This invention relates to an oral care device such as a toothbrush and a method of manufacturing such a toothbrush.
Known from the prior art are various oral care devices which are constructed in particular as toothbrushes and have an electrically operable function element such as an LED emitting light. In some of these cases efforts are made to arrange the LED within the toothbrush head so that the electrically operable function element is fully encapsulated in the toothbrush plastic and hence no moisture-related problems are encountered.
Efforts to arrange the function element as near as possible to the teeth to be cleaned, however, can lead to handling problems during oral care.
It would thus be desirable to provide an oral care device which enables an arrangement of an electrically operable function element on the head as near as possible to the oral care site while providing safe and user-friendly handling.
Further, advantages, features and application possibilities of the present invention will become apparent from the subsequent description of embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings. It will be appreciated that any feature described and/or represented by illustration, when used singularly or in any meaningful combination, forms the subject-matter of the present invention, irrespective of their summary in the claims or their back-reference.
An oral care device that has a handle and a head connectible thereto on which oral care elements are provided. The head further includes an electrically operable function element being arranged on an outer surface of the head, and a ramp disposed adjacent the function element.
According to this embodiment, both the LED 8 and the head 1b (or 1) is made from a hard plastic material so that a slightly smaller dimensioning of the mounting hole 6 compared to the outer diameter of the LED 8 is suitable for the press fit. Alternatively, the LED 8 or the head may be formed at least partly from a soft plastic material such as TPE. The head material can be optionally transparent or translucent. The head may be sealingly closed from the rear with a cover 12 (see
The cover 12 has in the interior of the head 1 on a section facing the LED rear side a region 16 which is in direct contact with the LED rear side. This region may be constructed as a rod-shaped protrusion on the inner side of the cover 12. This may help prevent the LED 8 from being pressed into the interior of the head 1. Lateral shoulders on the side opposite the LED provide for its positive engagement with inner sections of the head so that said positive engagement also makes it impossible for the LED 8 to project out beyond the head.
Variants are possible for the construction of the ramp 5. For example, the ramp 5 may be injection-molded in one integral piece with the head 1. Alternatively, the ramp 5 may be manufactured in an additional injection molding step, adhesive-bonded, joined, welded or snap-fitted. The ramp 5 can be made from a hard or a soft plastic material.
As becomes further apparent from
By constructing a ramp directly adjacent to the function element it helps ensure that the function elements work as desired without otherwise disturbing the user. If the toothbrush exerts excessive pressure against the teeth, the tooth is thus able to slide over the ramp without this leading to any interference along the variously protruding teeth while they are being cleaned.
The support taken by oral care elements is particularly little if a free space is provided above the function element. In addition, the electrically operable function element may be arranged as near as possible to the teeth to be cleaned while at the same time the thickness of the head carrying the oral care elements is kept as small as possible, thus enabling an agreeable cleaning of the teeth even with a small space between the inside of the cheek and the outer surface of the tooth.
The function element may be arranged adjacent to and/or between the oral care elements. It is thus assured that the properties of the function element take effect in the immediate vicinity of the oral care elements. Alternatively, the function element may be arranged on a different outer side of the head on which no oral care elements are arranged.
The function element may be constructed as a light emitting source, in particular as an LED (light emitting diode), as a toothpaste conveyor, a sensor or an actuator for, for example, a sound or a movement or a vibration. The LED can be used, for example, as a supplier of energy for activating a substance in the toothpaste. Other energy-emitting function elements may also be contemplated. If the function element is constructed as a toothpaste conveyor, then particularly the toothpaste outlet is arranged adjacent to the ramp while the toothpaste conveying device is arranged as a rule inside the head or an adjacent region. If the function element is constructed as a sensor, then this can be, for example, a motion sensor which detects the 3D motion of the head by means of an inclination sensor, a speed sensor or an acceleration sensor. A contact force sensor may also be contemplated.
The oral care elements may be connected on a first-lower-level to the outer surface of the head or are tufted or injection-molded in the head. The function element extends to a second level which differs from the first level, in particular is raised relative to it. In this arrangement, the ramp is intended to bridge at least part of the difference in height between said first and said second level. Thus, no abrupt difference in height exists between the second level of the raised surface of the function element and the first level of the head.
The first and the second level may be bridged by a surface ascending or descending in an oblique or arched configuration. The oral care elements are arranged or fastened on a plane of the head and the ramp is constructed to ascend or descend in an oblique or arched configuration relative to said plane. If the oral care elements are not arranged on a uniformly flat plane, then the first lower level is the level from which the ramp begins to extend from a foot region in the direction of the bristle ends.
The function element may be arranged partly in the head and partly projecting therefrom. The ramp thus prevents a 90° angle from being formed between the outer surface of the head and the projection of the function element and bridges this region in direct adjacency to the function element by an oblique or arched or otherwise curved surface.
The ramp and the head may be injection-molded from the same plastic component. This affords particular ease of manufacture because an additional plastic component would add to the complexity of the production process. This single-component construction of the ramp relative to the head notwithstanding, other plastic components may be provided on the head or be injection-molded onto it. Alternatively, the ramp may be injection-molded from a different plastic component than the head.
The ramp may be constructed from a soft plastic material, in particular an elastomer such as TPE (thermoplastic elastomer), and the head from a hard plastic material, in particular PP or PE.
The ramp is arranged directly around the function element at least in a radial direction. Hence at least one ramp is arranged in one direction in direct contact with and adjacent to the function element. In one variant, provision is made for one ramp each in two opposing directions on either side of the function element. In another variant, one ramp is arranged around the function element radially in all directions, in which arrangement the ramp can be constructed in a variously oblique or arched configuration in the different radial directions. The place at which the ramp is provided depends directly on the intended movement for cleaning the teeth so that a ramp is provided adjacent to the function element according to the intended cleaning direction. The number of ramp geometries required around the function element can also be provided dependent on the geometry of the rest of the head. Given an outer surface of the head on which the oral care elements are arranged and which already represents at least two different levels, it suffices in one variant for only one ramp to be provided between these two height levels
The function element may be secured in the head by a press fit. The external diameter or the external geometry of the function element is therefore larger than its receiving opening provided in the head. An encapsulating solution against the ingress of liquid/moisture is thus obtained in simple manner. Other types of securing the function element in the head, for example injection-molding, welding, adhesive-bonding or snap-fitting, are likewise possible.
The oral care device may be constructed as a manual or electric toothbrush and/or the function element as an LED which is arranged in protruding fashion in the cleaning region. This protrusion formed by the function element in the outer surface of the head is thus filled or bridged by the ramp. An outer surface is considered to be the fastening level of the oral care elements, hence, for example, the tufting surface.
The oral care elements may be arranged on the head above and spaced from the function element, such that a free region devoid of oral care elements is provided above the function element—approximately on a height with the ends of the oral care elements. If the function element is constructed as an LED, then it is assured that, for example, a light cone with an opening angle of at least 5 to 30° illuminates the tooth and the toothpaste largely unobstructed by cleaning bristles or elastomer cleaning elements. If the function element is constructed as a toothpaste conveyor, then an unhindered supply of the toothpaste to the tooth should be available.
The function element and the ramp may be integrally made of one piece. In particular the function element and the ramp are formed of the same material. In one variant, the function element and the ramp form a prior assembled one-piece unit. In another variant, the ramp and the function element are manufactured separately, but as the result of being made from the same material they become one piece after being joined together.
A tangent applied to the oblique or curved or arched ramp forms an obtuse angle with the outer surface of between about 110° and about 170° . In an alternative variant, the obtuse angle lies between about 120° and about 150° . In this arrangement, the tangent in a sectional representation of the ramp is applied against said ramp, whereby in the case of an oblique-plane surface of the ramp the tangent has several points of contact with the ramp. This results conversely in a gradient angle for the ramp 5 which lies between about 10° and about 70°, or between about 30° and about 60°.
The toothbrush head may be manufactured using the following steps. The brush head 1 may be injection-molded with the ramp 5 and the rest of the head geometry being formed from a hard plastic component. The head 1 may be tufted with bristles by any suitable tufting method. In one embodiment, the anchor tufting method is selected. The bristle ends are cut to the proper length and end-rounded. The LED 8 is installed through the mounting hole 6, and the inner cavity in the head 7 is closed off by the cover 12. The cover 12 is caused to fuse with the surrounding material, for example, by laser welding, heated tool welding, ultrasonic welding or other thermal melting methods in order to obtain a sealing joint. Other closing methods such as snap-locking or adhesive-bonding are also possible.
In an alternative approach, a ramp may be inserted into the mounting hole 6 after the head is injection-molded and tufted. Alternatively, the ramp may be inserted after the injection-molding operation and then the head is tufted. In this case the ramp may be constructed from a different material than the head. Then the LED is inserted through the hole 6.
The brush head may be injection-molded together with the LED and the wiring and then equipped with bristles or other cleaning elements. Alternatively, the ramp and the remaining brush head 1 may be manufactured by a two-component or multi-component injection molding method. In such cases the ramp can be made from, for example, a soft plastic material and the head from a hard plastic material.
The dimensions and values disclosed herein are not to be understood as being strictly limited to the exact numerical values recited. Instead, unless otherwise specified, each such dimension is intended to mean both the recited value and a functionally equivalent range surrounding that value. For example, a dimension disclosed as “40 mm” is intended to mean “about 40 mm.”
Every document cited herein, including any cross referenced or related patent or application, is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety unless expressly excluded or otherwise limited. The citation of any document is not an admission that it is prior art with respect to any invention disclosed or claimed herein or that it alone, or in any combination with any other reference or references, teaches, suggests or discloses any such invention. Further, to the extent that any meaning or definition of a term in this document conflicts with any meaning or definition of the same term in a document incorporated by reference, the meaning or definition assigned to that term in this document shall govern.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it would be obvious to those skilled in the art that various other changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is therefore intended to cover in the appended claims all such changes and modifications that are within the scope of this invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 015 419.8 | Sep 2008 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation-in-part application of prior copending International Application No. PCT/US2009/053812, filed Sep. 1, 2009, designating the United States.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2009/053812 | Sep 2009 | US |
Child | 12849498 | US |