The present invention relates to finishing work for buildings, especially floors and related flooring materials, and more particularly relates to floor tiles.
Tiles made of various material (stone, ceramic, glass, polymers, etc.) have been used for a wide variety of purposes over many millennia, including in roofs, walls and floors. Those used for flooring must be able to durably support the weight of materials (furniture, boxes, etc.) and people walking on them without shifting or cracking. Improvements over the basic flat polygonal plate construction of floor tiles continue to be made, for example to provide interlocking features, adhesive-less installation, noise reduction and the like.
For example, U.S. Pat. No. 8,815,370 to Reichwein et al. describes a resilient floor tile whose backing has an array of annular projections with concave surfaces. The resilience of the array creates a vacuum in the blind passageways that increase friction with the underlying surface sufficiently to hold the tiles in place without need for adhesive.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,397,466 to Jenkins et al. describes a polymer tile for outdoor use with multi-level lattices that provide drainage from the top surface. It is also characterized by a loop and pin connector arrangement for interlocking the tiles together.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,124,210 to Kim describes a metal mosaic tile having concave parts on the back that mitigate noise or vibration while still being of high strength.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,031,368 to Matthews describes ‘pliable’ concrete tiles with a diagonal ridge with narrow inverted-V cross-sectional shape. This allows the tile to deform when pressure is applied so that the tile resists shear forces when used in construction on false floors.
A tile having a matrix of interconnected vaults on its underside surface provides space for flow of heated or conditioned air, passages for electrical service conduits and wiring, or passages for drainage. In particular, the tile comprises a solid rigid body having a substantially planar upper surface and a thickness substantially less than upper surface linear (length and width) dimensions. The underside surface has a set of concavities forming a matrix of vaults bounded and interconnected by archways. Each archway is characterized by a rise dimension that is less than a span dimension. The matrix of vaults defines a set of pendentives at each vault corner whose load-bearing bases are all substantially coplanar with one another so as to contact a supporting subfloor. Edges of the tile body have corresponding alternating laterally projecting extensions and indentations for forming (with some desired leeway) mortise-and-tenon joints between adjacent tiles.
A tile flooring system comprises a plurality of such tiles interconnected over a subfloor. Archways at the respective edges of adjacent tiles are substantially aligned. Tiles buttress one another at adjacent corner and edge pendentive bases.
Definitions
Arch: a curved structure that spans a space and resolves any downward stresses, into compressive stresses carried to its base. [Note: while ancient arches were normally constructed of multiple separate blocks (or voissoirs) capped by a keystone, each tile envisioned here comprises a single homogeneous solid body of material. But, the resolution of stresses, or arch action, from any loads applied to the top surface of a tile is substantially the same here.]
Vault: an arch extended into a third dimension; a continuous arch. (Often, this is contrasted with a dome, which is an arch revolved about a vertical axis. In the present application, the term vault can be generally used interchangeably for both. Both groin vaults and sail vaults or domes are envisioned as possible underside surface constructions.)
Groin vault: a vault formed from intersecting barrel vaults, with groin edges (or arrises) defined at the intersections.
Sail vault: also known as a sail dome; a vault or dome in the form like an upward-directed square sail that is pinned down at each corner, with four archways at the bottom.
Pendentive: a curved wedge-like segment tapering to a corner at the base of a dome or vault and receiving the weight and redirected load from the dome or vault. In the case of a sail vault, the pendentives are continuous extensions of the dome or vault down to their bases.
Thrust: any laterally outward directed component of forces at the base of an arch or vault that may need to be buttressed by laterally adjacent structures (e.g. another tile, or a wall). The amount of thrust depends in part on the shape of the arch or vault and the relationship between its respective span and rise dimensions, with wider spans and/or lower rises leading to generally greater thrusts.
With reference to
Tiles may be cast in an open or closed mold that is filled, for example, with a cementeous material having an admixture of glass fibers, antimicrobial formula, and colorant. Many alternative formulations can be used, included glazed or unglazed ceramic material that is subsequently fired. Even glass materials could be used. The top surface, while generally flat, may be embellished with a decorative or non-skid pattern.
The underside surface 15 has a plurality of concavities defining a matrix of vaults, in this case a two-by-two matrix of four vaults 17a-17d. These vaults can be groin vaults as seen here (the groins or arrises being indicated by the dashed, lines in
The matrix of vaults 17a-17d are bounded and interconnected by archways 18a-18l running in two directions (as in an x-axis direction and a perpendicular y-axis direction). Thus in this cross-arched vault or dome configuration, there are three sets of archways, 18a-18b, 18c-18d, and 18e-18f running parallel to each other in a first direction, and three other sets of archways, 18g-18h, 18i-18j, and 18k-18l running parallel to each other in a second direction perpendicular to the first direction. Archways 18c, 18d, 18i and 18j interconnect the four vaults 17a-17d to each other, while the other archways at the tile edges align with those of any adjacent tiles to connect with vaults of those adjacent tiles. Each archway 18a-18l preferably has a span S that is at least 8 times greater than its rise dimension R (see
The matrix of vaults 17a-17d defines a set of pendentives 19a-19l, including four at tile corners, 19a, 19c, 19g and 19i, four at tile edges, 19b, 19d, 19f and 19h, and one in the tile center, 19e. Each of these pendentives 19a-19l terminates at a corresponding base 21a-21l. These bases 21a-21l are substantially coplanar with one another so that they can all make contact with a supporting sub-floor, the bases of the pendentives being the load-bearing surface on the underside of the tiles. The bases 21a-21l may themselves have concave depressions deep enough to accept elastomeric materials for leveling, positioning and/or cushioning purposes.
The vaults span at least 75% of a linear dimension (W or L) across the underside surface, e.g. a total of 8⅝ inches (21.9 cm) of the 11⅝ inch (29.5 cm) square tile, and thereby leaving room, for example, for a 1.5 inch (3.8 cm) square center pendentive base 21e, 1.5 inch by 0.75 inch (3.8 cm by 1.9 cm) rectangular edge pendentive bases 21b, 21d, 21f and 21h, and 0.75 inch (1.9 cm) square corner pendentive bases 21a, 21c, 21g and 21i. Thus, the area of the pendentive bases from which stresses are transferred to the subfloor occupies at least 6.25% (and in the representative example, 6.66%) of the total tile area.
All of these example dimensions are representative, but could be varied across different embodiments according to the strength of the tile material, anticipated surface loads and the like. Likewise, the vault and archway shapes could be based upon catenary, hyperboloid, or ellipsoidal forms, as desired for a particular embodiment to effectively transfer the applied surface loads by arch action to the several pendentive bases and then to the subfloor. It should be noted that, as the span is much wider than the rise in these tile embodiments, the thrust from applied loads will be buttressed by adjacent tiles that resist laterally outward movement of tile edges.
Each side edge 23a-23d of the tile 10 typically has an approximately 4° draft so as to provide about a 0.125 inch (3 mm) gap that allows for the placement of grout or sealant material between adjacent tiles.
It is further contemplated that the arch tiles described herein would preferably include one or more interlocking features, specifically those that define mortise-and-tenon or tongue-and-groove type joints. In one such embodiment seen in
In another interlocking arrangement, each tile edge could have either a vertical slot within or a vertical node extending outward from the edge pendentives 19b, 19d, 19f and 19h and/or corner pendentives 19a, 19c, 19g and 19i that are arranged such that nodes on one tile fit into corresponding slots on an adjacent tile. This may be instead of or in addition to the curved extensions and indentations associated with the tile archways that were described above. The length, width and depth dimensions of slots should be slightly larger, e.g. by 0.050 inch (1.3 mm) than the corresponding length width and extension dimensions of the nodes, giving some leeway for installation.
With reference to
These arch-tiles can overlay a subfloor or an existing or new floor surface. The arch-tiles can cover or hide loose wiring or electrical service conduits, which will run through the connecting vault-ways and from one tile to the next. This not only eliminates unsightly wires, but also improves safety by preventing tripping. Because such wires or conduits are located above sub-flooring, individual tiles could be carefully removed, (if any interlocking elements provided in the tiles are not especially deep) in order to gain access when needed to install additional wiring or repair existing wiring.
With reference to
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) from prior U.S. provisional application No. 62/284,436, filed Sep. 29, 2015.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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62284436 | Sep 2015 | US |