The present invention relates to the field of garments adapted to protect a wearer's body from impacts associated with contacts sports and/or military/police activities.
Protective garments for sports, military and police uses have evolved in the direction of becoming lighter, stronger, more mobile, and more wearable. Optionally, the structures comprising such protective garments should be capable of deflecting impact forces, damping their impact, dissipating such forces, absorbing them, and blocking penetration through to the wearer's body.
The principal problem to be solved in designing such garments is that diverse materials need to be utilized in connection with the foregoing capabilities. The task of integrating such diverse materials into a composite structure requires consideration of their interaction, which should be synergistic, such that the resultant protective effect is greater than the sum of each material's isolated contribution.
The present invention comprises a multi-layer composite garment, which is conformable to the contours of the body parts for which protection is required. In one embodiment, the garment is designed for impacts associated with contact sports, such as football, hockey and lacrosse. In another embodiment, the garment is designed for military/police applications, in which impacts can be blunt forces, from weapons such as clubs, or penetrative forces, from knives, bullets or shrapnel.
In both embodiments, the present invention deploys structures comprising one or more outer arrays of multiple rigid, impact-deflecting plates, one or more impact-dissipating middle layers containing a viscoelastic polymeric gel, and one or more impact-damping microlattice lower layers.
In the sports embodiments, the outer shock-deflecting layer of each garment is a panel or shell composed of a rigid, light-weight, impact-resistant polymer, polymer blend or ceramic material. The outer layer is sized and contoured to match the body part(s) over which it will be worn. Such sizing and contouring can be done generically according to ranges of different body types, e.g., large men's size, medium men's size, small woman's size, etc.
Alternately, the outer layer can be tailored to the body shape, size and contours of specific individual wearer's body. Such tailoring can be done by three-dimensional (3D) optical scanning of the covered body part(s) of the individual and use of the 3D optical scanning data in a 3D printer to produce the corresponding panel/shell structure. This 3D optical scanning-printing methodology can also be used to generate partial “exoskeleton” structures, such as breast-plates or sleeves.
Over joints, such as shoulders, elbows, spine and knees, the outer impact-deflecting plates comprise overlapping, articulated convex shaped shells, which are interchangeably attachable to multiple plate sockets that are interconnected by a semi-rigid rail connector. The plate sockets are pivotally attached to the rail connector, such that each of the plate sockets can independently pivot about a pivot axis which is transverse to the longitudinal axis of the rail connector. The plate sockets are configured to allow replacement of any of the deflecting plates, so that interchangeable sets of deflecting plates can be deployed to accommodate different degrees of impact and/or different requirements for flexibility and mobility. For example, a protective garment for football players can have interchangeable sets of deflecting plates—one set of larger, denser, heavier plates for linemen, and another set of smaller, less dense, lighter plates for backs and receivers.
In the military/police embodiments, the structures of the outer shock-deflecting layer can be the same as those outlined above for the sports embodiments, but they will be composed of a ballistic and puncture resistant material, such as reinforced plastic, reinforced carbon fiber, graphene, titanium metal or aramid fibers.
In both sports and military/police embodiments, the lower layers of the impact resistant structures according to the present invention comprise deformable, polymer-based microlattice impact-damping layers below viscoelastic polymeric gel impact-dissipating layers. The microlattice material preferably comprises a three-dimensional interconnected network of hollow nanotubes preferably having tube diameters less than 1 mm, the stress buckling of which damps impact forces.
Above the microlattice impact-damping layers, multiple intermediate layers of viscoelastic polymeric gel are distributed above areas of the body particularly exposed or vulnerable to impacts. Optionally, pockets can be provided in the protective garment above selected portions of the microlattice layers, so that gel packets can be removably inserted as needed, depending on the level of protection required by the wearer. For a football lineman's garment, for example, additional gel packets can be used in areas such as shoulders and spine. For police and military garments, denser and/or thicker gel layers can be used to dissipate ballistic impacts.
The dissipative viscoelastic polymeric gel layers redirect the kinetic energy of an impact outward along a horizontal plane rather than allowing the impact force to penetrate through the gel layer. Commercial gel products such as DivGel® or SHOCKtec® Gel can be used, as can the gel compositions described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,461,237 and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2008/0026658, both of which disclosures are incorporated herein by reference.
As discussed above, the multi-layered composite impact resistant structures of the present invention can be configured as partial exoskeleton panels, which can in turn be removably interconnected to form a complete exoskeleton body armor for the upper torso, arms, lower torso, legs or a combination of some or all of these.
The foregoing summarizes the general design features of the present invention. In the following sections, specific embodiments of the present invention will be described in some detail. These specific embodiments are intended to demonstrate the feasibility of implementing the present invention in accordance with the general design features discussed above. Therefore, the detailed descriptions of these embodiments are offered for illustrative and exemplary purposes only, and they are not intended to limit the scope either of the foregoing summary description or of the claims which follow.
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The material composing the rigid, impact-deflecting outer layer 11 of the exemplary garment structure 10 can be varied, depending on the application. In sports uses, it is preferably made of a rigid, light-weight, impact-resistant plastic or ceramic material, while in military/police uses, it is preferably composed of a ballistic and puncture resistant material, such as reinforced plastic, titanium metal or aramid fibers.
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Although the preferred embodiment of the present invention has been disclosed for illustrative purposes, those skilled in the art will appreciate that many additions, modifications and substitutions are possible, without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention as defined by the accompanying claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/726,797, filed Oct. 6, 2017, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. The present invention is also related to this inventor's U.S. Pat. No. 9,067,122 B2, “Protective Athletic Garment and Method,” which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15726797 | Oct 2017 | US |
Child | 16110896 | US |