The disclosure relates to the mechanical fastening of materials and more particularly to mechanical fastening of materials where one of the materials to be fastened is a sheet having raised and pointed barbs.
Short press-in fasteners can suffer from low pull-out strength as exemplified in the extreme by a thumbtack pressed into foam. This is because such fasteners rely on the friction created by the shank spreading apart the substrate.
Screw-in fasteners on the other hand can provide much greater pull-out strength, but require can more time and effort to rotate the screw into the substrate. The increase in pull-out strength is achieved due to the fact that substrate material is trapped or captured between the threads of the screw while the trapped substrate material remains contiguous with the surrounding substrate material. The result is that considerably more force can be required to pull out a screw out as compared to a press-in fastener.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,376,410 (MacKelvie) purports to disclose a method for treating a surface which is to be bonded to another surface. The method comprises displacing a portion of the surface material to a position such that the displaced material, while remaining an integral part of the surface, forms a burr which is adapted to mechanically engage a flexible material placed adjacent thereto to thereby provide a mechanical interlocking action.
The following summary is intended to introduce the reader to various aspects of the disclosure, but not to define or delimit any invention.
According to some aspects, a sheet of material includes a planar portion, and a plurality of barbs extending from the planar portion. Each of at least some of the barbs has, respectively, a barb root adjacent the planar portion, a barb shank adjacent the barb root, and a pointed barb tip adjacent the barb shank. The pointed barb tip overlies the barb shank and overlies the barb root. The pointed barb tip is pointed in a direction away from the planar portion. The barb shank has a concave side and a convex side.
At least some of the barbs may be coated with hard particulate material. The hard particulate material may include abrasive grains adhered to the barbs. The hard particulate material may include at least one of sand, aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, garnet and emery.
The sheet of material may be a metal, and the barbs may extend integrally from the face.
The pointed barb tip may be pointed in a direction generally perpendicular to the planar portion.
According to some aspects, a method of attaching a sheet of barbed material to a substrate includes a) positioning a portion of the sheet of barbed material so that a plurality of barbs on a textured face of the portion are proximate to a substantially flat face of a substrate; b) curving the portion away from the substantially flat face of the substrate so that the textured face is not parallel to the substantially flat face of the substrate; and c) embedding the plurality of barbs in the substrate while curving the portion back towards the substrate to position the textured face parallel to the substantially flat face of the substrate.
Embedding the plurality of barbs into the substrate and curving the portion back towards the substrate may be performed by a roller.
At least some of the barbs may be curved so that one side is convex and an opposite side is concave. In step c), the curved barbs may deflect, increasing the concavity of the concave side of each curved barb as each curved barb embeds into the substrate.
Step c) may include deflecting the barbs as they are embedded in the substrate.
According to some aspects, a method of attaching a sheet of barbed material to a substrate includes a) positioning a sheet of barbed material adjacent a face of a substrate. The sheet of barbed material has a planar portion, and a plurality of barbs extending from the planar portion. Each of at least some of the barbs has, respectively, a barb root adjacent the planar portion, a barb shank adjacent the barb root, and a pointed barb tip adjacent the barb shank. The pointed barb tip overlies the barb shank and overlies the barb root. The pointed barb tip is pointed in a direction away from the planar portion. The barb shank has a concave side and a convex side. The method further includes b) pushing the barbs into the substrate to embed the barbs in the substrate; and c) while pushing the barbs into the substrate, increasing the concavity of the concave side to create a capture zone of the substrate between the barb root and the pointed barb tip of each barb.
Step b) may include i) pushing the pointed barb tips into the substrate, and ii) pushing the barb shanks into the substrate. The concavity of the concave side may be increased during step ii), and optionally only during step ii).
The method may further include, prior to step b), coating the barbs with a hard particulate material. Step b) may include embedding the particulate material in the substrate.
The pointed barb tip may be pointed in a direction generally perpendicular to the planar portion.
According to some aspects, there is provided a textured sheet of ductile material with barbs extending from a face of the sheet of ductile material. Some or all of the barbs are self-locking barbs. Each self-locking barb is curved so that one side is convex and an opposite side is concave, and a thrust line that is perpendicular to the face of the sheet of ductile material lies entirely within each self-locking barb. As a result, when a self-locking barb is pushed (or pressed) into a substrate, the self-locking barb deflects, increasing the concavity of the concave side of the self-locking barb while the self-locking barb fully penetrates into the substrate so that the textured sheet of ductile material is bound to the substrate with a portion of the substrate material above an end portion of the self-locking barb, thereby providing pull-out resistance.
Some or all of the self-locking barbs may be coated with hard particulate material. All of the self-locking barbs may be coated with hard particulate material. The hard particulate material may be abrasive grains adhered to the barbs. For example, the hard particulate material may include sand, aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, garnet or emery.
According to some aspects, there is provided a textured sheet of ductile material with barbs extending from a face of the sheet of ductile material, where a portion of the textured sheet is curved so that the textured face in the curved portion of the sheet is convex. The textured sheet can then be bonded to a substrate by pressing the textured face of the sheet into the substrate, causing the curved portion of the sheet to flatten as the barbs are penetrating the substrate so that lateral force is applied to the barbs in the curved portion of the sheet and at least some of the barbs in the curved portion of the sheet deflect while they are entering the substrate. As a result, a portion of the substrate material is above end portions of at least some of the barbs, thereby providing pull-out resistance. There may be multiple such curved portions of the textured sheet.
According to some aspects, there is provided a method of attaching a sheet of barbed material to a substrate. The sheet of barbed material has a textured face with barbs extending from the face. The substrate is made of a barb-penetrable material and has a substantially flat face. In this method, a portion of the sheet of barbed material is positioned to be proximate to the substrate so that the portion of the sheet of barbed material is curved away from the substantially flat face of the substrate. In this position, the textured face of the portion of the sheet of barbed material is not parallel to the substantially flat face of the substrate and the barbs on the portion of the sheet of barbed material are proximate to the flat face of the substrate. Then the portion of the sheet of barbed material is pressed into the substrate while the sheet of barbed material is being rotated so that the barbed face of the portion of the sheet of barbed material becomes parallel to the substantially flat face of the substrate when the barbs in the portion of the sheet of barbed material are fully embedded in the substrate. The rotation of the sheet of barbed material causes the barbs to deflect as they enter the substrate so that portions of the substrate material are above end portions of at least some, and preferably all, of the barbs in the portion of the sheet of barbed material, thereby providing pull-out resistance.
The pressing of the portion of the sheet of barbed material into the substrate may be performed by a roller. Some or all of the barbs in the portion of the sheet of barbed material may be self-locking barbs. Each self-locking barb may be curved so that one side is convex and an opposite side is concave, and a thrust line that is perpendicular to the textured face of the sheet of ductile material lies entirely within each of the self-locking barbs. When each of the self-locking barbs is pressed into a substrate, the self-locking barb may deflect, increasing the concavity of the concave side of the self-locking barb while the self-locking barb fully penetrates into the substrate.
According to some aspects, there is a laminate made from a sheet of ductile material and a substrate. The sheet of ductile material has barbs extending from a face of the sheet of ductile material. The sheet of ductile material is mated to a substrate by some or all of the barbs of the sheet of ductile material being embedded in the substrate so that for each of a plurality of the embedded barbs, a portion of the substrate is above an end portion of the embedded barb, thereby providing pull-out resistance. Some or all of the embedded barbs may be self-locking barbs such that each self-locking barb is curved so that one side is convex and an opposite side is concave. In such embodiments, prior to the sheet of ductile material and the substrate being mated, a thrust line that is perpendicular to the face of the sheet of ductile material lies entirely within the self-locking barb and when the self-locking barb is pressed into the substrate, the self-locking barb deflects, increasing the concavity of the concave side of the self-locking barb while the self-locking barb fully penetrates into the substrate.
The drawings included herewith are for illustrating various examples of articles, methods, and apparatuses of the present disclosure and are not intended to limit the scope of what is taught in any way. In the drawings:
Various apparatuses or processes will be described below to provide an example of an embodiment of the claimed subject matter. No embodiment described below limits any claim and any claim may cover processes or apparatuses that differ from those described below. The claims are not limited to apparatuses or processes having all of the features of any one apparatus or process described below or to features common to multiple or all of the apparatuses described below. It is possible that an apparatus or process described below is not an embodiment of any exclusive right granted by issuance of this patent application. Any subject matter described below and for which an exclusive right is not granted by issuance of this patent application may be the subject matter of another protective instrument, for example, a continuing patent application, and the applicants, inventors or owners do not intend to abandon, disclaim or dedicate to the public any such subject matter by its disclosure in this document.
Disclosed herein are textured sheets of material (also referred to herein as “sheets” or “textured sheets”, or “sheets of barbed material”), which may be a ductile material, such as metal (e.g. steel). The textured sheets of material have multiple barbs on one or more faces thereof (a face with barbs may also be referred to as a “textured face” or a “barbed face”). In some examples, the barbs may be referred to as “self-locking” barbs. The textured sheets of material may be used in the formation of laminates where a layer of a substrate material, such as hard foam or wood, is pressed against the textured face so that the barbs penetrate the substrate and lock the two layers together in a laminate.
Examples of suitable substrates (e.g. for use with metal (e.g. steel) textured sheet material) include wood, particle board, hard foam and other such “expanded” or “composite” substrates, and pliant materials such as softer plastics and metals. In order to be “suitable”, the substrate material should “give way” to a deflecting barb as the barb penetrates the substrate.
In some examples, the barbs self-lock in the substrate to increase pull-out resistance. The term “self-lock” refers to the deflection of at least some of the barbs while they are entering the substrate. In some examples, the shape of the barbs is configured to facilitate straight-in initial entry into the substrate, after which the path of the barb into the substrate deflects from a straight path. A capture zone of substrate material is thereby created for each barb, between the respective tips of each barb and the planar portion of the textured face, to lock or trap the barb in the substrate.
In some examples, self-locking is achieved by the process used to embed the barbs in the substrate, independent of the shape of the barbs. For example, the textured sheet may be curved before mating with the substrate, causing the barbs to angularly fan out (e.g. tilt away from perpendicular) before they enter the substrate. Then, as the barbs enter the substrate, they transition back (e.g. towards the perpendicular) causing them to deflect and self-lock.
Adding secondary material to the barbs (e.g. a particulate material) can also be used to facilitate deflection and self-locking.
As used herein, the term “barb” is interchangeable with the term “piercing member”, and refers to a nail-like or pin-like structure, or hooked structure, raised from the surface of a material, for example by carving, gouging, planing or scraping its surface, such as is described in Canadian patent numbers 1,330,521, 1,337,622, and 2,127,339, and in Canadian patent application number 2,778,455. The use of such textured materials to form laminates is described in Canadian patent application numbers 2,778,455, and 2,821,897.
Certain forms of barbed materials are available from Nucap Industries Inc., of Toronto, Canada.
Referring now to
In the example shown, the barbs are self-locking barbs 106, in that they are shaped to deflect while they are entering a substrate (as will be described in further detail).
Referring still to
The barbs 106 can be created by displacement from the sheet 100, whereby a shallow groove is carved into the sheet 100 to create each barb 106. The sheet 100 can be a ductile material, for example a metal such as steel. In other examples, other materials may be used, such as plastics.
Referring to
Referring now to
Particularly, referring to
In addition, the shank 110 has a curvature, wherein one side or portion (i.e. the left side or portion of the illustrated barb) has a convex surface 116, and the opposite side or portion (i.e. the right side or portion of the illustrated barb) has a concave surface 118. This curvature facilitates bending of the barb 106 after the tip 112 has entered the substrate 500.
Referring still to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Particularly, in the process of
Different roll diameters can cause different fan out angles. The roll diameter can optionally be selected to optimize the locking action in a range of different substrates having different characteristics, such as substrates of porous wood or hard plastic. In this example, the barbs can be the self-locking barbs 106 described with respect to
The result of this locking action is increased pull-apart/separation resistance of the mechanically connected materials (i.e. the textured sheet material and the substrate).
a show another example wherein self-locking is achieved by the process used to embed the barbs the substrate, independent of the shape of the barbs.
Referring to
A rigid pressure plate 1024 positioned above the sheet material 1000 has a recess with side clearance 1026 to hold an elastomer pad 1028. Barbs 1006 under the pad 1028 are first pressed into the substrate 1100 as the elastomeric pad 1028 is compressed and squash-flows sideways into clearances 1026. Further downward travel brings the end portions of the plate 1024 against the wavy portions 1022 of the sheet material 1000, which are gradually pressed flat as the pad 1028 is further compressed. This flattening causes lateral deflection of the barbs 1006 as they enter the substrate 1100. The effect of the two movements, downward and lateral, causes deflection of the barbs 1006. This creates capture zones 1108, resulting in self-locking action.
In
The hard particulate material 1230 may be, for example, sand, aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, garnet, emery and the like.
In the above-described examples, the substrate may be “torn” by lateral movement of the barb shank near the root of the barb, caused by lateral forces on the sheet of material. In such cases, the substrate may be selected to be a resilient material so that it will, at least in part, return into the space temporarily created by the tearing.
While the above description provides examples of one or more processes or apparatuses, it will be appreciated that other processes or apparatuses may be within the scope of the accompanying claims.
To the extent any amendments, characterizations, or other assertions previously made (in this or in any related patent applications or patents, including any parent, sibling, or child) with respect to any art, prior or otherwise, could be construed as a disclaimer of any subject matter supported by the present disclosure of this application, Applicant hereby rescinds and retracts such disclaimer. Applicant also respectfully submits that any prior art previously considered in any related patent applications or patents, including any parent, sibling, or child, may need to be re-visited.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/617,658, entitled “MATERIAL WITH SELF-LOCKING BARBS” and filed Feb. 9, 2015, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14617658 | Feb 2015 | US |
Child | 15014546 | US |