WRIST-WORN, INFLATABLE, SMART LIFE PRESERVER
20230382505 · 2023-11-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
The inventive concept discloses an inflatable life preserver device compacted within a wristband, in a convenient, minimally-sized form that operates simply by pulling of at least one rip-cord attached within the wristband. A floating plastic sac internal to the wristband is then deployed, and produces immediate mixing of water and internally contained, powdered acidic and alkaline substances. When the two types of substances are combined with a minute quantity of the water flowing into the plastic sac, a chemical reaction is created within the plastic sac. This condition generates, in the preferred embodiment, carbon dioxide gas. The entirety of the deployed plastic sac remains attached to the wristband. In this manner, the float device is inflated, providing substantial buoyancy, enabling the wearer to stay afloat in an emergency situation.
Claims
1. A flexible wristband containing an internally-stored, deployable floatation device, the flotation device becoming inflatable when the wearer of the wristband manually deploys the flotation device while immersed in a body of water, the floatation device, by reason of its inflation, inherently becoming a device providing buoyancy.
2. The flexible wristband of claim 1, wherein the deployable floatation device comprises a compacted, folded plastic sac stored within a chamber internal to the wristband, the sac further containing both a powdered acidic substance and a powdered alkaline substance, such that when the two substances are mixed with water, carbon dioxide gas is released within the sac, causing the sac to substantially expand in volume.
3. The flexible wristband of claim 1, wherein the means for deploying the flotation device comprises at least one pull tab mounted on the exterior of the wristband, the at least one pull tab connected to a rip cord, which rip cord is connected to an attachment point within the wristband, whereby, manually tugging of the at least one pull tab by a wearer causes the rip cord to breach the exterior of the wristband, causing the release of the floatation device.
4. The flexible wristband of claim 1, further having a Bluetooth-enabled transmitter affixed to the outer cover of the wristband.
5. The flexible wristband of claim 1, further having an RFID-functioning device affixed to the outer cover of the wristband.
6. A method of providing an emergency buoyancy support device for use by a person immersed in a body of water, comprising the steps of: a) constructing a flattened plastic sac shaped in the general form of the letter, “V,” further having (i) a left wing, (ii) a right wing, (iii) a continuous seam along the edges of the plastic sac, except for (iv) a small orifice in a channel intake in the left wing, (v) a small orifice in a channel intake in the right wing, and vi) having a bottommost neck, the neck having stored therein a mixture of a powdered acidic substance and a powdered alkaline substance; b) constructing a flexible wristband having (i) an outer cover, (ii) an inner cover, (iii) an inner chamber, and further, (iv) wherein the outer cover and inner cover are of the same dimensions and are detachably bound together along at least one of their common longitudinal edges; c) constructing at least one pull tab mounted on the exterior of the wristband, the at least one pull tab connected to a first end of rip cord and the second end of the rip cord being connected to an attachment point within the wristband; d) folding the flattened plastic sac multiple times, achieving a compacted form of the plastic sac, and bonding a segment of the exterior surface of the neck of the plastic sac onto the outer cover of the wristband; e) packing the compacted plastic sac entirely within the inner chamber; wherein f) producing a firm tug upon the at least one pull tab and its associated rip cord causes (i) breach of the exterior of the wristband; (ii) the release of the compacted plastic sac, (iii) the entry of water into the small orifices of the wings thereby intermixing water with the powdered acidic substance and the powdered alkaline substance, and (iv) the generation of carbon dioxide gas, which causes rapid expansion of the plastic sac.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the flexible wristband further comprises a Bluetooth-enabled transmitter affixed to the outer cover of the wristband.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the flexible wristband of claim 1, further comprises an RFID-functioning device affixed to the outer cover of the wristband.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE VIEWS OF DRAWINGS AS EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTIVE CONCEPT
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TABLE OF NOMENCLATURE & PART NUMBERS OF INVENTION
[0025]
TABLE-US-00001 1. Wristband 2. Right rip cord 3. Right pull tab 4. Right attachment point 5. Left rip cord 6. Left pull tab 7. Left attachment point 8. Outer cover (surface?) 8(a) Inner chamber 9. Inner cover 10. Pressurized plastic sac 10(a) Flattened plastic sac 10(b) Compacted plastic sac 11. Left wing 12. Left wingtip 13. Left channel 13(a) Stowed material 14. Right wing 15. Right wingtip 16. Right channel 16(a) Stowed material 17. Neck 17(a) Interior view of neck 17(b) Neck adherence surface 18. Seam (float) 19.-20. n/a 21. Left channel fold 22. Right channel fold 23. First folding line 23(a) First folding direction 24. Second folding line 24(a) Second folding direction 25.-29. n/a 30. Outer left edge 31. Outer right edge 32. Inner left edge 33. Inner right edge 34. Junction 35.-40. n/a 41. Powdered acidic substance 42. Powdered alkaline substance 43. Water 44. Gas (preferred CO.sub.2 45. Body 45(a) Body first surface 45(b) Body second surface 46. n/a 47. Left arch 48. Right arch 49. n/a 50. User 51. User's wrist 52.-57. n/a 58. Bluetooth-enabled transmitter 59. RFID-functioning device
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIVE CONCEPT
[0026] The objects, features, and advantages of the inventive concept presented in this application are more readily understood when referring to the accompanying drawings. The drawings, totaling ten figures, show the basic components and functions of possible embodiments and/or methods of use. In the several figures, like reference numbers are used in each figure to correspond to the same component as may be depicted in other figures.
[0027] The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing general embodiments of the inventive concept only, and is not intended to be limiting or restrictive of various modes, components, and manner of use of the inventive concept. As used herein, the term “and/or” includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items. As used herein, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well as the singular forms, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” when used in this Specification, describe and/or designate the presence of certain features, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.
[0028] The discussion of the present inventive concept will be initiated with
[0029] Further shown in
[0030]
[0031] It is to be noted, in viewing
[0032] An important element of the fabrication process is the joining of the longitudinal edges 30, 31, of the outer cover 8 and the longitudinal edges 32, 33, inner cover 9, respectively, by a heat-sealing process into a single wristband 1 unit. The compacted plastic sac 10(b) is contained in an inner chamber 8(a) between the outer and inner covers 8, 9.
[0033]
[0034] The pull tabs 6, 3, are connected to a left rip cord 5, and a right rip cord 2, respectively, as more readily shown in
[0035]
[0036]
[0037] Should a user 50 firmly tug either of the pull tabs 3, 6 either rip cord 3, 5 will cause a rendering in the outer cover 8, disrupting the outer edge 30 of the outer cover 8 and the outer edge 32 of the inner cover 9. This, in turn, deploys the compacted plastic sac 10(b). Should a user pull both pull tabs 3, 6, then the entirety of the outer cover 8 will be released from the predominance of its edge bonding with the inner cover 9, also causing the deployment of the compacted plastic sac 10(b).
[0038]
[0039]
[0040] By the configuration shown in
[0041] As the water 43 enters the exposed compacted plastic sac 10(b), it mixes with both the powdered acidic substance 41 and the alkaline substance 42. A rapid expansion caused by the release of carbon dioxide gas inflates the pressurized plastic sac 10, as shown by the rotund body 45 of the pressurized plastic sac 10, its body first surface 45(a) its body second surface 45(b), and the circumferential seam 18. The increasing internal pressure gradually causes the stowed material 13(a) contained in the left channel fold 21 and stowed material 16(a) contained in the right channel fold 22 to close, preventing both the escape of carbon dioxide gas and the entry of additional quantities of water 43.
[0042] This intermixing of water 43 and the contained substances 41, 42 has caused the generation, in the preferred embodiment, of carbon dioxide gas 44, which fully inflates the interior of the pressurized plastic sac 10. In the preferred embodiment, the powdered acidic substance 41 and powdered base substance 42 are citric acid and bicarbonate of soda, respectively. These two specific substances are set out for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended to have a limiting effect on the types of substances that may be utilized in operating the inventive concept. Testing of the pressurized plastic sac 10 has shown that 33.0 grams of bicarbonate of soda and 26.0 grams of citric acid, when mixed with water 43 within the plastic sac 10, should provide flotation support, or buoyance, for a 250-pound person, for a period of time from thirty minutes to an hour or more.
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[0044] The interior of the body first surface 45(a) adheres directly to the interior of the body second surface 45(b)(not in view) at this pre-assembly stage, due to the mutual attraction of static electricity between the surfaces. Also shown in
[0045] The previously referred-to circumferential seam 18 does not seal the entirety of the flattened plastic sac 10. In a small area proximate the left wingtip 12, there is constructed a small left channel 13, and similarly, the right wingtip 15 is also constructed with a small inlet channel 16. Both channels 13, 16 are small orifices which allow the entry of water 43 into the wing areas 11, 14 when the flattened float pack 10(a) is immersed in water 43. The seam 18 serves to bind the lower edges of the body first surface 45(a) and the body second surface 45(a).
[0046]
[0047] Similarly, the right wingtip 15 and its right channel 16 are pushed inwardly the same short distance, resulting in stowed material 16(a) in the area shown by dashed lines. During actual deployment of the flattened float pack 10(a), pressurized carbon dioxide gradually forces the two areas of stowed material 13(a), 16(a) outward, preventing the entry of additional water.
[0048] The next sequential step in the installation of the flattened float pack 10(a) in the wristband 1 is depicted in
[0049] The result of these first two folding lines 23, 24 is the form shown in
[0050]
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[0052] The flattened plastic sac 10(a) is composed of a very thin, lightweight, malleable plastic material that has been arranged in folds to fit within the inflatable wristband 1. The inner cover 9 of the wristband 1 conforms to a typical range of wearer's 20 wrist sizes. The outer cover layer 8 is simply an aesthetic covering, possibly with an elastic piece for sizing, which could optionally house a tiny smart chip/RFID chip 59 or Bluetooth enabled transmitter 58 for location purposes or to also function as an electronic hotel door opener, etc.
[0053] While preferred embodiments of the present inventive method have been shown and disclosed herein, it will be obvious to those persons skilled in the art that such embodiments are presented by way of example only, and not as a limitation to the scope of the inventive concept. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions may occur or be suggested to those skilled in the art without departing from the intent, scope, and totality of this inventive concept. Such variations, changes, and substitutions may involve other features which are already known per se and which may be used instead of, in combination with, or in addition to features already disclosed herein. Accordingly, it is intended that this inventive concept be inclusive of such variations, changes, and substitutions, as described by the scope of the claims presented herein.