The present invention relates to a use in a respiratory therapy mask, a personal protective equipment mask, and/or a mask for sports and fitness applications and also for applications which reduce the spread of bacteria or viruses in the exhaled air of the wearer.
Respiratory therapy masks usually consist of a mask cushion made of silicone or other elastic materials, which creates a seal to the patient's face. A therapeutically effective positive pressure can be applied via this seal. This form of therapy is known as CPAP therapy or non-invasive ventilation with or without leakage, among other names.
In order to obtain a closed cavity, the mask cushion is connected to a dome made of plastic. This dome also forms all of or at least part of the connection to the tubing system and the headgear that retains the mask on the patient's head. For both of these connections, a hard component is advantageous, for example, in order to create a rotatable joint to the tubing, to enable snap-on attachments, or to form retainers for the headgear.
Due to various, sometimes contradictory requirements for the mask dome, an additional frame is often used, which, for example, takes over the connection to the headgear, so in this case the dome is reduced to the functions of hose connection and creation of a cavity.
The hard component is usually manufactured by injection molding; this allows cost-effective production with a high degree of geometric freedom. However, there are also limitations associated with it, which can be improved by the present invention.
In applications in the field of personal protective equipment, a sealing effect must also be produced on the face of the wearer, so the invention can be used in this field in a similar manner as in the field of respiratory masks. However, the use of a filter medium instead of a respirator is the more likely application here. The attachment of a filter medium to a mask body of course also mandates the presence of a rigid body.
For applications in the sports and fitness sector, the comparatively low weight of the mask is of primary importance, but connections of filters, materials for increasing inhalation resistance, or exhalation valves are also common here, which can also be advantageously integrated into a rigid component.
In the area of reducing the spread of bacteria or viruses, low weight is particularly important, as is the ability to reprocess the material.
In the automotive sector, printed plastic films are often used, which are further processed in the injection molding process into decorative and/or functional elements in the vehicle interior as well as in the exterior. The printing or other coatings can have a purely decorative function, but can also use conductive inks to form electrical functional elements.
The films are often converted into a three-dimensional shape and trimmed before the injection molding process in order to achieve better processability. Deep-drawing/thermoforming processes or high-pressure forming (HPF), among others, are used here.
A plastic film is shaped into a mask dome for respiratory masks by high-pressure forming (HPF) and then trimming.
The formed film can be combined with other elements, such as a mask cushion to seal on a wearer's face, a headgear, filters, tubes, exhalation valves, structures to rest on a wearer's face, or materials to influence flow characteristics in a controlled manner.
Some of the aforementioned components are themselves solids that can be attached, welded, or otherwise bonded to the rigid component formed from film. Others of said components are not inherently dimensionally stable, and thus require a rigid component for stabilization.
In the present invention, a film of thermoplastic, preferably high-temperature polycarbonate, is completely or partially overmolded with silicone rubber using a multicomponent injection molding process. The silicone overmolding can thereby form sealing lips, support structures, membranes or the like according to the prior art. The mask dome-mask cushion component can then be integrated into a mask system, for example, as would also be the case with a conventional injection-molded part.
The use of a formed plastic film has several advantages over the use of a plastic part which has been injection molded according to the prior art.
The main advantage is a weight saving: a formed film is in the range of 0.1 mm to 1.0 mm wall thickness, preferably in the range 0.4 mm to 0.6 mm. Compared to a conventional injection-molded part, which has a wall thickness of 1.0 mm to 2.5 mm, for example, a significant reduction in weight can thus be achieved. This makes the mask lighter and therefore more comfortable to wear for the user. The material savings also result in a reduction in costs.
Another advantage lies in the pliability or flexibility of the rigid component formed from foil. Due to the reduced thickness of the material, the film has greater flexibility or pliability when suitably shaped, this allows, for example, controlled deformation during operation. This reduces the tendency to slip on the wearer's face in some operating conditions, such as lateral resting on a pillow during the wearer's night sleep, thus improving the sealing effect.
By specifically designing the geometry of the rigid component formed from film, improved conformability to different face shapes can also be achieved by using the controlled elastic bending of the film to cover a larger percentage of the group of potential wearers, thus reducing the number of different manufacturing tools required. As a result, a reduction in manufacturing costs can be achieved.
Due to the significantly reduced weight and increased flexibility of the formed plastic film, a significant improvement in wearer comfort can be achieved.
Another advantage of producing a rigid component of a mask formed from film using the HPF process as opposed to conventional thermoforming or deep-drawing is the improved dimensional accuracy and better precision, since the film can be formed more precisely and at a lower temperature in the HPF process. Accurate and low-variation forming of the geometry of the rigid component is required for subsequent overmolding in a silicone injection mold. Furthermore, important geometric elements such as a connector for filter cartridges or ventilation hoses/ventilation accessories can be produced that meet the strict requirements for roundness, dimensional accuracy and conicity, which could not be repeatedly ensured in a thermoforming process. This enables the use of standardized accessories, for example in the field of respiratory medicine, and raises the formed sheet to a level of accuracy equivalent to an injection molded part.
Another advantage of the invention is the ability to apply a printing or other coating. The ability to print or coat the film prior to forming, and thus create a bond that will withstand the forming process and the downstream injection molding process, opens up a variety of possibilities that make the dome formed from film in the HPF process stand out from the prior art.
Printing designs on the finished part can be made far more complex, accurate, repeatable and aesthetically pleasing than a subsequent printing on an injection molded part using, for example, the pad printing process could possibly achieve. This opens up new aesthetic design opportunities. Due to the lower temperatures involved in using the HPF process compared to thermoforming, the printing or coating can be carried out more consistently and more gentle on the materials and inks used, as suggested by the state of the art in this field.
Special inks can be used which contain a fading effect, for example over time or after a number of cleaning cycles. Thus, a mask can be equipped with an optical wear indicator. The application of these inks prior to the forming process allows this advantageous element to be incorporated in a much more cost-effective manner than would be the case, for example, with the subsequent printing of an injection-molded part.
Because the film is flat before forming, conductive tracks can be printed, laminated, coated or otherwise applied, which would not be possible with a three-dimensionally shaped injection molded part. At the same time, the lower temperature of the HPF process compared to thermoforming prevents damage to the conductive track. The processing of a plastic film in the HPF process thus brings the possibility of integrating sensor technology or other electronic components into a mask system in a cost-effective manner, for example for temperature, humidity or pressure measurement.
Capacitive switches can be printed which, for example, allow a simple form of remote control of a connected device by the wearer of the mask, such that on-off functions, humidifier output or the like could be controlled from the mask so that the wearer does not have to reach over to the attached device first. This will improve the comfort of the entire application.
Conductive tracks applied to the mask body can support RFID applications, for example, so that breathing masks can be coded to specific device types. This provides additional security against incorrect operation.
The ability to apply a print or other coating to a flat film prior to the forming process allows a much more practical and cost-effective application of the various inks or coatings than would be possible with a subsequent application of the same functionality to a finished injection molded part. In addition, some of the above applications would most likely not be able to be efficiently applied to a three-dimensionally shaped injection molded part in the first place.
Overall, processing in the HPF process is advantageous over the thermoforming process because the forming can take place at significantly lower temperatures. As a result, pre-applied inks, coatings or conductive elements are subject to less thermal stress and are reproduced with greater accuracy.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2020 006 605.4 | Oct 2020 | DE | national |