FOAM MAT

A two layer foam mat is described. The raw materials for each layer are separately mixed and heated in different batches, and separately pressed through heated rollers to form a plurality of sheets. One or more sheets from each batch are stacked together in a press and heated above a foaming temperature to permit the stacked sheets to foam and expand. The press restricts the sheets from vertical expansion while allowing horizontal expansion. Once the sheets are foamed, a series of alternating teeth and receiving slots can be cut around the boundary of the mat to form an interlocking peripheral wall. The layers preferably have the same chemical composition after foaming, even though the layers are formed from different batches and may have different colors and/or textures.

Skip to: Description  ·  Claims  · Patent History  ·  Patent History
Description

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/642,078, filed Jul. 5, 2017, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/052,788, filed Feb. 24, 2016, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/630,232, filed Feb. 24, 2015, now issued U.S. Pat. No. 9,289,085, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/105,182, filed Apr. 13, 2005, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 29/203,027, filed Apr. 8, 2004, now issued U.S. Pat. No. D532,238, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention is directed to floor matting. More specifically, the present invention is directed to resilient floor matting which can be used in playroom environments, athletic environments such as for gymnastics or tumbling, and for environments where cushioning from the hard undersurface is desirable, such as a studio, or workplace where people are standing for prolonged periods. Artists, draftsmen, wood workers, printers, surgeons, dentists, retail sales people, and the like, are subject to standing on hard surfaces for prolonged periods.

BACKGROUND

Resilient floor matting has been used extensively for thousands of years. Fiber matting was first used, then came carpeting. Between the 1900's and 1960's, canvas mats filled with batting were commonly used for gymnastics and tumbling. In the last two centuries, floor matting of cork has been extensively used to absorb the pounding forces of the feet on hard surfaces. In the last 30 years mats prepared from polymeric foam has become common. For purposes of convenience, such as retail sale, packaging, transportation, and the like, the mats are sold in roll form, such a 4′×8′ sheets, or as tiles measuring anywhere from 6″×6″ up to 3′×4′. Some floor matting tiles, especially large dimension tiles, are merely laid down with adjacent tiles butting up against one another. For smaller tiles, there is an interlocking arrangement. Some tiles have a periphery of interlocking teeth which dovetail with the peripheral teeth of adjoining tiles. Prior art tiles are one color and/or have a textured surface on one side only. The bottom surface is normally smooth and flat, and the top surface is smooth and flat or textured, depending upon the taste of the user. The prior art has attempted to make matting with one color on one side and another color on the other side, but without success. Delamination of two or more mat layers can be a problem especially with use or when there are temperature changes, such as from ambient temperature to below freezing or from ambient temperature to an elevated temperature. In addition, delamination can occur when the mats are subject to physical forces, such as with tumbling, or gymnastics, or the dropping of articles, such as weights, on the matting. In addition, running and stopping or quick turns on matting, applies shear forces to each of the layers which can lead to delamination of the layers.

With use, the working surface or top surface of the floor matting can become disfigured with stains from dirt, paint, ink, and the like, physically disfigured can cause cuts, abrasions, and indentions in the floor matting. The floor matting can be reversed but this can be unsatisfactory if the bottom surface of the matting is smooth and the top surface of the matting is textured, or vice versa. When it is reversed, the textured side becomes the base surface and the original base surface becomes the top working surface. The new working surface will not be textured.

Resilient matting, such as foam elastomeric matting, is normally anywhere from ⅜″ to ¾″ in thickness and around 2′×2′ square. To cover a room 10′×10′, 25 mat tiles are normally required.

Solid resilient matting can be quite heavy and voluminous when stacked. Polymeric foam elastomeric resilient matting is relatively light, but it is also voluminous when stacked. For example, matting (2′×2′×½″) for 12′×12′ coverage when stacked forms a cube 2′×2′×1½′. For retail sales, matting can take up a great deal of retail space especially when several textures and several colors are being offered. For example, if four colors are available and four textures are available, the retail outlet has to carry sixteen varieties of floor matting. The number of varieties could be cut in half by having both surfaces of the matting textured in different textures and/or different colors. Thus, if four colors are offered in four textures for polymeric foam matting, the matting on one surface having one color and one texture and the other surface having another color and another texture, only eight varieties of matting would be required at the retail outlet.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The floor matting of the present invention comprises a body having first and second layers, each layer having an outer surface and an inner surface, the inner surfaces of the first and second layers are bound together to form an inner boundary, the outer surfaces constituting a first and second surfaces of the body, the first and second surfaces being generally parallel to one another but not generally parallel to the boundary; the first and second surfaces having different surface textures or design and/or different colors, the body bounded by an interlocking peripheral wall.

The body is a planar structure and from a plan view, it can have a rectangular shape, triangular shape, square shape or hexagonal shape. The interlocking peripheral wall has a series of teeth and receiving slots in alternating positions. The teeth dovetail with the receiving slots of adjacent floor mats to lock the floor mats together.

The thickness of the body is generally constant over its width and length. This is important because it permits a plurality of floor mats to be joined together to form a continuous planar surface. Although the thickness of the body is generally constant, the thickness of the first and second layers is preferably not constant. The reason for this is that the boundary between the first layer and the second layer is undulating. If one layer was peeled away to show the boundary which follows the inner surface of the remaining layer, the topography of the boundary would look similar to rolling hills and valleys.

The undulating nonplanar boundary resists delamination of the two layers. By having an undulating boundary between the two layers, shear forces and compressive forces applied to one layer are partially converted to compressive forces and tension forces. For example, if one layer is placed in shear with respect to the other layer with an undulating boundary, in certain areas of the undulating boundary shear forces are going to be partially converted to compressive forces, and in other areas, the shear forces are going to be converted into tension forces. This helps to minimize delamination between the two layers.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a top plan view of the floor mat of the present invention;

FIG. 2 shows an embossed design on the top surface of the floor mat of FIG. 1;

FIG. 2a shows an alternative embodiment of an embossed design on the top surface of the floor mat of FIG. 1;

FIG. 2b is another embodiment of a design embossed in the top surface of the floor mat of FIG. 1;

FIG. 3 is a bottom plan view of the floor mat of FIG. 1;

FIG. 4 shows another design embossed in the surface of the floor mat of FIG. 3;

FIG. 5 shows a side view of the floor mat of FIG. 1; and

FIG. 6 is an enlargement of the side view of FIG. 5 in the encircled area labeled FIG. 6.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

Referring to FIGS. 1 and 3, the floor mat 10 is a large, planar, flat, body 12 which has a first surface 16A and a second opposing parallel surface 16B. The two surfaces 16A and 16B are parallel to one another. The periphery of the floor mat is bounded by an interlocking perimeter 26, which comprises a series of teeth 28A and receiving slots 30A in alternating positions. Interlocking perimeter 26 also comprises four corners each having a smaller tooth 28B and a smaller receiving slot 30B. The surface 16A has a texture or three dimensional design 18′ and the second surface 16B has a texture or three dimensional design 18″, the two textures or designs can be the same or different. For purposes of this invention, texture means a three dimensional texture or design embossed in or embossed out of the mat surface. One or both surfaces 16A and 16B can also be smooth. The body is made up of two layers 14A and 14B (see FIG. 6). The two layers are bound together either by heat welding and/or an adhesive. Preferably, the two layers have the same chemical composition so that the two layers have the same coefficient of thermal expansion and the same elastomeric properties so that the two layers work together and respond similarly when subject to temperature changes and forces. The two layers have an outer surface 16A and 16B, respectively, and two inner surfaces 17A and 17B which preferably form an undulating boundary 20 between the two layers. Preferably, the inner surfaces 17A and 17B are not parallel to the first and second surfaces. Rather, the two inner surfaces 17A and 17B in the preferred embodiment meet to form undulating boundary 20 which has a topography of rolling hills and vales. The two outer surfaces 16A and 16B are parallel, or generally parallel. In the preferred embodiment, the inner surfaces 17A and 17B are generally not parallel to either of the outer surfaces. Thus, the thickness 22 of the body is generally constant across the entire length and width of the body. In contrast, in the preferred embodiment, the thicknesses of the first layer and second layer vary as the boundary undulates. Thus, the thickness of the first and second layers vary from point to point. The thickness 24A of the first layer 14A at a given point, together with the thickness 24B of the second layer at the same point are equivalent to the thickness 22 of the body. Thus, thickness 24C of the first layer 14A, at a second point, is less than the thickness 24A at the first point and the thickness 24D of the second layer 14B at the second point is greater than the thickness 24B of the second layer at the first point. The undulating boundary between the first layer and the second layer resists delamination of the two layers making the mats more robust as explained supra. However, the two layers 14A and 14B can be flat planar layers of the same or different thickness, each having a generally uniform thickness.

As described above, the texture of the first surface 16A can be different than the texture of the second surface 16B (see FIGS. 2, 2a, 2b, and 4 showing textures 18A, 18B, 18C and 18D, respectively). Similarly, the color of the first layer and the first surface 16A can be different than the color of the second layer 14B. Thus, the present mats give the purchaser the opportunity to have a selection of colors and/or a selection of textures. In addition, it permits the purchaser to form a checkerboard pattern or other pattern, assuming enough tiles are utilized, utilizing the different textures and/or colors of the mat tiles.

Preferably, the mats are made from resilient polymeric materials, such as natural or synthetic rubber, and most preferably from foam elastomeric material, such as polyethylene foam, polyurethane foam, EVA-PE foam (ethylene vinyl acetate-polyethylene foam elastomer), and EVA foam (ethylene vinyl acetate foam).

Preferably, the elastomeric mats are made from a combination of virgin polymer and recycle polymer, such as virgin EVA polymer and a mix of virgin and recycle PE (polyethylene) polymer. The blend of EVA and virgin and recycle PE are compounded together and heated to a temperature below the polymer foaming temperature and pressed into thin sheets through rollers of uniform thickness within uniform temperatures of a range of 5° C.; preferably within a range of 1° C. The sheets are 5 to 10 millimeters in thickness. Other thicknesses can be employed. The sheets are sandwiched together, normally about six sheets to each mat and placed in trays having a bottom surface with a die or mold for the texture and a top plate. The top plate may also have a die or mold for the texture for the other surface. The tray with the sandwich of layers of the raw composition and the top plate are pressed in a press and heated to a temperature to permit the elastomer to foam and expand. The press is required to keep the distance between the tray and the top plate constant to yield elastomeric foam mat of a predetermined thickness. Preferably, the three like sheets have virtually identical compositions and blend together to form one layer of the mat. The two mat layers may have slightly different compositions because their respective sheets are made from different raw compositions (the differences can be slight) at different times (e.g., in different batches).

The virgin PE and the recycle PE have different rates of thermal expansion and different rates of foaming. The raw compositions of the sheets are restricted in vertical movement and unrestricted in horizontal movement between the tray and the top plate in the press when heated. In the preferred embodiment, three layers of the raw composition will have one color and the other three layers of composition will have another color. Thus, one side of the mat may be red and the other side may be black, etc. The die in the bottom of the tray places one texture on one surface of the mat, and if the top plate has a die, it places a texture on the other surface of the mat. Preferably, the two textures are different although they can be the same. After the foaming reaction is completed by the heating in the press, the tray and the top plate are removed from the press and the unfinished mat is removed from the tray. The mat is allowed to cool and then it is passed to a cutting machine wherein the mat with the interlocking periphery is cut out of the unfinished mat. The mat is now complete.

In those cases where the top plate does not have a die for the texture, the mat comes out of the press with a texture only on one surface and a smooth planar other surface. The mat can be sent to a roller mill having a cool roller and a heated roller with a die attached thereto. The heated roller with die only heats the surface not having a texture permitting the heated roller with die to texture the other surface of the mat. The textured surface is kept cool by the cool roller. The mat is passed between two rollers and the roller that touches the texture surface is cool, whereas the roller with the die to give texture to the other surface is hot. The cooling roller prevents destruction or damage to the textured surface created in the press.

The above invention is not restricted to the specific embodiments disclosed herein; modifications and other embodiments of the invention are within the scope of the invention.

Claims

1. A foam mat comprising a body bounded by an interlocking peripheral wall, the body comprising:

a first layer made from a first batch of raw materials comprising a first polymer and a second polymer;
a second layer made from a second batch of raw materials comprising the first polymer and the second polymer;
wherein the first layer and second layer are made by (i) separately heating and mixing the first batch of raw materials and the second batch at a temperature that is below a foaming temperature of the first batch of raw materials and the second batch of raw materials, respectively; (ii) separately heating and pressing the first batch of raw materials and the second batch of raw materials through rollers that are maintained within uniform temperatures of a range of 5° C. to form a first plurality of sheets and a second plurality of sheets, respectively; and (iii) stacking, pressing, and heating one or more of the first plurality of sheets and one or more of the second plurality of sheets to a temperature that permits the sheets to foam and expand; and
wherein, after foaming and expansion, the first layer comprises a first chemical composition and the second layer comprises a second chemical composition that is substantially similar to the first chemical composition so that the first layer and second layer respond similarly when subject to temperature changes and forces.

2. The foam mat of claim 1 wherein the first polymer comprises ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) and the second polymer comprises polyethylene (PE).

3. The foam mat of claim 2 wherein the EVA is recycled EVA, and the PE is virgin PE.

4. The foam mat of claim 2 wherein the EVA is virgin EVA, and the PE is recycled PE.

5. The foam mat of claim 2 wherein the EVA is virgin EVA, and the PE is virgin PE.

6. The foam mat of claim 1 wherein the second batch of raw materials comprising the same amount of the first polymer and the second polymer as the first batch of raw materials.

7. The foam mat of claim 1 wherein the first layer and the second layer have the same coefficient of thermal expansion and the same elastomeric properties.

8. The foam mat of claim 1, wherein the first batch of raw materials comprises a first colorant and the second batch of raw materials comprises a second colorant that is different that the first colorant.

9. The foam mat of claim 1, wherein the first layer comprises a first texture and the second layer comprises a second texture that is different than the first texture.

10. The foam mat of claim 1 wherein the interlocking peripheral wall comprises a plurality of alternating teeth and receiving slots.

11. A method of manufacturing a foam mat comprising a first layer and a second layer, the method comprising the steps of:

(i) separately heating and mixing a first batch of raw materials and a second batch of raw materials at a temperature that is below a foaming temperature of the first batch of raw materials and the second batch of raw materials, respectively; wherein the first batch of raw materials comprises a first polymer, a second polymer, and a colorant; and wherein the second batch of raw materials comprises the first polymer, the second polymer, and a second colorant;
(ii) separately heating and pressing the first batch of raw materials and the second batch of raw materials through rollers that are maintained within uniform temperatures of a range of 5° C. to form a first plurality of sheets and a second plurality of sheets, respectively; and
(iii) stacking, pressing, and heating one or more of the first plurality of sheets and one or more of the second plurality of sheets to a temperature that permits the sheets to foam and expand; and
(iv) cutting a plurality of alternating teeth and receiving slots around a peripheral wall of the mat.

12. The method of claim 11 wherein the first polymer has a first rate of foaming and the second polymer has a second rate of foaming that is different than the first rate of foaming.

13. The method of claim 11 wherein the first polymer has a first rate of expansion and the second polymer has a second rate of expansion that is different than the first rate of expansion.

14. The method of claim 11 wherein the step of stacking, pressing, and heating one or more of the first plurality of sheets and one or more of the second plurality of sheets comprises stacking the sheets in a press.

15. The method of claim 14 wherein the press comprises a top plate and a bottom tray.

16. The method of claim 15 wherein the bottom tray comprises a first die having a first texture.

17. The method of claim 16 wherein the top place comprises a second die having a second texture that is different than the first texture.

18. The method of claim 11 wherein the step of stacking, pressing, and heating one or more of the first plurality of sheets and one or more of the second plurality of sheets comprises stacking three or more of the first plurality of sheets and three or more of the second plurality of sheets.

19. The method of claim 11 wherein the first plurality of sheets and the second plurality of sheets have a uniform thickness.

20. The method of claim 11 wherein the first plurality of sheets and the second plurality of sheets have a thickness between 5 to 10 millimeters.

Patent History
Publication number: 20190183273
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 22, 2019
Publication Date: Jun 20, 2019
Inventor: Bruce A. Thrush (San Juan Capistrano, CA)
Application Number: 16/283,618
Classifications
International Classification: A47G 27/02 (20060101); E04F 15/10 (20060101); B32B 3/02 (20060101); B32B 3/06 (20060101); B32B 3/26 (20060101); B32B 3/30 (20060101); B32B 5/18 (20060101); B32B 5/32 (20060101); B32B 25/04 (20060101); B32B 25/14 (20060101); E01C 13/04 (20060101); B32B 3/10 (20060101);