The present invention relates to fenestration of buildings, and more specifically, to window and door structures for buildings.
In recent years, there has been a drive to make buildings, such as residential homes, multi-family homes, condominiums, and commercial buildings, more energy efficient. One strategy for reaching such a goal is to employ components and features that make windows and doors more energy efficient. For example, one approach is to employ insulating glass units (IGUs) to reduce thermal transfer through glass portions of windows and doors. An IGU is typically comprised of two or more glass panes and an edge seal member that is disposed along the edges of the glass panes that seal the gap, gaps, or airspace between the glass panes so that air or a thermal insulating gas, such as a noble gas (e.g., argon), that is held in the gap, gaps, or airspace is sealed tightly so that no air or gases escape.
Although the incorporation of IGUs has improved thermal efficiencies of at least the glass portions of windows and doors, such solutions do not improve the overall thermal efficiencies of the window or door frame structures that surround the IGUs. For example, window and door assemblies (hereinafter “opening assemblies”) are typically comprised of a jamb/frame (hereafter referred to as “frame”), a sash, and glass pane(s) or IGU that are designed to be affixed to a building opening. Both the frame and sash of an opening assembly normally comprises of a number of components, including components that are often elongated (e.g., mullions, bottom and top rails, jambs, tiles, sills, heads, and so forth), as well as additional components having other form factors that can be made from a variety of materials and that are often where thermal heat loss or transfer occurs. In addition to wood, the most common types of materials used to form such components are, for example, aluminum, steel, or synthetics (e.g., PVC, fiberglass, other plastics) due to their strength, durability, and low costs.
One drawback of employing components made of, for example, aluminum, steel, or synthetics is that they are generally not very good thermal insulators. To improve thermal insulating properties of opening assemblies containing such components, insulating foam such as polystyrene and polyurethane foam are sometimes poured or injected into the crevices and voids of the opening assembly and allowed to cure in the crevices and voids. Once cured, these insulating foams can form a low-density insulator with insulating properties that improves the overall insulating properties of the opening assemblies. There are, however, some drawbacks with such low-density insulators. As a direct result of their low density, as well as the inconsistent densities arising from the process of being injected or poured into the frame or sash structure and then cured within those components of the window or door assemblies, these low-density insulators often have weak structural strength and integrity. Because the components of window and door assemblies have structural frames that are made of hard and durable materials such as aluminum, steel, or synthetics, there has not been a need to incorporate into window and door opening assemblies made of aluminum, steel, or synthetics an insulator that has acceptable structural integrity for certain applications.
Traditionally used to form the components of fenestration assemblies (e.g., window or door assembly) is wood. Like opening assemblies made primarily of aluminum, steel, or synthetic components, opening assemblies made of wood components may also have poor thermal insulating characteristics. Unfortunately, using low-density foam insulators for window and door assemblies made primarily of wood components are often not an acceptable solution, since they may not have the structural (tensile, compressive, or torsion) strength and integrity that may be needed for wood window or door assemblies. In addition, there are many situations in which screws or nails are screwed or driven into components of wood window and door assemblies to either affix the assemblies to, for example, a building frame or to affix something to the window and door assemblies. For example, a wood frame for a window or door that supports the window or door and that is placed along the perimeter of a building opening is typically affixed to, for example, the house envelope with nails or screws that are driven or screwed into the wood components of the frame. However, conventional low-density insulating foams may not have sufficient structural integrity to support nails or screws that may be driven into the components of wood window assemblies, particularly if these components are partly made of the same low-density insulating foam used in aluminum, steel, and synthetic window assemblies.
In the present description, certain specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of various embodiments of the disclosure. However, upon reviewing this disclosure, one skilled in the art will understand that the various embodiments disclosed herein may be practiced without many of these details. In other instances, some well-known structures and materials of construction have not been described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the descriptions of the embodiments of the disclosure.
In the present disclosure, to the extent the terms “about,” “approximately,” and “substantially” are used, they mean±20% of the indicated range, value, or structure unless otherwise indicated. In the present description, the terms “a” and “an” as used herein refer to “one or more” of the enumerated components. The use of the alternative (e.g., “or”) should be understood to mean either one, both, or any combination thereof of the alternatives. As used herein, the terms “include” and “comprise” are used synonymously, the terms and variants of which are intended to be construed as non-limiting. The definitions in this paragraph are intended to apply throughout this disclosure unless otherwise expressly stated.
Throughout various portions of the following description, the embodiments of the present disclosure are described in the context of application to specific examples as presented. However, these examples are not intended to be limited unless otherwise expressly stated. As will be understood by one skilled in the art after reviewing this disclosure, various embodiments of the present disclosure may have a wide variety of applications in other contexts and fields.
The drawings submitted herewith include example information depicted for illustrative purposes and are not intended to be limiting unless otherwise indicated.
According to various embodiments of the present disclosure, window and door assemblies (hereinafter window or door opening assemblies or simply “opening assemblies”) of building openings are disclosed herein that include one or more insulating members with high-density insulating cores having high structural strength, integrity, and excellent insulating properties. For these embodiments, an opening assembly may include a door or window, which will be referred to herein as a “sash structure,” and a frame, which is the supporting structure that supports, for example, the sash structure (e.g., a door or a window), and that is designed to be affixed along the perimeter of a building opening. As one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize, the sash structure may be attached to the frame by various means including, for example, hinges, hardware, screws, and so forth.
According to various embodiments, the sash structure and the frame of an opening assembly may each include one or more “insulating members” with high-density insulating cores that are at least partially encased in one or more wood components. In some cases, an insulating member may be an elongated wood member with a high-density (HD) insulating core that is at least partially covered longitudinally by one or more wood components and that may extend longitudinally from one end to the opposite end of the insulating member. That is, typically in both the sash structures (e.g., windows and doors) and the frames of opening assemblies for wood windows and doors, there may be one or more elongated wood members such as mullions, bottom and top rails, jambs, stiles, sills, heads, and so forth that are commonly situated along the perimeters (e.g., just inside the perimeters) of the sash structures and frames. According to various embodiments, at least some of these elongated wood members may include the HD insulating cores to form the insulating members. In various embodiments, one or more of these insulating members may be incorporated into the sash structure and/or frame of a door or window opening assembly and that may encircle one or more glass panes of the door or window opening assembly.
The HD insulating core that may be incorporated into one or more wood members to form one or more “insulating” wood members of opening assemblies according to various embodiments may be an HD polyurethane core with a uniform density that in some cases does not deviate by greater than ten percent throughout the core. For example, in some cases, the HD polyurethane core may be an HD microcellular polyurethane foam with a highly uniform cellular structure such as the FR-4600 series of foam produced by General Plastics Manufacturing Company of Tacoma, Wash.
In order to produce an insulating member with a uniformly dense HD polyurethane core, the HD polyurethane core may be cured and set prior to being incorporated into wood members of window and door opening assemblies. Conversely, when low-density insulating foam such as polystyrene and conventional polyurethane foams are employed in window and door assemblies to act as insulators, these foams are often poured or injected into the voids and crevices of components of such assemblies and then cured within the voids and crevices of the components of the window and door assemblies. Unfortunately, the cured low-density insulating foam produced by this approach will result in the formation of an uneven and low-density insulating foam. As a result, the cured insulating foam will have relatively low structural integrity and strength, which may not be acceptable for use in wood components of wood window and door structures since such insulating foam will need to have sufficient structural integrity to meet fenestration requirements.
One conventional solution to using low-density insulators, such as low-density polystyrene or polyurethane that does not have good structural integrity, is to use the low-density insulator in combination with another substance having high density and high structural integrity. For example, using a combination of a layer of low-density insulator (e.g., low-density polyurethane or polystyrene) with a layer of high-density, high-structural integrity material (e.g., PVC, high-density polystyrene, high-density polyurethane) may not provide an adequate solution since the transition between the low-density and high-density materials may form a transition boundary where the structural integrity may be compromised (e.g., a weak point). Further, because opening assemblies (e.g., windows and doors and their frames) are typically installed by homebuilders/contractors into building openings, the installers may not know where either the high-density material or the low-density insulating foam starts and ends within the enclosed opening assembly when they are installing the opening assembly. This is a problem particularly for wood window and door frames since builders/contractors install the window and door opening assemblies by screwing or driving a screw or nail into different parts of the opening assembly using different size screws and nails, depending on the application. If the proper sized screw or nail is not used in a proper way during installation of a window or door opening assembly having different layers of both high and low-density material/insulators, the installation of the opening assembly could fail. That is, using layers of different materials with different densities, at best, makes the installation of wood windows and doors more difficult and dangerous.
According to various embodiments, to address these issues, highly and uniformly dense polyurethane cores with high insulating properties are employed in opening assemblies. To produce insulating polyurethane cores with high and uniform densities in some embodiments, high-density (HD) insulating polyurethane cores may be formed and cured prior to being at least partially encased in, for example, wood components. In some embodiments, and contrary to some conventional approaches, the HD insulating polyurethane cores may not be mated or affixed to a low-density insulating foam, such as low-density polystyrene or polyurethane foam (e.g., a low-density polyurethane foam that has a density less than the HD polyurethane cores such as a polyurethane foam having a density of less than 10 pounds per cubic foot) since the mating of an HD insulating polyurethane core to a low-density insulating foam may create a structural weak point.
In various embodiments, an HD polyurethane core may be at least partially encased by one or more wood components on at least two opposing sides of the HD polyurethane core to form an insulating member. For example, if the HD polyurethane core has an elongated, cuboid shape with four longitudinal sides and two opposing end sides that are transversely situated relative to the four longitudinal sides, then one or more wood components may cover three or all four longitudinal sides of the elongated, cuboid-shaped, HD polyurethane core to form an insulating member. As a result, at least opposing longitudinal sides of the elongated cuboid-shaped HD polyurethane core may be encased by the one or more wood components. Note that in other embodiments, the HD polyurethane core may have other types of shapes (e.g., a curved or arched shape) other than an elongated cuboid shape as will be further described herein.
In various embodiments, one or more insulating members, each with an HD insulating polyurethane core, may be situated along the perimeter of a frame. For example, a frame for a rectangular door may have a rectangular shape that frames the outline of the rectangular door. As a result, the one or more HD insulating cores of the one or more insulating members that are situated along the perimeter of the rectangular frame will form a rectangular HD insulating polyurethane core that may encircle the sash structure (e.g., window or door) that the frame may support.
In various embodiments, four linear or straight elongated insulating members with HD insulating cores may be placed on the four sides of the rectangular-shaped frame as will be illustrated herein. In still other cases, two L-shaped insulating members may be used to form the rectangular-shaped frame. Similar strategies using one or more elongated insulating members with high-density insulating cores (e.g., using a single elongated insulating member, using multiple straight elongated insulating members, and so forth) may be used for improving the insulating properties of a sash structure (e.g., the window or door portion of an opening assembly). Note that for purposes of this description the term “insulating member” or “insulating members” may be in reference to a member or members that may have a variety of shape types in addition to the elongated shapes illustrated in the figures. For example, in alternative embodiments, an insulating member with a high-density insulating core may have a variety of non-elongated shapes such as cube, torus, triangular prism, and so forth.
In various embodiments, the high-density (HD) polyurethane core of each of the one or more insulating members of a window or door opening assembly may have a uniform density of polyurethane that does not deviate by greater than ten percent in density throughout the core as described above. In one embodiment, the HD polyurethane core of each of the one or more insulating members may have a density of 10 to 50 pounds per cubic foot. In another embodiment, the HD polyurethane core of each of the one or more insulating members may have a density of 20 to 30 pounds per cubic foot. In yet another embodiment, the HD polyurethane core of each of the one or more insulating members may have an average density of 25 pounds per cubic foot.
In various embodiments, the HD polyurethane core may be made of microcellular polyurethane foam having a highly dense uniform structure with gas bubbles that are less than 50 microns in size.
In some embodiments, the HD polyurethane core of one or more insulating members of a window or door opening assembly may have a compressive strength of 300 to 5000 pounds per square inch (psi), a tensile strength of 260 to 4000 psi, a flexural strength of 380 to 6000 psi, and coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of 29×10−6/K. In various embodiments, the HD polyurethane cores that may be employed may have, in addition to high structural integrity, high insulating properties such as, for example, having an R-value of between 1.0 and 7.5 for one-inch thickness. In some embodiments, the HD polyurethane cores may have an R-value of between 2.00 and 4.40 for one-inch thickness. In some embodiments, the HD polyurethane cores may have an R-value of approximately 2.42 for one-inch thickness.
Referring to
In various embodiments, the HD insulating core of each of the insulating members 12a, 14a, 16a, and 18a may extend longitudinally from one end side to the opposite end side of the insulating members 12a, 14a, 16a, and 18a. For example, in
In some embodiments, a portion of the insulating members 12a, 14a, 16a, and 18a may be replaced by wood members or other types of members without the HD insulating core described above.
Although
As illustrated in
Referring to
Note that unlike the insulating members 12a, 14a, 16a, and 18a of the frame 10a, there may be wood components on all four longitudinal sides of the cuboid-shaped HD insulating cores of each of the sash insulating members 32a, 34a, 36a, and 38a. For example, in
As will be further described and illustrated herein, the HD insulating cores described above may be incorporated into various components of a variety of window and door opening assemblies to improve the thermal insulating properties of the window and door opening assemblies. That is, in various embodiments, the insulating members that incorporate the HD insulating core may have a variety of form factors and may be incorporated into various types of window and door structures. For example,
Each sash structure 30d and 30e represents the window portions of the window opening assembly 100e. Note that the right half of the sash structure 30d is behind sash structure 30e. Sash structure 30e is a stationary window that does not open or move, while sash structure 30d is an operable window that can slide laterally. Each sash structure 30d and 30e includes four sash insulating members that form the frames of the sash structures 30d and 30e, similar to the sash structure 30a (which has sash insulating members 32a, 34a, 36a, and 38a) of
Similarly, the four sash insulating members of sash structure 30d (three of the four sash insulating members are visible in
Referring now to
Similarly, the sash structure 30f may include four sash insulating members 32f, 34f, 36f, and 38f (with the HD polyurethane core) that frame or hold a set of one or more glass panes 40f. In some embodiments, the set of one or more glass panes 40f may include multiple glass panes and may be part of an insulating glass unit (IGU).
The incorporation of the HD polyurethane cores in the elongated components of both window and door opening assemblies, such as the sash insulating members 32f, 34f, 36f, and 38f of the sash structure 30f and the insulating members 12f, 14f, 16f, and 18f of the frame 10f for the door opening assembly 100f of
Incorporated into each of the insulating members 14a and 18a of frame 10a in
The sash insulating member 38a, as illustrated in
The insulating member 14a includes a high-density (HD) insulating core 20b and wood components 22g, 24g, and 26g that are situated on three of the four longitudinal sides of the elongated cuboid-shaped HD insulating core 20b. As further illustrated in
Note that although only screws 62g and 64g are illustrated as being vertically screwed into the insulating member 14a to attach the insulating member 14a of the frame 10a to the house frame 66g, other screws or nails may be horizontally screwed into the HD insulating core 20b of the insulating member 14a or the HD insulating core 50b of the sash insulating member 38a to affix other components such as, for example, an extrusion to the insulating member 14a or to the sash insulating member 38a. To facilitate this, in various embodiments, both the HD insulating core 20b and the HD insulating core 50b may be comprised of highly uniform and dense polyurethane foam.
The use of an HD insulating core 50b that comprises polyurethane foam with high and uniform density in the sash insulating member 38a also provides certain benefits. For example, there may be times when nails or screws may be inserted horizontally into the HD insulating core 50b. The uniform structural integrity of the HD insulating core 50b may ensure that the nails or screws do not easily dislodge regardless of the angle at which such nails or screws are driven or screwed into the HD insulating core 50b.
Although the above-described window and door assemblies were illustrated and described as having rectangular or round shapes, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the above-described HD insulating core technology may be incorporated into assemblies of windows or doors having other shape types. For example, in various embodiments, the above-described HD insulating core technology may be incorporated into the assemblies of windows having other form factors (other than the rectangular and circular shapes described and illustrated above) including, for example, triangular, hexagonal, oval, pentagonal, octagonal, square, trapezoid, cathedral, radiused (curved top), cambered, and so forth.
Although block 302 is illustrated in
In various embodiments, the HD polyurethane block 302 of
Next, one or more wood components may be affixed to multiple sides of the HD polyurethane core 304 as illustrated in
In alternative embodiments, three or fewer of the four longitudinal sides of the HD polyurethane core 304 may be covered by wood (e.g., wood component 306c is absent). For example, if the insulating member 310 is to be an insulating member for a frame, then only three of the four longitudinal sides of the HD polyurethane core 304 may be affixed with wood (e.g., wood components 306a, 306b, and 306d), such was the case for insulating member 14a in
Note that although
If the insulating member 310 is for a frame, then the insulating member 310 along with three other similar insulating members may be affixed to each other to form a frame, such as the rectangular frame 10a of
If, on the other hand, the insulating member 310 is a sash insulating member for a sash structure (e.g., sash structure 30a of
Once the frame and the sash structure are finished, the sash structure may be affixed to the frame by various means depending on the type of window or door opening assembly being constructed. For example, if the opening assembly being constructed is for a casement type of window, then the sash structure may be affixed to the frame with one or more hinges. On the other hand, if the opening assembly being constructed is for a sliding type of window opening assembly, such as illustrated in
After reviewing the present disclosure, an individual of ordinary skill in the art will immediately appreciate that some details and features can be added, removed, and/or changed without deviating from the spirit of the invention. Reference throughout this specification to “one embodiment,” “an embodiment,” “additional embodiment(s)” or “some embodiments,” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment(s) is included in at least one or some embodiment(s), but not necessarily all embodiments, such that the references do not necessarily refer to the same embodiment(s). Furthermore, the particular features, steps, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments. These and other changes can be made to the embodiments in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification and the claims but should be construed to include all possible embodiments along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
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