Sole structure for a running shoe
09775403 · 2017-10-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A43B13/181
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A sole structure for a running shoe is presented having an outsole and a midsole. The sole structure includes a plurality of hollow elements, which are closed off in each case by front flanks and rear flanks, and have spaced-apart upper inner surfaces and lower inner surfaces, that forces to which the hollow elements are subjected when the runner is running are absorbed by these hollow elements in each case with deformation, with the spacing between their inner surfaces decreasing in the process. The upper inner surfaces of the hollow elements are formed on the underside of the midsole, that the lower inner surfaces of the hollow elements are formed on the upper side of the outsole, which is fastened on the underside of the midsole in each case in front of, and behind, the hollow elements, the front flanks and the rear flanks likewise forming part of the outsole.
Claims
1. A sole structure for a running shoe, comprising: an outsole and a midsole, the outsole and the midsole made from different types of material and the outsole and the midsole joined to one another, and a plurality of hollow elements, which are closed off in each case by a front flank and a rear flank, in the longitudinal direction of the sole structure, but are open laterally and each of the plurality of hollow elements have an upper inner surface and a lower inner surface, each upper inner surface and each lower inner surface of each of the plurality of hollow elements being spaced-apart and extending between each respective front flank and each respective rear flank, wherein each one of the plurality of hollow elements, which are configured to be subjected to forces generated during exercise when the runner is running, is configured to absorb the forces by being elastically deformed, such that the spacing between the respective upper inner surface and the respective lower inner surface decreases and horizontal displacement of the respective upper inner surface in relation to the respective lower inner surface occurs, and wherein each one of the plurality of hollow elements is configured to be capable, under the effect of said forces, of deforming to such a pronounced extent that the respective upper inner surface comes into contact with the respective lower inner surface, thereby preventing horizontal displacement of said upper inner surface in relation to said respective lower inner surface, wherein the upper inner surfaces of the plurality of hollow elements are formed on an underside of the midsole, wherein the lower inner surfaces of the plurality of hollow elements are formed on an upper side of the outsole, which is joined to the underside of the midsole in each case in front of, and behind, the plurality of hollow elements, the front flanks and the rear flanks likewise forming part of the outsole, and wherein only the outsole is deformed when the upper inner surfaces and the respective lower inner surfaces of the plurality of hollow elements are in contact with each other.
2. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein only the front flanks and rear flanks of the plurality of hollow elements are deformed when the upper inner surfaces and the respective lower inner surfaces are in contact with each other.
3. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the midsole is designed to project downward in the region of each respective hollow element.
4. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the upper inner surfaces and the lower inner surfaces of the plurality of hollow elements are each provided with transverse ribs which, when the inner surfaces are in contact with one another, engage with an adjacent transverse rib and thereby preventing horizontal displacement of the inner surfaces in relation to one another, wherein the sole has a forefoot region and a heel region, each with at least one of the plurality of hollow elements, and wherein the transverse ribs of the at least one hollow element in the forefoot region are smaller, and more numerous, than the transverse ribs of the at least one hollow element in the heel region.
5. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of the upper inner surfaces has an average roughness depth (Rz) of 250-500 μm at least over part of a surface area of the at least one upper inner surface.
6. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the front flank and the rear flank of at least of one of the plurality of hollow elements have different thicknesses than one another.
7. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the sole has a forefoot region and a heel region, each with at least one hollow element of the plurality of hollow elements, and wherein the front flank of the at least one hollow element in the forefoot region is thinner than the rear flank of said at least one hollow element, and wherein the front flank of the at least one hollow element in the heel region is thicker than the rear flank of said at least one hollow element.
8. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein a shape of the cross section of at least one of the plurality of hollow elements changes in the transverse direction of the sole.
9. The sole as claimed in claim 1, wherein the outsole is designed in more than one individual part, wherein the individual parts each help merely to form the plurality of hollow elements arranged one behind another in the longitudinal direction of the sole.
10. The sole as claimed in claim 9, wherein at least two transversely adjacent parts of the outsole are provided with a first number of hollow elements and a second number of hollow elements, and wherein the first number is different from the second number.
11. A sole structure for a running shoe comprising: a midsole having an underside; an outsole having an upper side coupled to the underside of the midsole, the outsole forming a plurality of front flanks and rear flanks, the underside of the midsole forming plurality of upper inner surfaces at respective locations corresponding to the plurality of the front flanks and rear flanks, and the outsole having a plurality of lower inner surfaces respectively corresponding to the plurality of upper inner surfaces, so that the plurality of front flanks, rear flanks, lower inner surfaces, and upper inner surfaces form a plurality of hollow elements, wherein the plurality of hollow elements is configured to elastically deform when the sole structure is subjected to forces generated during exercise, and wherein each hollow element is closed in the longitudinal direction of the sole structure by a respective front flank and a respective rear flank and each hollow element is open in the lateral direction of the sole structure; and wherein each hollow element has an undeformed configuration and a deformed configuration, wherein in the undeformed configuration, the upper inner surfaces are spaced apart from the respective lower inner surfaces, and wherein in the deformed configuration, the front flanks and rear flanks are deformed so as to cause the lower inner surfaces to come into contact with respective ones of the upper inner surfaces, and wherein in the deformed configuration, at least one of the plurality of hollow elements is configured to deform horizontally so that the lower inner surface and the upper inner surface of the at least one hollow element move relative to one another and once the lower inner surface and the upper inner surface are in contact, the upper inner surface and the lower inner surface are configured to prevent horizontal displacement relative to one another.
12. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein the sole structure is configured such that the elastic deformation causes the upper inner surface and the respective lower inner surface of at least one hollow element to move closer to each other and causes horizontal displacement of the upper inner surface and the respective lower inner surface in relation to one another.
13. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein the midsole is configured to project downward in the region of the plurality of hollow elements.
14. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein the sole structure comprises a forefoot region and a heel region, each with at least one hollow element of the plurality of hollow elements; wherein the upper inner surfaces and lower inner surfaces each further comprise transverse ribs, wherein each transverse rib is configured to engage an adjacent transverse rib, such that a peak of one rib is received in a valley of an adjacent rib, when the upper inner surface and the lower inner surface are in contact, so as to prevent horizontal displacement of the lower inner surface relative to the upper inner surface; and wherein the transverse ribs in the forefoot region are smaller and more numerous than the transverse ribs in the heel region.
15. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein at least a portion of the surface area of at least one of the upper inner surfaces has an average roughness depth (Rz) between 250-500 μm.
16. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein the front flank and the rear flank forming at least one of the plurality of hollow element have different thicknesses than one another.
17. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein the sole structure comprises a forefoot region and a heel region, each with at least one hollow element of the plurality of hollow elements; wherein the front flank forming the at least one hollow element in the forefoot region is thinner than the rear flank forming the at least one hollow element; and wherein the front flank forming the at least one hollow element in the heel region is thicker than the rear flank forming the at least one hollow element.
18. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein a shape of the cross section of at least one hollow element changes in the transverse direction of the sole structure.
19. The sole structure according to claim 11, wherein the outsole is comprised of a plurality of transversely adjacent parts, wherein the parts form the plurality of hollow elements arranged one behind another in the longitudinal direction of the sole structure.
20. The sole structure according to claim 19, wherein a first transversely adjacent part of the plurality of transversely adjacent parts comprises a first number of hollow elements and a second transversely adjacent part of the plurality of transversely adjacent parts comprises a second number of hollow elements, the first number being different than the second number.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) An exemplary embodiment of the invention will be explained hereinbelow with reference to the drawing, in which:
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WAYS OF IMPLEMENTING THE INVENTION
(6) The sole structure for a running shoe illustrated in the drawing is joined together from a midsole 10 and an outsole 20. The outsole 20, during use, is in contact with the ground, which is indicated in
(7) The midsole 10 is in one piece and thus extends over the heel region F, the midfoot region M and the forefoot region V of the sole structure. A possible example of a material to use for the midsole 10 is EVA with a Shore C hardness of 55. The thickness of the midsole 10 is greater in the heel region F and in the midfoot region M than in the forefoot region V.
(8) The outsole 20 is in a number of parts and, in the present exemplary embodiment, comprises five parts, designated 21-25. A possible material to use for the outsole, or the parts thereof, is a rubbery, elastically deformable material, but one which is difficult to compress.
(9) Each of the parts 21-25, together with the midsole 10 in each case, forms a plurality of hollow elements arranged one behind the other in the longitudinal direction of the sole structure. For example, the part 21 in the heel region F on the lateral side, together with the midsole 10, forms the hollow elements 31 and 32, and the part 25 in the forefoot region V on the medial side, together with the midsole 10, forms the hollow elements 33, 34 and 35. There are no hollow elements present in the midfoot region M, although it would likewise be possible for them to be found here.
(10) The hollow elements are closed off in each case by front flanks and rear flanks, as seen in the longitudinal direction of the sole structure, and have spaced-apart upper inner surfaces and lower inner surfaces. The flanks and the lower inner surfaces are formed in each case on the outsole 20. The upper inner surfaces, in contrast, are formed in each case on the midsole 10. On the hollow element 31, the front flank is designated 31v and the rear flank is designated 31h. The upper inner surface of said hollow element 31 is designated 31o and the lower inner surface is designated 31u.
(11) The outsole 20 and/or the parts 21-25 thereof is/are fastened on the midsole 10, in each case in front of, and behind, the hollow elements, for example by adhesive bonding. It is merely so that the outsole parts 21 and 25 can be distinguished to better effect from the midsole 10 that these parts have been illustrated in
(12) Under the forces to which they are subjected when the runner is running, the hollow elements can be deformed with the vertical spacing between their upper and lower inner surfaces decreasing in the process and mostly also by horizontal displacement of their inner surfaces in relation to one another. However it is, at least mainly, only the outsole 20 which contributes to said deformation of the hollow elements and, on said outsole, in particular the front and rear flanks of the hollow elements. In contrast, the midsole 10 is, for all practical purposes, stiff and dimensionally stable in the region of the hollow elements when subjected to the aforementioned forces.
(13) The compliance of the hollow elements, furthermore, is such that, under the forces to which the hollow elements are subjected when the runner is running, with elastic damping of these forces, they can be deformed in each case individually, i.e. possibly one after the other in the case of a rolling action over the sole structure, to such a pronounced extent that their upper and lower inner surfaces come into contact with one another. This contact, first of all, puts a stop to any vertical deformation which has taken place, but also prevents possibly further horizontal displacement of the inner surfaces of the hollow elements in relation to one another, or of the respectively lower inner surface against the upper inner surface, which is fixed in place on the midsole.
(14) It should also be noted, in respect of this deformation state, that the upper and the lower inner surfaces of the hollow elements butt against one another in each case over the surface area, and that, in the case of at least some individual hollow elements, the respectively rear flanks thereof, as seen in the deformation and/or displacement direction, are folded up in an approximately s-shaped manner. This avoids local bulging of the outsole, at which repeated abrasion could take place. This is made possible by the midsole projecting some way outward in the region of the hollow elements in each case, and by the folded, rear flanks, as seen in the displacement direction, being somewhat thicker in each case than the front flanks, as seen in the displacement direction. This applies in each case to the hollow elements in the heel region A, such as the hollow elements 31 and 32, and also to the respectively rearmost hollow elements in the forefoot region C, such as the hollow element 33. As far as the rest of the hollow elements are concerned, a difference in thickness between the front and rear flanks thereof can be dispensed with or can be provided in the converse formation. Of course, the hollow elements have to be arranged with sufficient horizontal spacing between them in order for the horizontal deformation explained above to be possible and for them not to impede one another therein.
(15) As can be seen in
(16) As can likewise be seen in
(17) In a manner which has not been illustrated, the upper hollow-element inner surfaces, which are formed in each case on the midsole 10, are each of rough design at least over part of their surface area, the average roughness depth Rz being 250-500 μm. This makes it possible to prevent squeaking, which may possibly be caused by the upper and lower inner surfaces sliding one upon the other until they are arrested firmly with one another.
(18) As can be seen in the bottom view of
LIST OF DESIGNATIONS
(19) 10 Midsole 20 Outsole 21-25 Parts of the outsole 31-35 Hollow elements 31v Front flank of the hollow element 31 31h The rear flank of the hollow element 31 31o Upper inner surface of the hollow element 31 31u Lower inner surface of the hollow element 31 32o Upper transverse ribs in the hollow element 32 32u Lower transverse ribs in the hollow element 32 35o Upper transverse ribs in the hollow element 35 35u Lower transverse ribs in the hollow element 35 F Heel region M Midfoot region V Forefoot region B Ground