The invention relates to structural elements as well as sets of structural elements or respectively tiles with geometrically defined circumferences which will be in the following also referred to simply as “tiles”, as well as to surface patterns composed of such structural elements or respectively tiles. The invention also relates to applications of these sets of structural elements in tilings, puzzles, placement games, inlays, fabric patterns and jewelry.
Several sets of tiles with geometrically defined circumferences are known. Many of these sets of tiles can tessellate the plane. Some more recent ones have been described in Spektrum der Wissenschaft, January 2000, page 106 f. Such tile sets cover the plane either periodically or non-periodically.
Several puzzles use tile sets with geometrically defined structural elements, so the well-known Tangram or the pentagonal puzzle of U.S. Pat. No. 4,343,471. These geometrical tile sets of the puzzles comprise a number of different tiles.
The tile sets which cover the plane are generally limited with respect to the possible structures. Thus tilings from square or hexagonal tiles are only represented in a single periodic structure.
For puzzles but also for tilings or tessellations such as parquet or inlay structures tile sets would be of interest which allow a variety of different structures or patterns in periodic or non-periodical way, but are composed of only one or a very limited number of different types of tiles.
In accordance with the invention a set of structural elements or tiles with geometrical circumferences is provided as it is defined in the claims. All tiles of these sets, which can of course also be combined with other sets, consist of or derived from equilateral, irregular pentagons with the internal angles 36°, 108°, 108°, 36°, 252°. These equilateral pentagons will be referred to in the following also as “Ipenta(s)”. Sets of congruent Ipentas cover the plane in accordance with the invention in many different ways, in particular periodically, non-periodically, symmetrically and non-symmetrically. The tilings can among other possibilities have a decagonal base structure, a parallel gram structure as well as various spiraling structures.
Further objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the detailed description of preferred embodiments that follows, when considered together with the accompanying figures of drawing.
The invention will be described in the following in conjunction with the drawing illustrating embodiments.
a to 8h-2 show structural elements in accordance with the invention from modified Ipentas,
a to g show structural elements in accordance with the invention which are composed of two Ipentas,
h shows the structural elements of
a to b shows structural elements in accordance with the invention composed into a spirally tessellation,
a shows a tessellation from a group of structural elements in accordance with the invention,
b to c shows two complementary structural elements in accordance with the invention,
d shows a tessellation of structural elements in accordance with
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,343,471 in
In Scientific American 1977, page 110 ff. “Mathematical Games” Martin Gardner describes various tilings, among them the famous tiling by Roger Penrose. These tiles are not equilateral.
In all plane covering tilings using the groups of Ipentas or tiles derived from such Ipentas as described in the following, always an even number of four to ten of such Ipentas meet each other in each interstices or crossing point. Thus, each pattern can be represented by tiles of two different colors in such a way, that never two tiles of the same color will contact each other along a side of the pentagon. Thus a quasi checkerboard structure results.
The set or group of structural elements in accordance with the invention can in particular also contain modifications of the Ipentas as they will be described in more detail in the following.
The sets of structural elements in accordance with the invention can preferably be used in the following applications, which themselves represent embodiments or respectively further examples of the invention.
The sets of structural elements can be tile sets for the inside or the outside. With these sets floor areas, places and walls can be covered. Insofar these tiles can be made from traditional materials such as ceramic, marble, precious stones, plastic, metals or wood. The corners can be rounded, preferably with equal radius of curvature in the corners or with curvature sections of the smaller corner being repeated in the larger corners in a convex or respectively concave manner three times in a congruent fashion. Thereby the roundings in all patterns fit smoothly together.
The structural elements can be used for placement games, in particular for puzzles. These puzzles can be provided in a standard fashion with pictures which are to be placed. These placements or respectively puzzles in accordance with the invention preferably have a solid and set frame area, or they can be cut straight in order to provide e.g. a rectangular edge, whereby however edge pieces are generated which differ from the congruent puzzle pieces. In the embodiment of the placement game which has a solid fixed frame with a non-smooth internal edge the structure elements can be employed in a game in which two or more players alternate in placing the structural elements and e.g. the player wins who places the last structural element. Since the structural elements can be placed in the range inside of the edge not only in a completely space filling way, it is not a priori defined how many of such structural elements can be placed. This depends rather exclusively from how the structural elements are being placed. But alternating placement of a structural element or also of a plurality of those (e.g. determined by the number of a dice) interesting game variations can result. The placement game in accordance with the invention preferably have a larger number of structural elements, in particular more than nine and the structural elements consist all preferably in one or two sets of congruent structural elements as well as optionally in the above mentioned frame area.
In many of the known puzzles none of the elements geometrically fit onto the other, unless also the picture area fits together. In accordance with the puzzle of the invention all pieces match with all sides of the other pieces without the requirement that the picture areas also fit. This increases the difficulty of the puzzle.
In a particular embodiment of the puzzles or respectively placement games of the invention, the sides of the Ipentas or respectively the structures resulting from these Ipentas have been replaced by line sections which upon placement of the puzzle pieces will result in their hookup. For the Ipentas this can occur by replacing each of the five sides by one bulging line which bulges to the left and centrally symmetrically thereto to the right, whereby back cuts or respectively hookups become possible.
In accordance with the invention, the sets of the structural elements can be made from wood, stone, ceramic, glass, plastic, metal or precious stones and be formed into inlays. These structures can, in spite of their geometrical rigidity, formed into a variety of pictures by multiple kinds of positioning of the structural elements.
Most arrangements of the Ipentas can be described by a non-intersecting line sequence. When this line sequence is rounded out, the contact areas disappear and a continuous, generally singly connecting area results which can be for instance cut from veneer, in particular by means of a laser, and can be placed into a plate or section with the corresponding cutout. Such items, in particular on surfaces of furniture, are a further embodiment of the invention.
The set of structural elements can be composed into fabric patterns or respectively wallpaper patterns or similar items, in which the entire area is completely or substantially completely covered by Ipentas or respectively modified Ipentas, wherein the circumference however due to a randomization or respectively accidental distribution do not repeat. In this case, the preferred embodiment is made from a periodically repeating hexagonal subdivision of eight Ipentas, in which the Ipentas, however, can be statistically distributed differently from sub area to sub area, so that in spite of the periodicity of the edge of the sub group a statistically non-periodic arrangement of Ipentas results. For most observers the hexagonal structure of the sub areas thereby disappears.
A further embodiment of the invention are new structural elements or respectively tiles which are derived from the Ipentas. A first group of these structural elements results from the Ipentas by replacing each side of the Ipentas by a line track, a vector sequence or a curved section (in the following “curved section”), in which the distance between the end points is the same and for which at least one of these is non-straight. Preferably all five curved sections are equal, resulting in either one or two new modified Ipentas, which have five “main corners” which spread or define an Ipenta. If the curved sections are centrally symmetrical, then only one new structural element results. Otherwise two of these arise, depending upon whether the replacement of the five sides of the Ipenta by curve sections is done clockwise or counterclockwise.
Among the new structural elements those are particularly preferred, in which the curved sections have a centrally symmetrical S- or respectively Z-shape. Among these again those are particularly attractive for applications such as puzzles or other placement games, in which the curve sections cause a hooking or interlocking of the juxtaposed structural elements. The latter can be achieved by providing that at least two partial sections of the curve sections form an angle of more than 180° with each other. Preferably the curved sections neither intersect with themselves nor do they intersect the curved sections of the other sides of the Ipentas.
If the curved sections consist of two line elements forming an angle of 144° the two inventive structural elements with ten (
In the case of the structural elements which have five identical but not centrally symmetrical curved sections, two different structural elements result (e.g. the just described structural elements with ten or respectively six corners), wherein each tiling or complete covering of the plane or respectively with a plane section with these structural elements comprises approximately the same number of the two different structural elements.
The invention further provides new structural elements or respectively tiles which are also derived from Ipentas and have a circumference which results from placing at least two Ipentas along one or two sides juxtaposed with each other. Preferred are the structural elements from two so juxtaposidly positioned Ipentas, whereby seven different (not counting mirror reversing) structural elements result, six of those having eight and one of those having six sides of equal length. Three of the structural elements can tile the plane periodically or non-periodically, wherein only the line symmetrical structural element allows the tiling with this single structural element. The others form structural elements which can tile the claim only together with the structural element which is mirror symmetrical to them. These three structural elements with eight and one with six sides are the preferred ones in this group. Also with these structural elements each side can be replaced by a curved section. Thereby again one or two groups of structural elements result which can in the case of a tessellation or tiling e.g. be interlocked with each other.
In
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Non-periodical tessellations from the structural elements in accordance with
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Placement games based on the above tessellation preferably in addition have a surrounding edge 20 (
In a further embodiment the placement game in accordance with the invention, which is particularly useful on trips, the structural elements are limited by magnetic forces in their movement. Also the structural elements with back cuts which define the juxtaposition and ensure against shifts are useful for this purpose.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 21 607 | May 2000 | DE | national |
The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/275,159, filed Nov. 4, 2002, which is a national stage application of International Application PCT/EP01/05058, filed May 4, 2001, which claims the right of priority based German Patent Application No. 100 21 607.2, filed May 4, 2000, which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070069463 A1 | Mar 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10275159 | US | |
Child | 11605318 | US |