The invention relates to a plane element for floors, comprising a multilayer plate having a thin pressure and abrasion resistant panel arranged at its top side, the panel in particular consisting of natural stone, and below this panel a pressure resistant lightweight material layer fixated by an adhesive connection, wherein grooves are arranged in vertical edge surfaces and connection ledges are arrangeable in said grooves for connecting adjacently layed multilayer plates.
The invention is designed, in particular, for removable and thus multiply reusable floors. With removable and multiply reusable floors that are needed, for example, for exhibitions it has been impossible to construct plane, high-quality floor areas having a high resilience hitherto, in particular using thin and thus lightweight natural stone panels. Permanently laying is also possible, of course. Additionally, floor heatings can be used efficiently in all cases.
In prior art removable floors for textile facings are known. The facing should be removable from the floor without residue and without damage to the facing.
In DE 36 00 807 C2 a method is given for this purpose, wherein a synthetics layer is arranged on both sides of a carrier material. At least one of them is glue-friendly, glue-impermeable and water-proof.
For applications with high stress load and outdoor applications it is known to lay stone elements, concrete elements or ceramic elements in mortar or on stilted bearings (German: Stelzlager). From DE 197 37 097 C2, a system for laying is known, in which laying panels (German: Verlegeplatten) are used that are layed separately besides each other or using a connecting disc body. The facing is firmly attached on the panels.
Usually, natural stone panels are thick and heavy in order to achieve the necessary stability. They are difficult to transport thus and therefore not suitable for multiple uses. Natural stone panels in thin and thus easy transportable designs have to be glued to a plane underlayer or layed in a mortar bed. Thus, they are not suitable for multiple uses, either.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,855,177 as well as in DE 38 01 603 A1 and in WO 00 67 999 A1 compound bodies are described, where a panel of natural stone is furnished with a reinforcing layer.
However, these arrangements are not suitable in order to enable placing the single elements securely and exactly to a floor area.
Furthermore, from EP 0 252 434 A2 multilayer plates are known that have a thin pressure and abrasion resistant panel arranged at the top side, under which a pressure resistant lightweight material layer (4) is fixated by an adhesive connection.
Here, it is disadvantageous that there is a high risk of breaking for the edges of the pressure and abrasion resistant panel.
From DE 25 08 628 a floor element is known, comprising a wooden flake board below which a contiguous panel of foamed plastics is glued. The panel has parallel groove-shaped recesses at the upper and the lower support area.
The disadvantages of this floor element are, on the one hand, the parallel alignment of the groove-shaped recesses. Thus, the air transport in them is possible along two opposite directions only. On the other hand, the construction requires applying an additional covering onto the surface.
The WO 02/077389 A1 describes a floor of single plane elements in the form of multilayer plates having a respective pressure and abrasion resistant panel at their top side and a pressure resistant lightweight material layer fixated at its bottom side by an adhesive connection. Grooves can be arranged in vertical edge surfaces. Connection ledges are arrangeable in said grooves between several plates.
This floor has the disadvantage that polystyrene is used as lightweight material, which is, on the one hand, not elastically deformable. Thus, bumps in the ground deform the floor persistently. On the other hand, the stability of polystyrene is not very high. Another effect of the inelasticity is the hardness of the floor when walking on it. Additionally, a floor heating below the floor would be almost without effect because of the good isolation.
It is an object of the invention to specify a floor design having high stability using single elements which are lightweight and easy transportable as well as simply removable and thus multiply usable, the elements additionally being comfortable to walk on and enabling an application above floor heatings.
The invention has a number of advantages.
Because of the multilayer construction of the single plates comprising a respective thin panel at the top side and a pressure resistant lightweight material layer arranged and glued below, the lightweight material layer consisting of expanded polypropylene foam, lightweight floor elements can be realized having a high-quality surface and sufficient stability.
By arranging grooves in the borders of the lightweight material layer and by placing connection ledges in the grooves between respective adjacently layed multilayer plates, the floor elements can be secured against displacements along ajoint direction as well as steps between adjacently layed multilayer plates can be avoided.
By furrows in the top side, that are preferably crossed, the elements are suitable for dissipating and conducting condensation and air moisture and for supplying warm air from a floor heating. By furrows in the bottom side, that are preferably crossed, it is possible to dissipate moisture.
If the grooves are shorter than the elements are wide the comers of the panel and of the light weight material layer are in superficially extended contact and flush with each other. Thereby, on the one hand, load transmission at the borders is improved and, on the other hand, the risk of damages by external forces as, for example, when jamming with tools is decreased. This is especially of interest when oftentimes setting up and taking down.
Openings in the lightweight material layer enable to supply warm air from heat sources situated below the floor. Furrows in the top of the lightweight material layer, touching or crossing these openings, provide an extensive distribution of the warm air.
By gluing a thin, two-dimensionally extended reinforcement having a high stability and a high Young's modulus between the upper panel and the lightweight material layer, it is possible to realize a very high stability of the floor elements even when using very thin panels and thus very lightweight floor elements. This stability causes a sufficient break resistance even in case of high punctual stresses occurring, for example, when setting up punctually supported shelves or cupboards, without a necessity for laying the floor elements in a mortar bed or for gluing the floor elements to an underlayer.
The invention is briefly described using an exemplary embodiment. The accompanying drawings show in:
The cross section through a multilayer plate in accordance with the invention depicted in
At all four edges of the lightweight material layer 4 of the quadratic floor plate, grooves 3 are arranged, serving for receiving connection ledges 9. The plates can have edge lengths from 200 mm to 2200 mm. Preferably squares with an edge length of 300 mm to 500 mm and a thickness of 10 mm to 40 mm are used. The grooves 3 are preferably shorter than the edges of the plates, so that the lightweight material layer 4 flushes with the panel 1 at the corners. The grooves can be placed either directly at the boundary surface between panel 1 and lightweight material layer 4 or within the lightweight material layer 4 in a distance from the boundary surface.
At the top side and the bottom side of the lightweight material layer 4 there are arranged furrows 12 crossing each other. In the furrows 12, condensation moisture that has arised at the bottom of the panel 1 can evaporate and be dissipated. Also, air moisture coming from the ground or water entering from the panel 1 can be guided through the furrows 12 to the border of the floor area.
The furrows can be arranged in parallel and congruently above each other on the top side and the bottom side or they can be offset in relation to each other.
Using the openings 13 depicted in
In this embodiment it is advantageous to use a foam material of an increased density so that the decreased payload resulting from the openings can be counterbalanced.
A connection ledge 9 is shown in
It is also possible that the vertical blades 9.2 are provided at their top with a colored lipping 11 consisting of an elastic synthetic material, the lipping 11 both performing decorative tasks and improving the sealing. The surface of the lipping 11 can be plane as shown in
Preferably, the grooves 3 are created by taking them out of the lightweight material layer 4, so that the additional complex use of fixation bars 10 can be omitted.
In the case of grooves in a distance from the boundary layer, it is useful to put undercuts to the top ofthe grooves 3, too, and also to provide the connection ledges 9 with sections of reinforced thickness at the horizontal blades.
Other layers can be arranged between the lightweight material layer 4 and the panel 1, for example, a metal layer in order to more uniformly distribute the heat of a heating.
The furrows 12 can be either designed to be contiguous so that long tubes form in an assembly of several floor elements, or they can end within the lightweight material layer 4 so that they do not penetrate its border and the border of the grooves 3, respectively.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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203 14 548.8 | Sep 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE03/03357 | 10/10/2003 | WO | 2/2/2007 |