Modular floor tiles may be laid across the surfaces of garage floors, sports surfaces, outdoor surfaces and other substrates. Occasionally the floor tiles are installed in areas in which they are exposed to variations in temperature such as direct sunlight or heating and air-conditioning ducts. These temperature variations may cause the floor tiles to expand or contract. Some of the tiles may be exposed to these heating or cooling effects while others may not, leading to differential thermal expansion or contraction. In instances where the floor is installed in such a manner that it is not allowed to float or if heavy objects are placed on the floor which consequently inhibit float, the temperature variations may cause buckling or separation between the tiles.
Thus a need exists for an expansion joint that attaches to the tiles and integrates with the flooring application and accommodates floor tile expansion and contraction due to temperature fluctuations.
According to one aspect of the invention, an expansion joint is molded from thermoplastic material. The expansion joint is separable into a first and second expansion body. The first expansion body has a web with a general upper surface and a general lower surface. A plurality of edge surfaces extend from the general upper surface to the general lower surface. An outer edge surface with at least one connector is disposed on the first expansion body.
The second expansion body also has a web with a general upper and lower surface. An outer edge surface is one of the plurality of edge surfaces which extend from the general upper surface to the general lower surface. A connector is formed on the outer edge surface of the second expansion body. The connectors on the first and second expansion bodies allow the expansion joint to be connected to modular floor tiles or other expansion joints.
At least two spaced apart fingers project from the general lower surface of the first web in alignment with a direction of expansion and contraction and at least one spaced apart finger projects from the general lower surface of the second web, also in alignment with a direction of expansion and contraction. The fingers are positioned such that the second finger is slidably received into the channel defined by the first fingers.
According to another aspect of the invention, a flooring system includes plural modular floor tiles and at least one expansion joint for creating a flooring surface. Each modular floor tile has a first edge surface that has at least one first connector, and a second edge surface that has each one second connector. The modular floor tile is affixed to an adjoining modular floor tile by fastening the first connector of one tile to the second connector of the adjoining tile.
The expansion joint has first and second expansion bodies. An outer edge surface of the first expansion body includes at least one first connector that fastens to a second connector of an adjoining, first modular floor tile. The first expansion body has at least two first fingers, spaced apart from each other by at least one first channel. The first fingers are disposed below a general lower surface of a web of the first expansion body, as is the first channel. The first fingers extend beyond a first inner margin of the first expansion body, in a first direction which is aligned with a predetermined direction of expansion and contraction. Sides of the first fingers are in alignment with the predetermined direction of expansion and contraction and partially form sidewalls of the first channel.
The second expansion body has an outer edge surface with at least one second connector. The second expansion body is affixed to an adjoining, second modular floor tile by fastening its second connector to a first connector of the second modular tile. The second expansion body has at least one second finger, flanked by at least two second channels, all of which are disposed beneath a general lower surface of a web of the second expansion body. The second finger extends, in a second direction opposite the first direction, beyond an inner margin of the second expansion body. Sides of the second finger are in alignment with the predetermined direction of expansion and contraction, and form portions of sidewalls of the adjoining second channels. The first fingers will advance into and out of the second channels, and the second finger will advance into and out of the first channel, as a function of the temperature of the first and second modular tiles.
In one embodiment, each of the expansion bodies has multiple fingers interdigitated with multiple channels. In one embodiment, the modular floor tiles each have plural spaced-apart first connectors and plural spaced-apart second connectors. In this last embodiment, the first expansion body will have plural spaced-part first connectors along its outer edge surface, while the second expansion body will have plural spaced-apart second connectors along its outer edge surface.
A flooring system according to the present invention is capable of accommodating a large amount of thermal expansion and contraction of the modular tiles without separating or buckling. The present invention also permits differential expansion and contraction, in the instance where some of the modular floor tiles are at a higher temperature than others. Disposing expansion joints both longitudinally and transversely permits the accommodation of thermal expansion and contraction along each of several directions.
Further aspects of the invention and their advantages can be discerned in the following detailed description, in which like characters denote like parts and in which:
The present invention provides an expansion joint for use in creating a floor surface of modular floor tiles where the floor surface expands and contracts, if necessary, in response to thermal variations between the tiles. The expansion and contraction of the expansion joint allows the floor surface to accommodate uneven temperature shifts across the floor thereby preventing buckling or separation. In the illustrated embodiment shown in
As shown in
The second expansion body 202b also has a web 204b, and at least one finger 206; the illustrated embodiment shows eight such fingers 206. The web 204b has a general upper surface 208b and a general lower surface 210b and an inner margin 216b. The inner margin 216b of the second expansion body is preferably also curved in a vertical direction. In further embodiments the curvature may be different than the curvature shown in
Also shown in
As shown on
Each channel 228 is sized to receive a finger 206 from the opposing expansion body 202a or 202b. The width of each channel 228 may be slightly greater than the width of each finger 206. Support members 240 and 242 downwardly depend from the general lower surface 210a or 210b of the web 204a or 204b and terminate on a bottom plane which is in general alignment with a bottom surface 234 of the fingers 206. The support members 240, 242 are proximate to edges 220 and 222. In the illustrated embodiment, the support members 240 and 242 downwardly depend from the lower surface of the web 210b to a height that is approximately equivalent to the height of the ribs 230. The placement of the support members 240, 242 may be partially determined by the placement of the connectors 212, 214. The support members 240 and 242 provide additional support, strength and stability to the expansion joint 100.
As seen in the illustrated embodiment in
In the illustrated embodiment each finger 206 is identical in shape and size. In addition, in this embodiment, adjacent fingers 206 on each respective expansion body 202a, 202b are equidistant from each other. The width of each channel 228 is generally equivalent (or slightly greater than) to the width of an individual finger 206. In further embodiments the fingers 206 on the first expansion body 202a may be of varying widths and/or spacing as compared to the fingers of the second expansion body 202b. The sizing and spacing of the fingers 206 may vary provided the fingers 206 of the first expansion body 202a are accepted into the channels of the second expansion body 202b.
Both inner margins 216a and 216b curve downwardly toward the respective fingers 206 to help prevent cracking, sheer stresses and to promote ease of wheels or rollers rolling across the upper surface. In addition, the curved margins 216a and 216b help prevent debris buildup in the gap between the two expansion bodies 202a, 202b. The shallow faces on the inner margins 216a, 216b are easier to clean ensuring contraction will not be inhibited. The inner margin 216b partially overlaps the general top surface 236 of the finger 206. As illustrated in
The illustrated embodiment of
The illustrated embodiment of
The post 226 is shown in greater detail in
In the embodiment shown in
When multiple expansion joints 100 are used across a large floor area, the individual expansion joints 100 may expand or contract by different amounts. For example, if part of a floor tile application is in the sun while the opposed portion is under a cold air vent, the expansion joints in the sun may experience contraction as the tiles around them expand, while the expansion joints in the cold air may experience expansion as the tiles around them shrink. Thus, the floor of tiles may experience an expansion as shown in
The expansion joints 100 are positioned in between modular floor tiles 102 which are molded of at least a first polymer; in further embodiments floor tiles may be molded of a first and second polymer. The floor tiles have bodies with horizontal, substantially planar webs with upper and lower surfaces. The floor tiles each have a first and second edge surface and connectors disposed on the edge surfaces of the tiles. The floor tile connectors mate with the connectors on the expansion joint; in some embodiments the connectors may be mating latch and loop connectors.
As discussed above, certain installations may have expansion joints installed at an angle to one another, preferably a right angle. In these cases a filler piece 902 is used at the intersection of the bidirectional expansion joints as illustrated in
In addition, in some applications, the modular floor tiles are connected to “border” pieces 106 that are placed around the outer-most tiles of the application. In these instances, an expansion joint border piece 104 may be used to join the tile borders 106 and provide a continuous outer edge. As shown in
In summary, a flooring system has been shown and described which uses interdigitated expansion joints to accommodate the thermal expansion and contraction of the modular floor tiles making up the flooring system. While embodiments of the present invention have been described and illustrated in the appended drawings, the present invention is not limited thereto but only by the scope and spirit of the appended claims.
This application is a division of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/940,468 filed Jul. 12, 2013, owned by the assignee hereof. The specification and drawings of the foregoing application are entirely incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13940468 | Jul 2013 | US |
Child | 14606144 | US |