Not Applicable
Not Applicable
1. Field of Invention
This invention pertains to a tufted air mattress formed of three congruent thermoplastic sheets with two of the sheets printed with a fluoropolymer containing ink before being heat sealed. More particularly, this invention pertains to a therapy system including the tufted air mattress, which includes two chambers for containing air, that is inflated from an air supply passing through an alternating air supply valve, which inflates each chamber individually and sequentially in an alternating manner, while deflating the other chamber.
2. Description of the Related Art
Inflatable thermal mattresses are often used in medical environments to support patients and to provide thermal conditioning to patients. For patients who are bedridden or who are immobilized for long periods of time, the prevention of skin rashes and bed sores caused by pressure applied by the mattress to the patient is a concern.
Many diverse air mattresses are known in the art. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,347,633, titled “Patient treating mattress,” issued to Gammons, et al., on Sep. 7, 1982, and U.S. Pat. No. 4,472,847, with the same title and issued to Gammons, et al., on Sep. 25, 1984, disclose crawl resistant flexible mattresses formed of panels sealed together. Both patents disclose mattresses with inflatable passages and a top surface with vent holes for exhausting conditioned air to ventilate the patient. The mattresses are formed of panels sealed together, and either one or both of the panels can be preformed by vacuum or pressure molding. The patents disclose heat sealing the top and bottom panels through a fusion process, but does not provide additional details on the fusion process.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,149,541, titled “Fluid circulating pad,” issued to Gammons, et al., on Apr. 17, 1979, discloses a flexible pad with interconnecting waffle-grid patterned passages. The pad is formed of a pair of flexible thermoplastic panels sealed together about a peripheral seal. The patent does not provide any details regarding how the seals are formed.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,102,936, titled Inflatable thermal pad with drainage,” issued to Augustine, et al., on Aug. 15, 2000, discloses an inflatable convective thermal pad for use under a patient. The pad is formed of two layers joined and sealed at their periphery and at various other points. The patent discloses ultrasonic welding as one technique that may be used to form a seal between the layers. The patent also discloses alternative techniques of RF sealing or heat sealing, without providing any details as to how these techniques are applied to form the thermal pad.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,653,083, titled “Bed pad,” issued to Lapidus on Apr. 4, 1972, discloses an aerated bed pad that has a variable flexing motion. In one embodiment, the pad includes a tubular member that alternately inflates and deflates, and the tubular member is interlaced with resilient strips that provide a floor on deflation. In another embodiment, the pad includes two interlaced tubular members that are alternately inflated and deflated. The pad if formed of two sheets of relatively think plastic, such as vinyl plastic, that are vacuum formed and heat sealed. Although the patent discloses heat sealing as the technique for forming a seal between the two sheets, it does not provide any details as to how heat sealing is applied to the sheets to form the pad.
Various techniques of forming inflatable mattresses and pads are used. One such technique is to glue or apply an adhesive or solvent between the two sheets of material forming the mattress. Another technique is to ultrasonically weld the two materials to form a seal.
Still another technique is to heat seal. Heat sealing involves applying heat to the area where the seal is desired. One method of applying heat to selected areas is by using a heated die with a raised pattern corresponding to the areas to be sealed. For mattresses, which are large, this method is cumbersome because it requires a heated die the size of the mattress. A similar method is by ultrasonic welding of selected areas.
Another method is to place a third sheet of incompatible material between the two sheets before applying heat to the three sheets. The third sheet is sized and has openings arranged so as to allow the two thermoplastic sheets to fuse while preventing the two sheets fusing where the third sheet is interposed. While this method allows the use of heated roller to heat seal, it also requires the use and handling of a third sheet, which increases the production costs.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,022,109. titled “Inflatable bladder,” issued to Pekar on Jun. 11, 1991, discloses a variation on ultrasonic welding in which three layers of sheets form the mattress, but only two sheets are welded together at any one spot. Heat energy, such as by ultrasonic welding, is applied to the sheets in specific areas in order to form seals. Barrier coatings, or coated bands, are applied in alternating strips on both sides of the middle sheet. The barrier coatings allow one outside sheet and the middle sheet to be sealed on one side of the middle sheet and the coating prevents the other outside sheet from sealing to the middle sheet at the same location. The barrier coatings act as a prophylactic by preventing the heat energy applied to specific areas of the sheets from welding, or fusing, two of the sheets together.
It is an objective of the present invention to provide an economical way of fabricating a tufted air mattress by heat sealing with heat applied to the full surface of the mattress, as opposed to localized, or spot, welding.
It is another objective of the present invention to provide areas on a thermoplastic sheet defining a connection between adjacent sheets when heat is applied to the full area of the mattress or bladder.
It is still another objective of the present invention to provide two isolated chambers that are inflated and deflated in an alternating manner.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a tufted air mattress is provided. The air mattress includes at least two sheets joined together in selected areas, which form a connection between the adjacent sheets. The sheets of the air mattress are a thermoplastic material. An outer sheet is printed with a special ink that inhibits heat welding of the printed sheet with an adjacent sheet. The ink is applied with a specified pattern consisting of inked, or coated, areas and un-inked, or uncoated areas. The uncoated areas define a connection between adjacent sheets. In one embodiment the ink includes a fluoropolymer, for example, Teflon. The ink adheres to the thermoplastic sheet, and the fluoropolymer inhibits forming a welded connection when it is positioned between two sheets of thermoplastic material that are heated.
The printed sheet and a second sheet are heat sealed such that the uncoated areas of the printed sheet are heat welded to the second sheet and the coated areas are not heat welded to the second sheet. When the air mattress is inflated, the sheets of the air mattress adjacent the coated areas are pushed apart by the air pressure inflating the air mattress, thereby forming a volume inside the air mattress bounded by the two sheets and the connection of the two sheets joined together at an uncoated peripheral area. The coated areas also act as a lubricant to aid in the separation of the two sheets when the air mattress is inflated.
In one such embodiment, the printed sheet is printed with an uncoated area around the periphery of the sheet and with a plurality of small rounded uncoated areas. With the two sheets heat sealed to form an air mattress, the air mattress inflates to form a tufted mattress with tucks where the small rounded uncoated areas join the two sheets and the area surrounding the uncoated areas pillow-shaped.
One embodiment of such an air mattress includes three sandwiched sheets with the two outside sheets having their inside surfaces printed with the ink. The small rounded uncoated areas on the two outside sheets are positioned with an alternating pattern such that when the air mattress is inflated, the mattress exerts a relatively constant pressure against an object resting on the mattress. This embodiment of the air mattress has two separate air chambers defined by the mattress: an upper chamber and a lower chamber. An air supply provides pressurized air to each chamber in an alternating manner. That is, the upper chamber of the air mattress is inflated for a period of time and then the air supply is diverted to the lower chamber of the air mattress, which is inflated for another period of time. The chamber that is not being inflated currently is having its air exhausted at a slow rate. This cycle repeats continuously, thereby reducing the likelihood of a user of the air mattress from getting bedsores and encouraging blood circulation of the user.
An alternating air supply valve that repetitively switches the air supply to the two chambers is disclosed. In one embodiment, the alternating air supply valve includes two solenoid operated three-way air valves operated by a controller that selectively actuates each solenoid operated valve. Another embodiment of the alternating air supply valve includes a rotating member with a central orifice and another orifice on the rotating surface that periodically aligns with each of a pair of ports when the rotating member rotates within a housing. Yet another embodiment includes a disk-shaped rotating member with a through-opening that rotates past each of a pair of ports, thereby allowing air to flow through each of the ports in an alternating manner.
The above-mentioned features of the invention will become more clearly understood from the following detailed description of the invention read together with the drawings in which:
A tufted air mattress, generally shown as 102 in the figures, is disclosed.
Two air supply hoses 104-A, 104-B connect the air mattress 102 to an alternating air supply valve assembly 106, which is, in turn, connected to a pump 108, which supplies air. The air supply hoses 104 each connect to one of a pair of separate air volumes 306-A, 306-B in the mattress 102 through corresponding inlet ports. The alternating air supply valve 106 receives a supply of input air and switches that supply of input air to each of the hoses 104-A, 104-B one at a time and sequentially. That is, the valve 106 allows air to flow through one hose 104-A to inflate one volume in the mattress 102 for a period of time, then the valve 106 switches the air flow to the other hose 104-B to inflate the other volume in the mattress 102 for a period. The valve 106 switches the air flow continuously. In some cases, it has been found to be beneficial to patients to alternate the inflation of the two volumes approximately every twenty seconds.
In another embodiment, the two volumes in the mattress are not isolated but are connected such that the air flowing from one hose 104-A enters the mattress 102 and flows through first one volume and then through the other volume before exiting through the other hose 104-B. In such an embodiment, the switching valve 106 is not used and the two hoses 104 are connected to a recirculation pump 108.
In the illustrated embodiment, the upper sheet 202-U is a mirror image of the lower sheet 202-L. The two sheets 202 include a coated area 214 that defines an uncoated periphery 212 and multiple uncoated spots 208 within the uncoated periphery 212. The sheets 202-U, 202-L are printed with an ink to create the coated area 214. The printed pattern is such that the uncoated periphery 212 and the multiple uncoated spots 208 have no ink on the inside surface of the sheet 202. In one embodiment, the uncoated spots 208 on the outer sheets 202 are arranged in a cross-hatched pattern. A cross-hatched pattern is one where the uncoated spots 208 are positioned at the intersections of a group of parallel lines crossing a perpendicular group of parallel lines. In such an embodiment, although the spots 208 are arranged in a cross-hatched pattern, the spots 208 are not line segments.
The ink has the characteristic of inhibiting welding of the sheets 202 to the center sheet 204 when the sheets 202, 204 are heat sealed. When heat is applied to the full surface, such as by a heated roller, the three sheets 202, 204 are joined (connected) at the areas 212, 208 where there is no ink, thereby forming the mattress 102 as illustrated in
In one embodiment, the ink includes a fluoropolymer, for example, Teflon. The fluoropolymer gives the ink the characteristics of inhibiting heat sealing and lubrication in the coated areas 214. In various tests, inks containing silicon were found to be undesirable because the silicon containing ink was determined to bleed and spread when applied to coated areas 214 defining small uncoated areas 208. Therefore, the silicon containing ink was found to have an undesirable affect on the areas 212, 208 desired to be uncoated. Fluoropolymer containing inks minimize the bleeding and spreading of the ink during printing of the ink on the sheet 202. The sheets 202 are printed with the ink to form the coated areas 214, in one embodiment, by a flexographic printing process in which the sheets 202 are printed as a web. In other embodiments, the sheets 202 are screen printed to form the coated areas 214.
In the illustrated embodiment, the center sheet 204 does not have any ink printed on it such as to form a coated area 214. In one embodiment, the air supply hoses 104 are attached to the mattress 102 by placing the end of one hose 104-A between the upper sheet 202-U and the center sheet 204 such that the very end of the hose 104-A falls within the coated area 214. The other hose 104-B is similarly placed between the lower sheet 202-L and the center sheet 204. When the sheets 202, 204 are heat sealed, the uncoated periphery 212 fuses to the hose 104 where the hose 104 contacts the sheets 202, 204, thereby forming a seal around the hoses 104.
The mattress 102 formed by the sheets 202, 204 is heat sealed by applying heat to the sheets 202, 204 when the sheets 202, 204 are aligned and in physical contact with each other. In one embodiment, the mattress 102 is heat sealed by applying a flat heated surface to the sheets 202, 204, which are supported on a flat surface. In another embodiment, the mattress 103 is heat sealed by a heated roller contacting the sheets 202, 204. Accordingly, one method of manufacturing the tufted air mattress 102 is to coat one surface of the upper sheet 202-U, coat one surface of the lower sheet 202-L, position a center sheet 204 between the coated areas 212 of the upper and lower sheets 202, and apply heat across the full width and full length of the mattress 102, such as with a heated roller. The uncoated areas 208, 212 will be heat fused and the coated areas 214 will inhibit heat fusing in those areas. In various embodiments, such a method includes installing ports to the two chambers 306-A, 306-B, attaching an air supply including a pump 108 and an alternating valve assembly 106.
The upper tufts 112-A form a regular pattern that is not aligned with the lower tufts 112-B, which also form a regular pattern. The offset of the tufts 112-A, 112-B is also visible in
In another embodiment, the valves 502 are not three-port valves, but only control the flow of air to the mattress 102. In such an embodiment, the air exhausts from the mattress 102 in some manner other than through the supply hoses 104. One such embodiment includes perforations, openings, or a sheet 202-U that is permeable to air, thereby providing air to the immediate environment of the mattress 102.
The rotating orifice 604 has a cylindrical body that fits inside the hollow portion of the cylindrical valve body 602. The end of the rotating orifice 604 opposite the inlet port 506 is closed with a shaft 610 protruding along the longitudinal axis of the rotating orifice 604. On the cylindrical portion of the rotating orifice 604 is an orifice 606 that connects the hollow inside volume of the rotating orifice 604 with the outside of the rotating orifice 604 at a position that aligns with the outlet ports 104-A, 104-B on the valve body 602 when the rotating orifice 604 is fully engaged in the valve body 602. In one embodiment, the orifice 606 extends no more than 180 degrees or half-way round the circumference of the rotating orifice 606 so as to form a fluid path between the inlet port 506 and only one of the outlet ports 104.
The plug 608 fits into the end of the hollow valve body 602 and seals the rotating orifice 604 inside the valve body 602. The plug 608 includes a through-opening 612 that allows the shaft 610 of the rotating orifice 604 to pass through. With the alternating air supply valve 106-B assembled, the shaft 610 protrudes past the outside surface of the plug 608 and is connected to a rotary drive motor that rotates 614 the rotating orifice 604 relative to the valve body 602. The rotation 614 of the rotating orifice 604 alternatingly creates a flow path between the inlet port 506 and one or the other of the outlet ports 104. With the rotating orifice 604 rotating 614 at a specified speed, the period of air flow through each outlet port 104 is controlled.
In one embodiment, two alternating air supply valves 106-B have the air supply hoses 104-A, 104-B connected in parallel and having the port 506 of one valve 106-B connected to the pump 108 and the port 506 of the other valve 106-B exhausting to the atmosphere whereby one chamber 306-A, 306-A is inflated by one valve 106-B and the other chamber 306-B, 306-A is deflated by the other valve 106-B, sequentially. In one such embodiment, the exhaust port 506 discharges through a restrictor or orifice 510. The shafts 610 of the two valves 106-B rotate in tandem such that the orifice 606 in one valve 106-B is aligned with one hose 104-A, 104-B when the orifice 606 in the other valve 106-B is aligned with the other hose 104-B, 104-A.
The valve body 702 is a short hollow cylinder with two outlet ports 104-A, 104-B located on the closed end of the valve body 702 away from the longitudinal axis of the valve body 702.
The rotating orifice plate 704 is a disk with a shaft 710 perpendicular to and in the center of the plate 704. The rotating orifice plate 704 has an orifice 706 positioned radially away from the center of the plate 704 such that the orifice 706 is positioned adjacent each one of the outlet ports 104-A, 104-B sequentially as the rotating orifice plate 704 rotates 716 inside the valve body 702. The orifice 706 subtends an arc no more than 180 degrees or half-way around the plate 704.
The end plate 708 seals the hollow cavity in the valve body 702 and creates a plenum between the inside surface of the end plate 708 and the rotating orifice plate 704. The end plate 708 includes an inlet port 506 that supplies air to the plenum. The end plate 708 also includes a through-opening 712 that allows the shaft 710 of the rotating orifice plate 704 to pass through.
With the alternating air supply valve 106-C assembled, the shaft 710 protrudes past the outside surface of the end plate 708 and is connected to a rotary drive motor that rotates 716 the rotating orifice plate 704 relative to the valve body 702. The rotation 716 of the rotating orifice plate 704 alternatingly creates a flow path between the inlet port 506 and one or the other of the outlet ports 104. With the rotating orifice plate 704 rotating 716 at a specified speed, the period of air flow through each outlet port 104 is controlled.
In one embodiment, two alternating air supply valves 106-C have the air supply hoses 104-A, 104-B connected in parallel and having the port 506 of one valve 106-C connected to the pump 108 and the port 506 of the other valve 106-C exhausting to the atmosphere whereby one chamber 306-A, 306-A is inflated by one valve 106-C and the other chamber 306-B, 306-A is deflated by the other valve 106-C, sequentially. In one such embodiment, the exhaust port 506 discharges through a restrictor or orifice 510. The shafts 710 of the two valves 106-C rotate in tandem such that the orifice 706 in one valve 106-B is aligned with one hose 104-A, 104-B when the orifice 706 in the other valve 106-B is aligned with the other hose 104-B, 104-A.
The air mattress system 100 includes various functions. The function of tufting the air mattress 102, 102′ is implemented, in one embodiment, by the uncoated areas 208 heat sealed to the center sheet 204 as illustrated in
The function of alternating the air flow to the chambers 306-A, 306-B is implemented, in one embodiment, by the alternating air supply valve 106-A illustrated in
From the foregoing description, it will be recognized by those skilled in the art that an air mattress system 100 has been provided. The system 100 includes a tufted air mattress 102 formed of at least two sheets 202, 204 with at least one sheet 202 having a coated surface 214 with uncoated areas 212, 208. The at least two sheets 202, 204 are heat sealed together at the uncoated areas 212, 208, which are small spots that are surrounded by the coated surface 214, which is a layer of ink containing a fluoropolymer.
While the present invention has been illustrated by description of several embodiments and while the illustrative embodiments have been described in considerable detail, it is not the intention of the applicant to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications will readily appear to those skilled in the art. The invention in its broader aspects is therefore not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of applicant's general inventive concept.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1625810 | Kirchbaum | Apr 1927 | A |
1777982 | Popp | Oct 1930 | A |
2318492 | Johnson | May 1943 | A |
2703770 | Melzer | Mar 1955 | A |
3030640 | Gosman | Apr 1962 | A |
3653083 | Lapidus | Apr 1972 | A |
3868056 | Keren | Feb 1975 | A |
4149541 | Gammons et al. | Apr 1979 | A |
4314865 | Ottaviano | Feb 1982 | A |
4347633 | Gammons et al. | Sep 1982 | A |
D266470 | Gammons et al. | Oct 1982 | S |
D270983 | Gammons et al. | Oct 1983 | S |
4415398 | Ottaviano | Nov 1983 | A |
4472847 | Gammons et al. | Sep 1984 | A |
4483030 | Flick et al. | Nov 1984 | A |
5022109 | Pekar | Jun 1991 | A |
5044030 | Balaton | Sep 1991 | A |
D325841 | Gammons | May 1992 | S |
5638565 | Pekar | Jun 1997 | A |
5647078 | Pekar | Jul 1997 | A |
6102936 | Augustine et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6209286 | Perkins et al. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6546580 | Shimada | Apr 2003 | B2 |
20020050010 | Shimada | May 2002 | A1 |
20040098807 | Ham | May 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080127423 A1 | Jun 2008 | US |