The present invention relates to manually held and operated toothbrushes having flexibly mounted bristles. A number of approaches have been taken in the prior art to provide flexibility to the bristles during use of a toothbrush. U.S. Pat. No. 5,970,564, for example, discloses a toothbrush having an elastomeric ridge wherein there is a center array of bristles and there is a side array of bristles mounted in elastomeric boots. A number of patents disclose a toothbrush head having sets of bristles, each of which is mounted to a non-rigid or elastic support element. Examples of these approaches are found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 1,770,195, 2,244,098, 6,161,245 and 6,311,360 and in French Patent No. 38440.
It would be desirable if a toothbrush could be provided having various cleaning elements such as bristles with different degrees of flexible mounting.
An object of this invention is to provide a toothbrush having the head separated into different cleaning areas which differ from each other in the flexible mounting of the cleaning elements.
A further object of this invention is to provide such a toothbrush wherein some of the cleaning areas have the cleaning elements mounted on a relatively fixed or non-movable base while other cleaning areas are mounted on a flexible or elastic pod.
A still further object of this invention is to provide techniques for improving the manufacturability of toothbrushes such as indicated above or toothbrushes having only flexibly mounted cleaning elements.
In accordance with this invention the toothbrush head is divided into a plurality of separate cleaning areas. These areas include at least one and preferably two areas wherein the cleaning elements are mounted to a base with other areas having the cleaning elements mounted to pods wherein the pods have a greater degree of movability than do the bases. The pods are resilient so that during use the cleaning elements could be moved from their initial position and then returned to the initial position.
The pods may be formed from a narrow or small diameter beam extending from the body of the toothbrush head to a cleaning element support pad. Preferably the small diameter beam is enclosed in elastic material.
In a preferred practice of the invention a relatively non-movable base is located at each of the distal and proximal ends of the toothbrush head with at least two elastic pods mounted between the two bases. These various cleaning areas are separated from each other by channels extending completely across the head in a transverse direction.
In accordance with a further aspect of this invention the pods are formed utilizing an IMT process where the bristles are introduced into the mold cavity into which a plastic material is injected. As the injected material cools off, it permanently traps the bristles to form a brush. In order to achieve functional flexibility and proper tuft retention, materials are used to create a pod of mushroom shape by forming a stem and a plate to which the bristles would be secured. The pods are interconnected at the stems to form a first subassembly for making the toothbrush. This subassembly may then be attached to the bulk of the toothbrush, which includes the remainder of the head and the handle, by being overmolded with an entire toothbrush handle during a second injection cycle. As a result, the entire handle could be formed at normal speeds because the IMT process is initially isolated to a smaller material shot size.
Mounted between the cleaning areas which incorporate bases 16 and 20 are a pair of pods 22,24. Each pod is provided with at least one and preferably a plurality of cleaning elements 26. As later described the pods 22,24 have a greater degree of movability than do the bases 16,20. In the preferred practice of the invention the pods 22,24 are resilient members so that the pod cleaning elements add a motion range beyond the cleaning elements 18 which are generally static or non-movable. Preferably, because the various cleaning elements are separated from each other such as by channels 28 which extend completely across head 14 in a transverse direction and because of the elastic nature of pods 22,24, the cleaning elements 26 are capable of 360 degrees rotation about the vertical axis of each individual pod. The angle of the bend is dictated by the ability of the material to bend.
Toothbrush 10 thus provides a head 14 wherein the front (distal end) and the back (proximal end) areas are in a relatively fixed position and wherein the cleaning elements, such as bristle strands, 18 do not have any extra degree of motion. The middle portion of head 14, however, has two areas of cleaning elements 26,26 which are capable of 360 degree rotation.
As best shown in
The desired flexibility or resiliency of the pods 22,24 is enhanced by enclosing the thin beams 32 in elastic material 36 which could be acquired during the multi-injection molding process. The elastic material 36 serves as a rubber band by returning the beams 32 to their original form or initial position. This return action creates an active motion in the opposite direction of the beam bend which aids in the cleaning of teeth by introducing extra brushing strokes.
As best shown in
Beam 32 could be of any suitable shape such as having a cross-section which is circular, square or any other geometric shape that provides a thin dimension or thin diameter to the beam to facilitate the bendability of the beam. The elastomer 36 may be considered as a continuous layer of any suitable thickness which covers the entire central area of head 14 as illustrated so that both pods 22,24 are incorporated as part of the same elastic material. The portion of the head 14 which includes pods 22,24 may be formed as a separate subassembly similar to the subassembly later described with respect to
Although the invention could be practiced with a single base and a single pod and could be practiced with the base having some, but a lesser degree of flexibility than the pod, the invention is preferably practiced wherein the base is generally static or non-movable. In addition, the invention is preferably practiced where there are a plurality of such bases and a plurality of pods. The drawings illustrate a preferred practice of the invention where there are a total of four separate cleaning areas with the pods being located in the central portion of head 14. The invention is also preferably practiced where the cleaning elements comprise a plurality of bristles or strands on each base and each pod.
As illustrated in
As shown in
Any suitable form of cleaning elements may be used as the cleaning elements 18 and 26 in the broad practice of this invention. The term “cleaning elements” is intended to be used in a generic sense which could include conventional fiber bristles or massage elements or other forms of cleaning elements such as elastomeric fingers or walls arranged in a circular cross-sectional shape or any type of desired shape including straight portions or sinusoidal portions. Where bristles are used, the bristles could be mounted to tuft blocks or sections by extending through suitable openings in the tuft blocks so that the base of the bristles is mounted within or below the tuft block.
Using different cleaning materials as cleaning elements of the toothbrushes may yield different effects. In an attempt to provide better stain removal a rubber-like material or elastomer can be used in combination with conventional bristles or used by itself to “brighten/whiten” the teeth.
It is to be understood that the specific illustration of the cleaning elements is merely for exemplary purposes. The invention can be practiced with various combinations of the same or different cleaning element configurations (such as stapled or in-molded technology bristles, etc.) and/or with the same bristle or cleaning element materials (such as nylon bristles, spiral bristles, rubber bristles, etc.) Similarly, while
To achieve a functional flexibility and proper tuft retention the portion of the bristle holding part or subassembly 23 which comprises the plates 34A, stems 38A and interconnecting support 25 is preferably a blend of polypropylene (PP) and soft TPE. Once the PP/TPE blend is combined with the bristles 26A the subassembly 23 is formed. In an initial independent IMT step the subassembly 23 is then overmolded with an entire toothbrush handle 12A and head 14A during a second injection cycle to form the completed toothbrush 10A shown in
Other IMT toothbrushes that have bristles attached to the bulk of the handle as known in the prior art are difficult to make because of the slow injection speed needed to fill the head of the toothbrush. The present invention permits the making of an entire handle at normal speeds by isolating the IMT process for making subassembly 23 to the smaller material shot size. Although a blend of PP/TPE is a preferred practice of this invention such blend is not required to make an IMT brush using the method of this invention. Similarly, the invention may be practiced using compatible materials to fuse the first and second shots so that the subassembly 23 created in one of the shots will be secured to the remainder of the toothbrush in the other shot. Thus, the two shots are mechanically trapped together to achieve essentially the same benefits as achieved by combining the subassembly 23 with the remainder of the toothbrush in a second injection cycle.
It is to be understood that the invention described in
As noted,
Although
This application is a continuation of application PCT/US 2003/024879, filed Aug. 8, 2003, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application 60/402,165 filed Aug. 9, 2002, both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050193512 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60402165 | Aug 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US03/24879 | Aug 2003 | US |
Child | 11053589 | US |