive, and yet effective hand protection barrier dispenser for use by public restroom users and the like to dispense hand protection barriers.
These and other advantages of the present invention are best understood with reference to the drawings, in which:
An exemplary embodiment of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention is illustrated in the figures and may be discussed in conjunction therewith. Referring first to
Referring now to
A system board 40 that contains most of the electronic circuitry that is used to operate the hand protection barrier dispenser is mounted (with four screws in an electrically isolated manner) onto the surface of the bottom cover member 38 that will be on the inside of the hand protection barrier dispenser when the bottom cover member 38 is installed into the rectangular aperture 36 of the housing base 30. The system board 40 optionally includes a communications connector 42 which may be used to connect the system board 40 to a computer (not shown) which may optionally be used to program the system board 40, which may be an off-the-shelf programmable board. The system board 40 optionally includes a power connector 44 which may be used to power the system board 40 either during its programming or also optionally during the operation of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention, although it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that this may not be desirable since it would require supplying external power to the hand protection barrier dispenser, which would likely complicate its installation.
A battery holder 46 that is preferably used to power the operation of the hand protection barrier dispenser is mounted (with four screws) onto the surface of the bottom cover member 38 that will be on the inside of the hand protection barrier dispenser when the bottom cover member 38 is installed into the rectangular aperture 36 of the housing base 30. The battery holder 46 is connected to supply power to the system board 40 with wires 48 (shown only in
A manifold assembly 50 is mounted (with two screws) onto the surface of the housing base 30 that will be on the inside of the hand protection barrier dispenser. The manifold assembly 50 is shown to be mounted near a corner of the housing base 30. The manifold assembly 50 has a threaded aperture 52 located on a side thereof which will have the threaded connector of a CO2 supply bottle (not shown in
Mounted onto the side of the manifold assembly 50 near one end thereof is a pressure regulator 54. The pressure regulator 54 may be, for example, a CO2/Gas Composite Regulator such as the one available from Genuine Innovations of Tucson, Ariz. The pressure regulator 54 has a knurled pressure adjustment knob 56 which may be used to adjust the pressure supplied through the pressure regulator 54, and an exit conduit 58 is located inside an annular opening in the pressure adjustment knob 56. Further detail of such a pressure regulator is available in U.S. Pat. No. 7,334,598, to Hollars, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference. The manifold assembly 50 and the pressure regulator 54 are designed to accommodate and regulate a very wide range of pressures, e.g. from approximately ten to one thousand PSI.
A support bracket 60 is shown mounted onto the surface of the housing base 30 that will be on the inside of the hand protection barrier dispenser. A second support bracket 62 is shown exploded off of the housing base 30 on the same side thereof. The support brackets 60 and 62 are used to support portions of the lower housing member 32 above the housing base 30. Additionally, the support bracket 60 is used to support a valve assembly 64 from a location near the end closest to the manifold assembly 50.
The valve assembly 64 has an inlet 66, an outlet 67, and a solenoid 70 for operating the valve assembly 64. A tubing segment 72 (shown only in
The valve assembly 64 is a normally closed valve, opening only when the solenoid 70 is energized. The valve assembly 64 should operate on low voltage direct current, given that the power supply of the hand protection barrier dispenser is from batteries that will be installed in the battery holder 46. It should also have an appropriately selected flow coefficient Cv. An example of an appropriate choice for the valve assembly 64 is a Model 5077T11 solenoid valve from McMaster-Carr of Los Angeles, Calif., which operates on 12 Volts DC (or less) and has a flow coefficient Cv of 0.156.
A nozzle stand 76 extends through an aperture 77 located in the lower housing member 32 (which will be discussed more fully below in conjunction with the discussion of the lower housing member 32) and is mounted (with two screws) onto the surface of the housing base 30 that will be on the inside of the hand protection barrier dispenser. The portion of the nozzle stand 76 extending upwardly from the surface of the housing base 30 is T-shaped and has a hollow interior to form a pressure manifold. An inlet 78 to the pressure manifold is located on the back side of the nozzle stand 76 as it is shown in
A tubing segment 86 (shown only in
Optionally, the nozzles 82, 84, and 86 may also be mounted in the nozzle stand 76 in an adjustable fashion thereby allowing them to be optimally directed. Also optionally, the nozzles 82, 84, and 86 may each be flow controlled by using a valve or a flow-adjustable orifice to control the flow through each of them. While it would likely prove to be unduly complex, it would also be optionally possible to operate the nozzles 82, 84, and 86 to move to accommodate a changing height of hand protection barriers located in the hand protection barrier dispenser.
The last of the primary operating components of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention is a sensor board 88. The sensor board 88 will be mounted to the surface of the lower housing member 32 (shown in
Thus, the signal source 90 may be, for example, an infrared LED or an ultrasonic signal generator, and the reflected signal sensor 92 may be, for example, a photodiode sensitive to infrared or an ultrasonic detector, respectively. The indicator LED must be clearly visible to a person when illuminated. The sensor board 88 is electrically connected to the system board 40 with wires 96 (shown only in
The housing base 30 may also have a plurality of mounting holes 98 located therein (some of which are visible in
Referring primarily to
Located in the barrier receptacle 104 is a rectangular, V-shaped elevated floor 106 that extends substantially the entire width of the barrier receptacle 104, but which is spaced away from the end of the barrier receptacle 104 at which the aperture 77 is located. This space is also important to ensure proper dispensing of hand protection barriers from the hand protection barrier dispenser, as will become evident below, as will also become evident below in conjunction with a discussion of
Located intermediate the side members 100 and 102 at the end opposite the location of the barrier receptacle 104 is large opening 110 into which a canister of compressed gas will be installed, as will become evident in conjunction with the discussion of
Still referring primarily to
The upper housing member 34 has three apertures 114, 116, and 118 located therein which are respectively aligned with the signal source 90, the reflected signal sensor 92, and the indicator LED 94 of the sensor board 88 (shown in
Referring now to
In a preferred embodiment, the compressed gas used by the hand protection barrier dispenser is carbon dioxide (CO2), which is readily available. In a preferred embodiment, the canister of compressed gas 120 may be a twenty-ounce CO2 cylinder, which is a readily available size. It has been determined that a single twenty-ounce CO2 cylinder is capable of dispensing at least five hundred hand protection barriers.
Referring next to
By way of example, the sheet of film material 130 is preferably very thin, for example approximately 0.8 mil (0.0008 inches) thick, although its thickness may be varied substantially without departing from the principle of the present invention (for example, from 0.5 mils (0.0005 inches) to 3.0 mils (0.0030 inches)). It may be made of polyethylene film or any other suitable material, and preferably either are made of an anti-static material or have an anti-static substance applied thereto. A suitable type of antistatic material is polyethylene terephthalate (“PET”), which is a low-charging material (i.e. the material itself will not create a static charge). As an example of the size of the sheet of film material 130, it may be approximately twenty-one inches long and approximately seven and three-quarters inches wide, with folded-down size of the cuff 142 being approximately one and three-eights inches.
The completion of the manufacture of the sheet of film material 130 into a hand protection barrier 144 is shown in
The end 132 of the sheet of film material 130 defines a top end of each hand protection barrier 144 and the fold line 140 defines a bottom end of each hand protection barrier 144. A seal line 156 parallel to the fold line 140 is made in the hand protection barrier 144 on the sides of the two apertures 150 closest to the bottom of the hand protection barrier 144 on the sides of the apertures 150 opposite the fold line 140 to enclose the interior of the hand protection barrier 144 except at the location of the cuff 142.
The assembly of a plurality of the hand protection barriers 144 into a stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144 is illustrated in
Located at the top end of the stack of hand protection barriers 144 is a collar 164 that is U-shaped in cross-section and encloses the top ends 132 of each of the hand protection barriers 144 in the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144 therein. The collar 164 has four apertures 166 respectively located adjacent the four corners of the collar 164 that are the same size as the apertures 150 in the hand protection barriers 144. It may be seen from
Optionally, the hand protection barriers 144 may have an attachment mechanism to each other to further facilitate the opening of the next subsequent hand protection barrier 144 when a hand protection barrier 144 is torn away from the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144. Such an attachment point 168 may optionally be located at the midpoint of the cuff 142 of each hand protection barrier 144 which will provide a weak attachment to the hand protection barrier 144 located on top of it to help to open the hand protection barrier 144 when the previous hand protection barrier 144 is removed from the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144. This attachment point 168 may, for example, consist of a small amount of a weak adhesive that will be sufficiently strong to open the hand protection barrier 144 when the previous hand protection barrier 144 is removed from the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144, but not strong enough for the subsequent hand protection barrier 144 to be removed from the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144.
Referring next to
Referring now
It will be appreciated that a burst of pressurized gas is used to open each of the hand protection barriers 144. The burst of pressurized gas is provided to the nozzle stand 76, and it is directed by the nozzles 82, 84, and 86 toward the top portion of the hand protection barrier 144 on top of the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144. It will cause the cuff 142 of that hand protection barrier 144 to be blown upward, opening the hand protection barrier 144. When the portion of that hand protection barrier 144 is blown upward, it may be seen from
It may be noted from
At this point, it is useful to describe a preferred mode of operation of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention as that operation may be implemented by the electronic system contained in the system board 40. One possible operating mode of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention would be to use the system sensor (the signal source 90 and the reflected signal sensor 92) to trigger a burst of pressurized gas to open a hand protection barrier 144 when a user's is in sufficiently close proximity to the hand protection barrier dispenser 170 to activate the system sensor, after which the user may insert his/her hand into the hand protection barrier 144 and tear it off of the rest of the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144. However, this is not the preferred manner of dispensing the hand protection barriers 144.
Instead, the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention operated in a preferred mode wherein the top hand protection barrier 144 is open before the user approaches the hand protection barrier dispenser 170. This is done by using the system sensor (the signal source 90 and the reflected signal sensor 92) to sense when a user is about to insert his/her hand into the hand protection barrier 144. This initiates a timed period, which may be, for example from approximately three to twenty seconds (preferably approximately five seconds), during which it is assumed that the user has inserted his/her hand into the hand protection barrier 144 and torn it off of the rest of the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144.
Upon the expiration of this timed period, the electronic system contained in the system board 40 will trigger a burst of pressurized gas to open the hand protection barrier 144 on top of the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144. The raised surface 106 facilitates the burst of pressurized gas opening the top hand protection barrier 144, and the V-shaped raised surface 106 and barrier receptacle 104 together with the cuff 142 on the hand protection barrier 144 ensure that once opened the hand protection barrier 144 will remain in its opened position. Optionally, if the hand protection barrier dispenser 170 is not used for a sufficiently long period of time, an additional burst of compressed gas may be used to ensure that the hand protection barrier 144 is kept in its opened position.
Since a typical size of the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144 has one hundred of the hand protection barriers 144, the electronic system contained in the system board 40 can also keep track of how many hand protection barriers 144 are remaining in the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144. Each time the system sensor (the signal source 90 and the reflected signal sensor 92) senses when a user is about to insert his/her hand into the hand protection barrier 144, the electronic system will assume that a hand protection barrier 144 was dispensed and decrement the number of hand protection barriers 144 remaining in the stack 154 of hand protection barriers 144 by one. When a predetermined number of the hand protection barriers 144 are calculated to remain (e.g., five), the electronic system may begin to periodically flash the indicator LED 94 (shown in
Since the system board 40 may be programmed using the communications connector 42 (shown in
Referring now to
In
In
Referring next to
Referring now to
Referring finally to
It may therefore be appreciated from the above detailed description of the exemplary embodiments of the present invention that it teaches a simple, inexpensive, and yet effective hand protection barrier dispenser for use by public restroom users and the like to dispense hand protection barriers. The hand protection barriers dispensed by the hand protection barrier dispenser provide a one hundred percent complete hand protection barrier for substantially the entire hand. The hand protection barrier dispenser for dispensing such hand protection barriers is also easy and intuitive to use, and it is reliably implemented.
The hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention is of a construction which is both durable and long lasting, and which will require little or no maintenance to be provided by the user throughout its operating lifetime. The hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention is also of inexpensive construction to enhance its market appeal and to thereby afford it the broadest possible market. Finally, all of the aforesaid advantages and objectives of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention are achieved without incurring any substantial relative disadvantage.
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar referents in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) is to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms “comprising,” “having,” “including,” and “containing” are to be construed as open-ended terms (i.e., meaning “including, but not limited to,”) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
Although the foregoing description of the hand protection barrier dispenser of the present invention has been shown and described with reference to particular embodiments and applications thereof, it has been presented for purposes of illustration and description and is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the particular embodiments and applications disclosed. It will be apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art that a number of changes, modifications, variations, or alterations to the invention as described herein may be made, none of which depart from the spirit or scope of the present invention. The particular embodiments and applications were chosen and described to provide the best illustration of the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. All such changes, modifications, variations, and alterations should therefore be seen as being within the scope of the present invention as determined by the appended claims when interpreted in accordance with the breadth to which they are fairly, legally, and equitably entitled.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/365,068, filed on Feb. 3, 2009, entitled “Hand Protection Barrier Dispenser,” which patent application priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/027,008, which is entitled “Hand Protection Barriers and Dispenser Therefor,” and which was filed on Feb. 7, 2008, both of which patent applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61027008 | Feb 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12365068 | Feb 2009 | US |
Child | 13415017 | US |