The disclosure generally relates to the field of mechanical locking systems for floor panels and building panels. The disclosure shows floorboards, locking systems and production methods.
Embodiments of the present invention are particularly suitable for use in indoor and outdoor floors and walls, which are formed of ceramic or stone material and which are intended to be joined with a mechanical locking system.
The invention may also be used to lock floor panels which are made up of one or more upper layers of wood or wood veneer, decorative laminate, powder based surfaces or decorative plastic material, an intermediate core of wood-fibre-based material or plastic material and preferably a lower balancing layer on the rear side of the core.
Floor panels of solid wood or with a surface layer of cork, linoleum, rubber or soft wear layers, for instance needle felt glued to a board, printed and preferably also varnished surface and floors with hard surfaces such as stone, tile and similar materials bonded to a sheet shaped material are included. Embodiments of the invention may also be used for joining building panels in general which preferably contain a board material for instance wall panels, ceilings, furniture components and similar.
The following description of known technique, problems of known systems and objects and features of the invention will therefore, as a non-restrictive example, be aimed above all at this field of application and in particular at ceramic tiles intended to be mechanically joined to each other vertically and horizontally on all four edges.
Long and short edges are used to simplify the descriptions. The tiles may also be square.
Ceramic tiles are one of the major materials used for flooring and wall coverings. The raw materials used to form tiles comprise clay minerals, feldspar and chemical additives required for the shaping process. One common method to produce ceramic tiles uses the following production steps. The raw materials are milled into powder and mixed.
Sometimes, water is then added and the ingredients are wet milled. The water is removed using filter pressing followed by spray drying into powder form. The resulting powder is then dry pressed under a very high pressure (about 400 bars) to a tile body with a thickness of 3-10 mm. The tile body is further dried to remove remaining moisture and to stabilize the tile body to a solid homogenous material. One or several layers of glaze, which is a glass like substance, are applied on the tile body by dry or wet methods. The purpose of tile glazing is to protect the tile. The glaze is available in many different colours and designs.
Some glazes may create different textures. The tile is after glazing fired in a furnace or kiln at very high temperatures (1.300° C.). During firing, the glaze particles melt into each other and form a wear resistant layer.
New dry methods have been introduced recently and a tile may be formed by scattering, pressing and firing in a continuous production line with a total production time of about one hour. Large tile blanks may be formed that after firing are divided into individual tiles by for example laser cutting. This new production technology provides improved strengths, flexibility and size tolerances.
Roller screens are often used to create a decorative pattern. The contact nature of the rotary screen-printing has many disadvantages such as breakages and long set-up times. Several tile producers have therefore recently replaced this conventional printing technology with digital ink jet printing technology that offers several advantages mainly related to production flexibility and costs
Tiles are generally installed side by side on a surface such as a floor or wall. An adhesive compound is used as a base. After connection to the sub floor or a wall a grout is spread over and between the tiles to further bind the tiles and to fill spaces between adjacent tiles.
The major advantage of a tile-based floor is that the tiles are moister proof and they do not swell and shrink in changed humidity as other floors, for example laminate and wood floors.
Tile floors have several disadvantages compared to laminate and wood floors. One major disadvantage is that conventional tiles have significant dimensional variances in length, width and thickness. However, such production variances are decreasing continuously when new and advanced production methods based on dry forming are introduced and combined with edge trimming. Another major disadvantage is that installation of tiles is labour intensive. Ceramic tiles are very brittle and they break without significant deformation. They must be installed on rather rigid sub floors and the adhesive compound layer may break if the sub floor expands and shrinks. Rather costly and moisture stable sub floor must be used such as cement bonded particleboard and similar.
Floor elements comprising thin stone material are similar to ceramic tiles. They have similar properties and are installed in a similar way.
There is a need for a tile or stone floor and wall system that is simple to install, that may cover large floor areas without expansion joints, that may be easy to disassemble and that may be installed on more cost efficient sub floors that have a higher moisture movement than the ceramic tiles.
In the following text, the visible surface of the installed floor or wall is called “front side”, while the opposite side, facing the sub floor or the wall, is called “rear side”. The edge between the front and rear side is called “joint edge”. By “horizontal plane” is meant a plane, which extends parallel to the outer part of the surface layer. Upper and outer parts of an edge define a “vertical plane” perpendicular to the horizontal plane. By “vertical locking” is meant locking parallel to the vertical plane. By “horizontal locking” is meant locking parallel to the horizontal plane.
By “up” is meant towards the front side, by “down” towards the rear side, by “inwardly” mainly horizontally towards an inner and centre part of the tile and by “outwardly” mainly horizontally away from the centre part of the tile.
Laminate flooring usually comprise a wood based core, an upper decorative surface layer of laminate and lower balancing layer. A laminate surface comprises melamine-impregnated paper. The most common core material is fibreboard with high density and good stability usually called HDF—High Density Fibreboard.
Laminate floor panels of this type are installed floating on a sub floor and joined mechanically by means of so-called mechanical locking systems. These systems comprise locking means, which lock the panels horizontally and vertically. The mechanical locking systems are usually formed by machining of the core of the panel. Alternatively, parts of the locking system may be formed of separate materials, for instance aluminium or HDF, which are integrated with the floor panel, i.e. joined with the floor panel in connection with the manufacture thereof.
The main advantages of floating floors with mechanical locking systems are that they are easy to install. They may also easily be taken up again and used once more at a different location.
It is known that mechanical joining of long edges as well as short edges in the vertical and horizontal direction may be made l several ways. One of the most used methods is the angle-snap method. The long edges are installed by angling. The panel is then displaced in locked position along the long side. The short edges are locked by horizontal snapping. The vertical connection is generally a tongue and a groove. During the horizontal displacement, a strip with a locking element is bent and when the edges are in contact, the strip springs back and a locking element enters a locking groove and locks the panels horizontally. Such a snap connection is complicated since a hammer and a tapping block has to be used to overcome the friction between the long edges and to bend the strip during the snapping action.
Similar locking systems may also be produced with a rigid strip and they are connected with an angling-angling method where both short and long edges are angled into a locked position. Such installation method is difficult to use if the panels are large and heavy.
Recently advance so called fold down locking systems have been introduced that allow a very easy single action installation with an angling action only that locks the long and short edges. A flexible tongue attached to the short edge is used to connect the short edges with a scissor like movement when a long edge is locked with angling.
The majority of all mechanical locking systems used in laminate and wood floorings are formed by rotating diamond tools. Such forming may be made in high speed and with high precision. The locking systems comprise protruding parts such as a tongue for the vertical locking and a strip for the horizontal locking.
Protruding parts are difficult and practically impossible to form in ceramic material especially in thin ceramic tiles that comprise brittle edges. Spaces between the edges provide additional problems since a tongue must extend over a considerable distance from an edge to cover the space between the edges and to enter into a tongue groove of an adjacent edge.
Diamond tools may be used to form the tile edges. However, the production speed is a fraction of the speed that is used to form advanced joint geometries in wood and plastic based materials. Special cooling systems, generally based on water-cooling must be used to form tile and stone material.
Several attempts have been made to improve tile installations by attaching ceramic and stone tiles to a separate sheet shaped material that may be formed with a mechanical locking system comprising protruding parts such that a floating installation similar to laminate floorings may be obtained.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,156,705 describes a tile having at least one coupling member that cooperatively engages a coupling member of an adjacent tile, such that adjacent tiles may be reasonably secured to one another without the use of grout. The tiles are moulded into a synthetic support structure that comprises a conventional mechanical locking system.
US 2011/0113713 describes a method for arranging a tile in a mould, and injecting a polymer into the mould. The injected material mechanically anchors the substrate to the tile. A mechanical locking and a surrounding grout gasket may also be formed.
Attaching tiles to a separate sheet material or a mould is expensive. The floor thickness increases and a moisture stable tile is difficult to combine with wood base sheet material that expands and shrinks when relative humidity varies between dry and wet conditions.
It is known that a locking strip may be formed of a separate material such as aluminium or HDF and that such strip may be clamped in undercut grooves or attached into a horizontally extending groove formed at an edge of a laminate panel by snapping pressing and/or turning. Such systems are described in WO 94/26999 and WO 03/083234 (Valinge Innovation AB). It is also known that several strip parts spaced form each other may be attached to a long side edge in order to obtain further cost savings.
WO 2001075247 describes a locking system for joining sheet shaped flooring elements with tight joints. The floor elements are constituted of solid wood, fibreboard or particleboard. Long edges are locked with conventional locking system comprising a protruding tongue and a protruding strip. The short edges are joined by vertical displacement and by means of a separate vertical assembly joining profile. The short edge comprises an edge geometry, which requires that substantial amounts of the edge material are removed. The locking system is not suitable to install tiles, which are spaced from each other.
WO 03/083234 describes a locking system that comprises a strip and a tongue made of separate material. This system is not suitable to lock tiles with edges that are spaced from each other. The geometry of the locking system is very complicated to produce in ceramic material.
As a summary it may be mentioned that known locking systems are not suitable to connect ceramic tiles having a brittle tile body since the necessary strength and flexibility of protruding portions formed in ceramic material is not sufficient and the geometry of the edges is difficult to produce with moulding or machining of ceramic material.
The above description of various known aspects is the applicant's characterization of such, and is not an admission that any of the above description is considered as prior art.
An overall objective of embodiments of the present invention is to provide an improved and more cost efficient locking system for primarily floating installation of ceramic and stone tiles which allows that the edges may be locked to each other mechanically with angling, and/or horizontal snapping and/or vertical snapping.
A specific objective is to form a locking system that comprises a very simple joint geometry and minimum amount of separate material attached to a tile and that may be formed with smallest possible machining of the tile edges, preferably without any brittle protruding parts.
Other specific objectives are to provide tiles with an integrated grout material, improved décor properties, to eliminate size tolerances and to provide panels comprising combination of ceramic material and other lighter and more cost efficient materials.
The above objects of embodiments of the invention may be achieved wholly or partly by locking systems and tiles formed according to the disclosure. Embodiments of the invention are evident from the description and drawings.
The invention is based on the insight that vertical and horizontal grooves with a specific geometry may be formed with high precision in edge portions of a thin ceramic or stone tile body and that such grooves may be used as a part of a locking system allowing a mechanical locking.
The invention is also based on a second understanding that separate strip shaped material comprising vertically protruding locking elements and horizontally protruding tongues may be mechanically connected to such groves and that such separate strip shaped materials and grooves may be used to accomplish a strong, cost efficient and simple floating installation of ceramic or stone tiles on a floor or on a wall in indoor or outdoor applications.
The invention is based on a third understanding that the grooves and separate strip shaped material may be formed such that it is possible to overcome the size tolerances off ceramic tiles that generally are installed with a space between the edges and that machining of the upper edges to a pre-determined perfect size may be avoided.
The invention is based on a fourth understanding that pre formed tiles comprising vertical and horizontal grooves may be produced and that such pre formed tiles may reduce the final machining of the edges which is needed to form the required geometry.
Thin ceramic surfaces may also be bonded to materials that are moisture stable and the ceramic surface may be used to form a part of the locking system.
A first aspect of the invention is a set of ceramic or stone tiles comprising a first tile provided with a first edge and a second tile provided with a second edge. The tiles are provided with a locking system for locking the first edge to the second edge in a horizontal direction parallel with a tile surface and in a vertical direction perpendicular to the horizontal direction. The locking system comprises a first and a second tongue and a strip part provided with a first and a second locking element. The first edge is provided with a first horizontal groove and a first vertical groove formed in a body of the first tile. The first locking element is configured to cooperate with the first vertical groove for locking in the horizontal direction and the first tongue is configured to cooperate with the first horizontal groove for locking in the vertical direction. The second edge is provided with a second horizontal groove and a second vertical groove formed in a body of the second tile. The second locking element is configured to cooperate with the second vertical groove for locking in the horizontal direction and the second tongue is configured to cooperate with the second horizontal groove for locking in the vertical direction. Each of the first and the second horizontal groove comprises an upper lip and a lower lip. The lower lip of the first horizontal groove extends horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the first edge and the lower lip of the second horizontal groove extends horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the second edge. There is a space between the outer and upper part of the first edge and the outer and upper part of the second edge in a locked position of the first and the second edge.
The lower lip of the first horizontal groove may extend horizontally essentially to the upper and outer part of the first edge and the lower lip of the second horizontal groove may extends horizontally essentially to the upper and outer part of the second edge.
The depth of one of the horizontal grooves of the first or the second tile, measured as the horizontal distance from a vertical plane, located at the upper and outer part of the edge, and to the groove bottom, may vary along the same edge of one of the tiles or between the same edges of two different tiles.
The depth of the horizontal groove may vary with at least 0.10 mm.
The strip part may comprise a vertically extending tongue body and a first tongue protruding from the vertically extending tongue body.
The locking system may be configured to be locked by angling and/or vertical snapping and or horizontal snapping of the first and the second tile.
A second aspect of the invention is a set of ceramic or stone tiles, each comprising a first and a second edge which are provided with a locking system for locking in a horizontal direction parallel with a tile surface and in a vertical direction perpendicular to the horizontal direction. The first edge of the first tile is lockable to the second edge of the second tile. The second edge of the first tile is lockable to the first edge of the second tile in a horizontal direction parallel with a tile surface and in a vertical direction perpendicular to the horizontal direction, wherein said locking system comprises a first and a second tongue and a strip part provided with a first and a second locking element. The first edge is provided with a first horizontal groove and a first vertical groove formed in a body of the first and the second tile. The second edge is provided with a second horizontal groove and a second a vertical groove formed in a body of the first and the second tile. The first locking element is configured to cooperate with the first vertical groove for locking in the horizontal direction and the first tongue is configured to cooperate with the first horizontal groove for locking in the vertical direction. The second locking element is configured to cooperate with the second vertical groove for locking in the horizontal direction and the second tongue is configured to cooperate with the second horizontal groove for locking in the vertical direction. Each of the first and the second vertical groove comprises a first groove wall, a second groove wall and an upper surface. The first groove wall of the first vertical groove is closer to the outer part of the first edge than the second groove wall of the first vertical groove. The first groove wall of the second vertical groove is closer to an upper and outer part of the second edge than the second groove wall of the second vertical groove. There is a first a horizontal distance between the first groove wall of the first edge of the first tile and an upper and outer part of the first edge of the first tile. There is a second horizontal distance between the first groove wall of the second edge of the first tile and an upper and outer part of the second edge of the first tile. There is a third horizontal distance between the first groove wall of the first edge of the second tile and an upper and outer part of the first edge of the second tile. There is a fourth horizontal distance between the first groove wall of the second edge of the second tile and an upper and outer part of the second edge of the second tile. The first horizontal distance varies along the first edge of the first tile, and/or the second horizontal distance varies along the second edge of the second tile, and/or the third horizontal distance varies along the first edge of the second tile, and/or the fourth horizontal distance varies along the second edge of the second tile, and/or the first horizontal distance is different from third horizontal distance and/or the second horizontal distance is different from the fourth horizontal distance.
In a locked position of the first and the second edge there may be a space between the upper outer parts of the first and second edge.
Each of the first and the second horizontal groove may comprise an upper lip and a lower lip. The lower lip of the first horizontal groove may extend horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the first edge and the lower lip of the second horizontal groove may extends horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the second edge.
The strip part may comprise a vertically extending tongue body with a first tongue that protrudes from the vertically extending tongue body.
The locking system may be configured to be locked by angling and/or vertical snapping of the first and the second tile.
A third aspect of the invention is a ceramic tile provided with an embossed surface and a décor. The embossing is in register with the décor. The embossing comprises upper and lower surface portion. An upper surface portion comprises a different gloss level than a lower surface portion.
The décor may be a wood design and the different gloss levels may be formed by a digitally applied powder.
A fourth aspect of the invention is a set of floor panels comprising a first and a second panel comprising a ceramic surface layer and a core comprising thermoplastic material mixed with wood or mineral fillers. A mechanical locking system is formed in the core of the first and the second panel. The mechanical locking system comprises a strip provided with a locking element at a first edge of the first panel and a locking groove at a second edge of the second panel. The locking element and the locking groove are configured to cooperate for locking of the first and the second edge in a horizontal direction parallel with the ceramic surface layer. The mechanical locking system comprises a tongue at the second edge and a tongue groove formed in the first edge. The tongue and the tongue groove are configured to cooperate for locking of the first and the second edge in a vertical direction perpendicular to the horizontal direction. The thickness of the ceramic surface layer is in the range of 2 mm to 5 mm. The tongue groove comprises an upper lip that is essentially formed by the ceramic surface layer.
In a locked position of the first and the second edge there may be a space of about 1-10 mm between the ceramic surface layers.
A fifth aspect of the invention is a pre formed ceramic tile intended to be provided with a locking system. A groove is formed at the rear side of a tile edge.
A first thickness of an outer edge of the pre formed ceramic tile may be lower than a second average thickness of the tile body of the pre formed ceramic tile.
The thickness difference between the first thickness and the second average thickness may be about 1-3 mm.
The groove may be an equalizing groove comprising an upper surface that is essentially parallel with an upper surface of the pre formed ceramic tile. The upper surface may extend from the outer part of the edge and inwardly.
The upper surface of the equalizing groove may extend over a horizontal distance of about 3-20 mm.
The rear side of the pre formed ceramic tile edge may comprises a vertical groove spaced from the outer edge and an equalizing groove extending from the vertical groove and to the outer part of the edge.
A sixth aspect of the invention is a set comprising a first tile, a second tile and a strip part, which preferably comprises a polymer or metal material, wherein said first and second tile are ceramic or stone tiles. A first edge of the first tile or a second edge of the second tile comprises a vertical groove and a horizontal groove formed in a body of the first or the second tile respectively. The strip part is configured to be connected to one of the vertical grooves and one of the horizontal grooves, formed on the same edge, for vertical locking perpendicular to the tile surface and horizontal locking parallel to the tile surface of the first and the second tiles. In locked position there is a space between upper parts of the first and second edge.
Vertical and horizontal grooves may be formed in the first edge of the first tile and the second edge of the second tile. The strip part may be configured to be connected to the horizontal and vertical groves formed in the first edge of the first tile and in the second edge of the second tile.
The horizontal groove of the first edge or the second edge may comprise an upper lip and a lower lip. The lower lip may extend horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the respective first or second edge.
The strip part may comprise a tongue having a vertically extending tongue body located in the space.
The tiles may be connected with vertical or horizontal snapping wherein the tongue body is displaced horizontally in the space during locking.
The major advantages of the invention are that a locking system may be formed with a very limited machining of the tile edges and no protruding parts formed in the tile body are needed to accomplish a mechanical locking. The locking system is formed with a geometry that is adapted to the production methods of the tiles and to the possibility to pre form tiles comprising grooves that may be used as a part of the final joint geometry. This will reduce the material that must be removed during the final forming of the edges. The locking system is adapted to position and align tiles with normal size tolerances and generally no machining of the upper parts of the edges is needed. The strip part comprises a simple geometry that may be formed in a cost efficient way by punching or extrusion of a plastic or metal material. The strip part is also formed such that it is easy to factory connect to a tile edge prior to installation or by the installer during installation.
The disclosure will in the following be described in connection to exemplary embodiments and in greater detail with reference to the appended exemplary drawings, wherein:
To facilitate understanding, several locking systems in the figures are shown schematically.
It should be emphasized that improved or different functions may be achieved using combinations of the embodiments.
All embodiments may be used separately or in combinations. Angles, dimensions, rounded parts, spaces between surfaces etc. are only examples and may be adjusted within the basic principles of the invention.
An advanced edge profile is required to fix the strip to the edge. The locking system may also comprise a separate flexible tongue. Such locking systems suffer from several disadvantages. The material content is high due to the design and only limited material savings may be reached. The fixing of the strip to the edge is rather complicated and slow.
One of the basic principles of the invention is the understanding that simple grooves may be formed in the tile body and that such grooves may be used to connect separate materials comprising protruding parts and to form locking system allowing a strong mechanical locking in a floating manner.
The horizontal grooves 9a, 9b are formed in the outer vertical portion of tile edge.
The strip part 6 is according to the invention preferably used to lock the edges 1,1′ horizontally inwardly and outwardly and vertically upwards and downwards. The upper edges are preferably connected to each other with a pre-determined horizontal space S.
This is a major difference compared to conventional technology where the upper edges are locked in contact with each other and the strip part 6 is only used to preventing horizontal separation. The space S may be used to form a specific locking system with a favorable geometry and function as described below. Angling and snapping properties may be improved and the locking system may be formed with a more cost efficient geometry.
The locking system comprises a strip part 6 having a strip body 7 and upwardly extending first 8a and a second 8b locking element at opposite and outer part of the strip body 7. An upper part of the second locking element 8b comprises preferably an upper guiding surface 22 that is used to guide the locking element 8b into the second vertical groove 14b during angling, horizontal snapping and vertical locking.
The strip body 7 comprises a first 10a and a second 10b upwardly extending flexible tongue. The tongues 10a, 10b have preferably a vertically extending flexible tongue body 30, an upper sliding surface 31 that may be flexible and a tongue locking surface 32.
The tongue body 30 is preferably at least partly located in the space S formed by the adjacent edges. Such a locking system provides the advantage that no material has to be removed from the edge in order to accommodate a vertically extending tongue body 30.
The space S may also be used to allow the tongue body 30 to be displaced horizontally in the space S during vertical and/or horizontal snapping.
The strip part 6 is configured to be locked to the first edge 1 by the first tongue 10a that is inserted into the first horizontal groove 9a and by the first locking element 8a that is inserted into the first vertical groove 14a. The strip body 7 comprises preferably a fixing element 16 at an outer part that may be used in some embodiments to obtain a firm connection of the strip part 6 to the tile. The fixing element may be flexible and may lock against the second groove wall 25.
The locking elements 8a, 8b cooperate with the vertical grooves 14a, 14b and locks the edges 1, 1′ in a horizontal direction and prevents horizontal separation. The flexible tongues 10a, 10b cooperate with the horizontal grooves 9a, 9b and locks the edges 1, 1′ vertically and prevents horizontal displacement of the panel edges towards each other.
Other parts formed on the strip body may be used to prevent such horizontal displacement of the panels towards each other.
Tile and stone material may be formed by rotating hard metal or diamond tools. Even stationary carving, scraping or grinding tools may be used.
Test production shows that small grooves may be formed in a cost efficient way with rotating diamond tools and that such grooves may have sufficient strength even in brittle materials such as ceramic or stone material if the material content adjacent to the groove is sufficient in relation to the groove width and depth. A joint geometry with high strengths may be obtained if the edge preferably only comprises very small parts or even more preferably no parts that extend horizontally beyond the upper edge.
The locking system according to the invention has preferably no protruding parts such as a tongue or a strip that are formed in the tile body and that protrudes beyond the upper edge.
Rather small grooves that extend inwardly for example 0.5-2 mm into an edge or at a rear side may be formed and such grooves may have sufficient strength even in thin and brittle ceramic and stone materials. Preferably there are no or only very small protruding parts extending beyond the upper edge, especially if such protruding parts are formed by machining of the tile edges.
A strong edge groove with for example 2 mm debt may be formed in high speed with five rotating tools where each tool removes about 0.4 mm of material. The forming may be made when a tile is displaced in relation to rotating tools. The tile may also be connected to a stationary holder and the tools are displaced in one or several machining steps in relation to the tile edge.
It is an advantage if no material or very small amounts of material are removed at the upper part of the edges, especially if such edges are formed with bevels or rounded parts.
Tiles are general not completely square or rectangular and one edge may have a different length than another edge. Two edges that meet each other may not be completely perpendicular.
Such production tolerances are generally eliminated by the spaces between the edges that are filled with grout material. It is a major advantage if the locking system is formed and configured such that the tiles are installed and aligned with a pre-determined average distance between the edges and that the distance deviations are minimized. Preferably the horizontal grooves are formed more precisely than the upper edges. This means that the depth of one or several horizontal grooves, measured as the horizontal distance from a vertical plane located at the upper and outer part of a tile edge and to the inner surface a horizontal groove, may vary along the edge. The groove depth of a horizontal groove may be at least 0.10 mm or even 0.20 mm larger at one part of the edge than at another part of the same edge. The horizontal groove at all four edges of a tile may be formed with smaller tolerances the upper edges. For example a set of tiles according to the invention may have long edges of 40.0+−0.2 mm and short edges of 30.0+−0.2 mm measured at the upper parts of the tile. The distance between the inner surfaces of the horizontal grooves may be 36.0+−0.10 mm and 26.0+−0.10 mm when 2 mm deep grooves are formed in the edge.
The locking system according to the invention will align all tiles automatically in a pre-determined position vertically and horizontally. This allows that the space S between the tiles may be decreased compared to conventional installation. A space S of 2-3 mm may be sufficient and such a small space may be used to decrease the amount of grout material.
The grooves are preferably formed in the tile body with rotating diamond tools in a separate production step after the production of the tile. The grooves may also be formed in two steps. The first step may be a rough forming that is formed during the tile production. The second step is the final forming with diamond tools. This two-step forming may be used to reduce the amount of material that must be removed in order to obtain a joint geometry that is needed for a high quality locking system that guides the tiles into a correct position vertically and horizontally during installation.
New and advanced production methods to produce tiles are under development and such methods will make it possible to produce grooves with sufficient accuracy in line with the tile production. No further machining or forming may be needed to form a locking system.
The strip part 6 may be formed from metal material, preferably from steel or aluminium.
The strip part 6 is in this embodiment formed by punching and pressing.
A tile 1a with an edge 1 comprising a strip part 6 that is attached prior to installation, as shown in
A flexible tongue that may be used to connect the edges with a vertical displacement may have flexible protrusions in its inner or outer parts. The flexible tongue may also comprise a snap tab at its outer end. All separate flexible tongues described in this disclosure may be connected to the strip tile 1a or to the fold tile 1b.
The strip part 6 is preferably connected to the edge mechanically. Glue may also be used and may be combined with a mechanical connection.
The strip part 6 may be a plastic or metal section. Flexible or rigid tongues may be formed as punched, extruded or injection moulded plastic or metal components.
The strip part may comprise vertically protruding blocking elements that prevents a horizontal displacement of the edges towards each other.
The strip body may be made of about 0.3-0.6 mm thick metal sheet material preferably a stainless steel material. A more preferred thickness is about 0.3-0.4 mm.
A flexible grout material 13 may be factory connected to two edges that meet each other in a corner section of the tile.
The sub floor 3 may comprise panels with a mechanical locking system on long and short edges.
A locking with a vertical displacement may be made with less resistance if the flexible tongue 10a may be bended and displaced horizontally for example 1-2 mm during locking.
The edges may be formed such that a part of the tongue 10b may be displaced into one of the horizontal grooves 9a and then towards its locked position into the other adjacent groove 9b as shown in
The strip parts may be factory connected to the tile edge or supplied as individual component that is attached to a tile edge prior to installation. Strip parts 6 may be formed and adapted to a space S between the edges that may vary from 0-10 mm and this may be used to create different grout widths. The vertical 14 and horizontal grooves 9 may extend from along the whole edge 1 or they may only be formed in a part of the edge 1.
Several strip parts may be connected to an edge. The strip parts may have different geometries on different edges or on the same edge. The edge may also comprise one strip part that extends along essentially the whole edge.
It is obvious from the drawings that a first edge 1 of a first tile 1a may be connected to a second edge 1′ of a second tile 1b and that a second edge of a first tile 1a may be connected to a first edge of a second tile 1b.
The advantage is that the tiles are mechanically connected to the sub floor panel without glue. The mechanical connection and the flexible tongues allow that the moisture stable tiles 1, 1′ and a moisture sensitive sub floor 3 may move independently relative each other when the relative humidity changes from dry to wet conditions. This makes it possible to use sub floors comprising for example wood based materials such as HDF and particleboard that expand and shrink when relative humidity is changing.
All embodiments of the invention may be used to connect tiles for forming a floating floor or to connect tiles in vertical application on a wall. The strip part may be nailed to a vertical sheet material forming a part of a wall system.
Ceramic tiles produced with dry pressing of powder under high pressure may be formed with a thickness of about 2-5 mm and with high flexibility and strength.
Ceramic material 27 with a preferred thickness Ta of about 2-5 mm, or 2-4 mm or 2-3 mm may be bonded to such moisture stable core material 28. Preferably the thickness Tb of the core is about 3-5 mm or 3-4 mm. A two layer material with a total thickness Tc of for example 5-10 mm may be formed. Preferably the thickness Tb of the core 28 is larger than the thickness Ta of the ceramic surface layer 27.
A locking system comprising a tongue 10 and a tongue groove 9 for vertical locking and a strip 7 with a locking element 8 that cooperates with a locking groove 14 formed in an adjacent edge for horizontal locking may be formed in the core material 28. Preferably the upper lip 12 of the tongue groove 9 comprises essentially ceramic material that provides the strength and prevents vertical displacement of the tongue 10. Preferably at least 60% or at least 80% of the thickness of the upper lip 12 comprises ceramic material. Preferably the upper edges are spaced from each other with a pre-determined space S that is formed when the locking element 8 enters into the locking groove 14 during installation.
Cooperating surface of the locking element 8 and the locking groove 14 may be used to prevent separation of the panel edges away from each other and displacement of the panel edge towards each other. Cooperating surfaces of the tongue 10 and the tongue groove 9 may also be used to create a pre-determined space S and to prevent displacement of the panel edges towards each other.
The final shape may be formed by for example rotating tools that form a tile edge 1″ comprising a vertical 14 and horizontal 9 groove adapted to the shape of the strip part and the defined geometry of a specific locking system.
The lower wall 19 of the horizontal groove 9a is located at a first upper horizontal plane H1 that is closer to the tile surface than a second and lower horizontal plane H2 that intersects the upper surface 26 of the vertical groove 14a. The vertical distance between the first H1 and the second H2 horizontal plane is preferably at least 0.1 times the tile thickness T. The horizontal distance D1 between the vertical plane VP and the first groove wall 24 of the vertical groove 14 is preferably about the same as the tile thickness T or larger.
This embodiment offers the advantage that a strong edge portion may be formed in tile material and that the strip part 6 may be formed in a more cost efficient way with a simple punching operation as shown in
When tiles are installed floating on a foam material thickens tolerances will be visible. The locking system is preferably formed with the rear side as the reference side. High quality tiles have already sufficient thickness tolerances to allow a high quality installation with a mechanical locking system. The thickness tolerance may be improved and this allows that the space S between tiles may be decreased considerably to about 1 mm and that tiles may be formed without beveled edges. Further improvement may be obtained if filler layers 34a, 34b are applied on the rear side of the tile as shown in
The strip part 6 in this embodiment of the invention is preferably formed as an extruded plastic or metal section that is preferably used to connect adjacent tile edges with angling and/or horizontal snapping. The strip body 7 comprises a vertically extending tongue body 30 and two horizontally protruding tongues 10a and 10b connected to the tongue body 30. The tongue body and the protruding tongues may or may not be flexible. One of the protruding tongues 10b comprises preferably upper 42 and lower 43a contact surfaces that prevent vertical separation and tat are displaced horizontally in relation to each other such that the lower contact surface 43a is closer to the vertical plane VP than the upper contact surface 42. Such geometry facilitates an easy angling and the rotation point Rp may be located under the protruding tongue 10b as shown in
The plank shaped ceramic panel or tile is preferably digitally printed with a wood décor. The surface comprises preferably an embossing 29 that is made in register with the design as shown in
The strip part 6 extends in this embodiment along the whole long edge 4b and an edge portion 6a extends beyond the short edge 4d. The panels according to this embodiment have no locking system on the short edges.
Core grooves 56 may be formed in the rear side of a tile in order to decrease the weight. The strength of the tile may still be sufficient especially if the core grooves are covered with appropriate underlay materials 2 that preferably are bonded to the rear side. Preferably, such underlay material 2 comprises glass fibres that preferably are combined with a polymer material.
Preferably such different gloss levels are combined with an in register embossed structure. The upper part 44a of the embossed structure may have a lower or higher gloss level than the lower part 44b. The advantage is that the visual embossing will be more pronounced even when the lower parts of the embossed portions are only about 0.2-0.5 mm below the upper parts and such tiles are easier to clean.
Different gloss levels may be formed with digital printing. A binder pattern may be applied with a digital ink head, powder may be applied on the pattern and non-bonded powder may be removed.
It is obvious that the above described embodiments comprising an underlay, embossing with different gloss levels and core grooves may be used individually, in combinations and in conventional tiles without a mechanical locking system.
It is an advantage to use a tongue comprising flexible protrusions protruding beyond the vertical plane when tiles are locked with a space S between upper edges. The tongue may be firmly fixed into the grove 9 since there are no parts that have to be displaced in the inner part of the groove 9 during locking. The tile edges are rigid and sufficient locking strength may be obtained even in the case when the protruding protrusions are spaced from each other.
The separate tongues and the strip part 6 may be used separately or in combination. A strip part 6 that only connect the edges horizontally may preferably be attached to the lower part of the edges a shown in
Theoretically tiles may be machined such that size tolerances are eliminated. Practically this is not a suitable method due to high costs and the fact that bevels or rounded edges will be damaged. Horizontal 9 and vertical 14 grooves cannot be formed with the upper edges as a reference surface since tolerance will be accumulated and larger areas comprising several tiles installed in several rows will not be possible to install.
The locking system must be designed such that each row is perfectly aligned and that the size tolerances of the tiles are compensated by variations of the space S between the edges. This is a major difference compared to laminate and wood floors that are machined to a perfect rectangular form and installed with a tight fit between the upper edges.
The problem may be solved with a positioning system that prior to the forming of the grooves align the tiles with a predetermined position of one long edge 4a and one short edge 4c. Such alignment may be made with cameras or with a positioning tool 50 as shown in
After positioning of the tile vertical and horizontal grooves are formed parallel with the first and second positioning surfaces and with a pre-defined distances D1, D2, D3, D4, D5, D6, D7. One of the edges, preferably one of the long edges 4a that has been positioned against the first positioning surface 51 comprises grooves 14a, 9a that are essentially parallel with the edge. At least one of the other edges may comprise horizontal or vertical grooves with an actual horizontal distance Ad3, Ad4 to the edge that varies along the edge, in case the edge is not parallel with a pre-defined geometry. Such distance may vary between the same edge of two different tiles, for example to the vertical groove 14a that is used to connect the strip part or to the adjacent vertical groove 14b that during locking is connected to the strip parts as shown in
The actual horizontal distances Ad3, Ad4, Ad5, Ad6 from the vertical plane VP and to the inner wall 20 of the horizontal groove 9 and to the first wall 24 of the vertical groove 14c varies along the edge 1. The figures show that even the lower lip 11 may be formed against a pre-determined position. This means that the actual horizontal distance Ad7, Ad8 between the outer part of the lower lip 11 and the upper edge or the vertical plane VP may vary along the edge.
Preferably the tiles according to the invention are characterized in that there is a first horizontal distance Ad7 between a first groove wall 24 of a first edge 1 of a first tile 1a and an upper and outer part of the first edge 1 of the first tile 1a,
The first horizontal distance may vary along the first edge 1 of the first tile 1a and/or the second horizontal distance may vary along the second edge 1′ of the second 1b tile. The third horizontal distance may vary along the first edge 1 of the second tile 1b. The fourth horizontal distance may vary along the second edge 1′ of the second tile 1b. The first horizontal distance may be different from third horizontal distance and/or the second horizontal distance may be different from the fourth horizontal distance.
The above-described method may be used to form floor panels as describes in
It is a major advantage if flexible grout material may be integrated with a tile edge and factory connected prior to installation. The grout material serves several purposes. It is used to compensate size tolerances, to prevent water to penetrate into the joint and to create decorative effects. Grout material may be attached to all four edges or only on one long and one short edge. The disadvantage is that an installation will comprise many joints between the grout materials.
Such an embodiment provides increase flexibility especially if the tiles 1a, 1b are connected with horizontal snapping as shown in
The locking system may be configured such that the horizontal locking force that prevents the edges to separate away from each other is stronger than the locking force that prevents the edges to be displaced towards each other. Displacement of the edges towards each other may be prevented by grout material applied in the space S.
All embodiments of the invention may be combined and used in combinations on different edges but also on the same edge.
A separate tongue 10a located between two strip parts 6 may for example be used to replace the second tongue 10b in
All horizontal and vertical grooves and all equalizing grooves may extend along the whole edge or may be formed on only a part of an edge preferable where the strip parts 6 are intended to be connected to an edge. Preferably rotating tools with jumping tool heads may be used to form grooves in a part of an edge.
1. A set of ceramic or stone tiles comprising a first tile (1a) provided with a first edge (1) and a second tile (1b) provided with a second edge (1′) wherein the tiles are provided with a locking system for locking the first edge (1) to the second edge (1′) in a horizontal direction parallel with a tile surface and in a vertical direction perpendicular to the horizontal direction, said locking system comprises a first and a second tongue (10a, 10b) and a strip part (6) provided with a first and a second locking element (8a, 8b), characterized in:
2. The set of embodiment 1 characterized in that the lower lip (11) of the first horizontal groove (9a) extends horizontally essentially to the upper and outer part of the first edge (1) and the lower lip (11) of the second horizontal groove (9b) extends horizontally essentially to the upper and outer part of the second edge (1′).
3. The set of embodiment 1 or 2, wherein a depth of the first horizontal groove (9a) measured as the horizontal distance from a vertical plane (VP), located at the upper and outer part of the first edge, and to a bottom of the first horizontal groove, varies along the first edge; or
4. The set of embodiment 3, wherein the depth of the horizontal groove varies with at least 0.10 mm.
5. The set of any one of the preceding embodiments 1-4, wherein the strip part (6) comprises a vertically extending tongue body (30), wherein the first tongue (10a) protrudes from the vertically extending tongue body (30).
6. The set of any one of the preceding embodiments 1-5, wherein the locking system is configured to be locked by angling and/or vertical snapping and/or horizontal snapping of the first (1) and the second tile (1′).
7. A set of ceramic or stone tiles (1a, 1b), each comprising a first (1) and a second (1′) edge which are provided with a locking system for locking in a horizontal direction parallel with a tile surface and in a vertical direction perpendicular to the horizontal direction,
8. The set of embodiment 7, wherein in a locked position of the first (1) and the second edge (1) there is a space (S) between the upper and outer parts of the first and second edge.
9. The set of embodiment 7 or 8, wherein each of the first and the second horizontal groove (9a, 9b) comprises an upper lip (12) and a lower lip (11), that the lower lip (11) of the first horizontal groove (9a) extends horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the first edge (1) and the lower lip (11) of the second horizontal groove (9b) extends horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the second edge (1′).
10. The set of embodiments 7-9, wherein the strip part (6) comprises a vertically extending tongue body (30), wherein the first tongue (10a) protrudes from the vertically extending tongue body (30).
11. The set of any one of the preceding embodiments 7-10, wherein the locking system is configured to be locked by angling and/or vertical snapping of the first and the second tile (1a, 1b).
12. Ceramic tiles (1a,1b) provided with an embossed surface and a décor, characterized in that the embossing is in register with the décor, that the embossing comprises upper (44a) and lower (44b) surface portions wherein an upper surface portion (44a) comprises a different gloss level than a lower surface portion (44b).
13. Ceramic tiles of embodiment 12, wherein the décor is a wood design and wherein the different gloss levels are formed by a digitally applied powder.
14. A set of floor panels comprising a first (1a) and a second (1b) panel comprising a ceramic surface layer (27) and a core (28) comprising thermoplastic material mixed with wood or mineral fillers, characterized in:
15. The set of embodiment 14, wherein in a locked position of the first (and the second edge (1,1′) there is a space S of about 1-10 mm between the ceramic surface layers.
16. A pre formed ceramic tile (1) intended to be provide with a locking system characterized in that a groove (21, 14) is formed at the rear side of a tile edge (1).
17. A pre formed ceramic tile (1a) tile of embodiment 16, wherein a first thickness (T′) of an outer edge of the pre formed ceramic tile is lower than a second average thickness (T) of the tile body of the pre formed ceramic tile.
18. A pre formed ceramic tile (1a) of embodiment 17, wherein the thickness difference between the first thickness (T′) and the second average thickness (T) is about 1-3 mm.
19. A pre formed ceramic tile (1,1′) of any one of the embodiments 16-18, wherein the groove is an equalizing groove (21) comprising an upper surface (21a) that is essentially parallel with an upper surface of the pre formed ceramic tile (1a), wherein the upper surface extends from the outer part of the edge and inwardly.
20. A pre formed ceramic tiles (1a) of embodiment 17-19, wherein the upper surface (21a) of the equalizing groove extends over a horizontal distance of about 3-20 mm.
21. A pre formed ceramic tiles (1,1′) of embodiment 17-20, wherein the rear side of the pre formed ceramic tile edge (1) comprises a vertical groove (14) spaced from the outer edge and an equalizing groove (21) extending from the vertical groove (14) and to the outer part of the edge.
22. A set comprising a first tile (1a), a second tile (1b) and a strip part (6), which preferably comprises a polymer or metal material, wherein said first and second tile (1a,1b) are ceramic or stone tiles, characterized in
23 The set of embodiment 22, wherein vertical (14a, 14b) and horizontal (9a, 9b) grooves are formed in the first edge (1) of the first tile (1a) and the second edge (1′) of the second tile (4b) and wherein the strip part is configured to be connected to the horizontal (9a, 9b) and vertical (14a,14b) groves formed in the first (1) edge of the first tile (1a) and in the second (1′) edge of the second tile (1b).
24. The set of embodiment 22 or 23, wherein the horizontal groove (9a, 9b) of the first edge (1) or the second edge (1′) comprises an upper lip (12) and a lower lip (11), and wherein the lower lip (11) extends horizontally to or is within an upper and outer part of the respective first (1) or second (1′) edge.
25. The set of any one of the embodiments 22-24, wherein the strip part (6) comprises a tongue (10a) having a vertically extending tongue body (30) located in the space (S).
26. The set of embodiment 25, wherein the tiles may be connected with vertical or horizontal snapping and wherein the tongue body (30) is displaced horizontally in the space (S) during locking.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1350856-9 | Jul 2013 | SE | national |
1400291-9 | Jun 2014 | SE | national |
The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/815,985, filed on Mar. 11, 2020, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/102,914, filed on Aug. 14, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,633,870, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/902,706, filed on Jan. 4, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,060,139, which is a U.S. national stage of International Application No. PCT/SE2014/050877, filed on Jul. 8, 2014, which claims the benefit of SE 1400291-9, filed on Jun. 10, 2014, and the benefit of SE 1350856-9, filed on Jul. 9, 2013. The entire contents of each of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/815,985, U.S. application Ser. No. 16/102,914, U.S. application Ser. No. 14/902,706, International Application No. PCT/SE2014/050877, SE 1400291-9, and SE 1350856-9 are hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230003035 A1 | Jan 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 16815985 | Mar 2020 | US |
Child | 17812281 | US | |
Parent | 16102914 | Aug 2018 | US |
Child | 16815985 | US | |
Parent | 14902706 | US | |
Child | 16102914 | US |