The invention relates to a hygienic swab for the skin for the manual dabbing of urine in the area of the urethral opening.
Absorbent articles such as toilet paper and moistened cloths are already known for the dabbing and cleaning of the skin. In particular, absorbent articles have been described in which cellulose or sugar crystals are used.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,281,407 A specifies absorbent articles in which fructose and glucose are also used as drying agent, the drying agent being located in a pocket.
U.S. 2007/219521 A specifies monosaccharides and disaccharides as intermediate compounds for synthetic polymers, such as cellulose fibers.
U.S. 2011/028928 A specifies a polysaccharide for absorption and gel formation, being located in a tissue.
EP 1934389 A1 specifies thermoplastic fibers for a hygiene article that are stable in water.
The underlying problem of the invention is to provide a basic standard of hygiene for users of urinals and, for this purpose, to create a hygiene article that can be readily disposed of in the basin of a urinal.
The problem is solved according to the invention in that the swab is formed from a shaped and dimensionally stable tablet (1) having an absorbent structure, wherein at least part of the structure has at least one substance or a mixture of several different substances in the form of granules or grains.
Absorbent here has the meaning of being able to take up and retain liquid.
A structure here specifies a more or less dense mixture of grains and particles of solid substances, whose ingredients are in a primarily mechanical but not chemical interaction with each other. The structure of the invention is absorbent, has a tremendous capillary action, is dimensionally stable, and only decomposes upon uptake of more than around 20 ml of liquid, depending on the size or volume.
Such a swab in the form of a tablet, thanks to its attribute of first decomposing in water and then being dissolved in water, can also be disposed of without any problems even in a urinal, which usually has a reduced drain geometry and a reduced cross section of the sewage lines. There is no danger of clogging.
The danger of clogging of sewage lines with small cross section less than 80 mm that is associated with toilet paper or other known hygiene articles has had the consequence, since the advent of modern sewage collection systems, that no hygiene articles were available to the user of a urinal for drying the skin in the region of the urethral opening. This extremely unhygienic situation occurs especially in public toilet facilities, such as those in hotels, restaurants, schools, rest stops and other public toilets.
Urine is an initially germ-free and almost odorless bodily fluid that contains urea and uric acid, in addition to water. But the germ-free condition is not stable after leaving the bladder, either in the urethra or in other genital areas where urine collects, because the urine comes into contact here with oxygen and germs from the surroundings. In this no longer germ-free condition, a decomposition process begins, by which the odorless quality is lost after only two to three hours. The quantity of no longer germ-free urine that collects around the urethral opening in the urethra and other genital areas can amount to between 0.5 ml and 2 ml, or between 5 drops and 15 drops. The swab can be used to dab the liquid on the skin surface and around the urethral opening. But at the same time, due to the suction effect of the swab, urine is drawn out from the urethra and likewise taken up by the swab. After this, the user simply drops the swab into the basin.
The swab is primarily suited to the male gender, for which reason the swab has an elevated uptake capacity of as much as 4 ml. Even at maximum liquid uptake, the holding area remains dry and the swab remains dimensionally stable, without becoming totally wet in parts. Only when the swab is completely wet does it decompose entirely after a few minutes, at first forming a sediment and then dissolving for the most part into tiny pieces or entirely.
The sample embodiments, uses and areas of application are specified in the claims.
The substance or substances for the structure are preferably sugar (saccharose) and hydrophilic starch. Sugar (saccharose) serves here as a collective term for all household sugars that can be refined in granular or powder form in order to make such tablets. In particular, saccharose is used from sugar beets or sugar cane, which can be readily pressed, especially when the crystalline sugar is sifted in the form of refined sugar. Furthermore, sugar is a relatively favorable raw material that is available worldwide and, unlike paper, it can be produced in an environmentally friendly and sustainable manner.
By adding further substances, such as fragrance or bitters, a colorant, or some other substance, the tablet can be made unsuitable for any consumption.
The sugar or the granulate form with the starch a heterogeneous structure. The water-soluble (hydrophilic) starch according to the invention gives the surface of the tablet a smooth texture and at the same time helps during the pressing.
Another major benefit from the use of hydrophilic starch is its property of not clumping in combination with water but instead becoming homogeneously distributed in the water. The starch grains or particles are very small in comparison to the sugar grains, but do not themselves dissolve fully in the water, unlike the sugar.
The tablets can have any basic shape, such as square, cube, cylinder, cone or octahedron. Spheres and other combinations of such shapes can also be realized.
Thanks to the concave shape, it is possible to place, say, two tablets, arranged one on top of the other, against each other on a very small, almost pointlike surface. Since this surface at the same time is the surface on which the two swabs slide against each other when being removed from the dispensing device, the friction between the two tablets is reduced by the small surface.
The tablet is absorbent on the whole, so that in the case of very small tablets the situation may arise where liquid is suctioned beyond the absorption area into the holding area. In order to avoid all contact between the fingers and the liquid during manual use, it is arranged to isolate the holding area from the adsorption area. For this, a barrier layer can be produced by glazed sugar or by an additive at least inhibiting the capillary action. The barrier layer is not dimensionally stable upon decomposition of the tablet in water.
A major advantage for the manufacturing process to enhance the absorptivity is the increasing of the capillary effect between the individual sugar grains and the uptake capacity by adjusting the pressing force when manufacturing the shaped body as a function of the mean grain size of the sugar crystals and/or the size of the starch particles.
Further benefits and details of the invention are explained in the patent claims and in the specification and represented in the figures. There are shown:
a a side view of a convex curved tablet;
b a view from above of the tablet of
a a side view of a stack of tablets in a dispensing device;
b a view of a stack of tablets according to
c a view of a stack of tablets according to
a a dispensing device filled with tablets according to
b the dispensing device of
Swabs, such as are represented in
Preferably, the structure of the tablet 1 is formed from pressed granular-crystalline sugar, alone or in combination with water-soluble starch.
In
The tablet 1 per
The tablets 1 are stacked on one another in the vertical direction as shown in
In the lateral holding area 4, the bottom tablet 1 is free and not enclosed by the holder 50, as shown in
Thanks to the flat and concave shape, the tablets 1 arranged one on top of the other only touch each other in a small circular area 14, arranged concentric to the center axis M. This reduces the friction between the tablets 1 and improves the sliding ability between the tablets 1. In particular, swabs 1 of pure sugar, without addition of starch, have a tendency to stick when kept in a humid environment, so that the tablets 1 are still easy to separate from each other thanks to the shaping and the small bearing surface 14 according to the invention.
The tablet 1 shown in
The tablet 1 shown in
In the tablet 1 shown in
a and 7b show a similar dispensing device 5 to that described above for disk-shaped tablets 1. The dispensing device 5 is loaded with swabs 1, as described in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 015 889.8 | Apr 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/055992 | 4/2/2012 | WO | 00 | 9/25/2013 |