[0001] The invention is generally in the field of cosmetic apparatuses and more specifically
concerns an auxiliary device for a hair removing apparatus which is capable of cooling
the skin from which the hair is to be removed, thereby significantly decreasing the
pain which is generally associated with such removal of hair.
[0002] Removal of unwanted hair for cosmetic purposes from various parts of the body has
become common practice, especially for women. Hair from non-facial skin is usually
removed by plucking and various devices adapted for such hair removal have been described
in the literature. Swiss Patent No. 268,696 describes a manually-operated depilatory
device which comprises helical springs which are rotated when the device is moved
along the skin, and hair that is caught by the coils are plucked away.
[0003] The principle of the rotating helical spring was incorporated into a electrically-powered
depilatory device disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,524,772. The device disclosed there
comprises a helical spring, consisting of a helical adjacent windings, which is driven
to rotate around its axis by an electric motor. In operation, the rotating helical
spring is moved along the surface of a hair-bearing skin portions, the hair is caught
by the rotating helical spring and plucked.
[0004] A somewhat similar device is described in U.S. Patent No. 4,726,375 in which, however,
the helical spring of U.S. Patent No. 4,524,772 is replaced by a flexible hair-plucker
body which consists of a plurality of gaps on its outer surface which open and close
during its rotation so as to receive, pluck and eject hair growing on a skin portion
on which the hair-plucker body moves.
[0005] The known hair-removing devices have a fundamental drawback in that the plucking
of the hair can be very painful. This drawback limits considerably the widespread
use of such device, particularly for sensitive skin surfaces.
[0006] It is the object of the present invention to provide an auxiliary device for hair-removing
apparatus which reduces the pain associated with hair plucking.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0007] The present invention is based on the realisation that the pain associated with hair
plucking by a hair-removing apparatus may be avoided or significantly decreased if
the skin is anaesthetised by cooling prior to the removal of hair. This is achieved
in accordance with the invention by adding an auxiliary skin cooling device to the
hair removing apparatus.
[0008] The present invention provides an auxiliary device for a hair-removing apparatus
capable of reducing sensitivity of the skin to pain prior to hair removal, comprising
a cooling element adapted to cooling the skin from which hair is to be removed (hereinafter
to be referred to at times as "the auxiliary device").
[0009] The present invention also provides a hair-removing apparatus characterised in that
it comprises an auxiliary device capable of reducing sensitivity of-the skin to pain
by cooling it prior to hair removal by the apparatus's hair-removing unit.
[0010] The auxiliary device will generally comprise a cooling element which will be placed
in front of the hair-removing unit of the apparatus. In operation the user usually
moves the apparatus in a forward direction on the surface of the skin which will thus
be in contact first with said cooling element and only then with said hair-removing
unit of the apparatus. consequently the skin will be cooled prior to the removal of
hair by said apparatus and thus during said removal, the skin will be in a a temporary
state of anaesthesia.
[0011] In some embodiments of the present invention, the cooling element in the auxiliary
device will be a circumferential or semi-circumferential element partially or entirely
surrounding the hair-removing unit of the apparatus or several cooling elements will
be provided, together partially or entirely surrounding the hair-removing unit from
all sides. This will enable to move the apparatus in other directions than formed
while cooling the skin prior to the removal of hair.
[0012] The attachment of the cooling element to the body of the auxiliary device or the
attachment of the auxiliary device to the apparatus may not necessarily be always
rigid. It may sometimes be desired that one or both of said attachment be elastic.
In the case one of said attachments is elastic the cooling element may be devised
so that in the slack state of said attachment or when applying a light force thereon,
its lower, skin touching, surface, will be at a level below that of the hair-removing
unit. Thus in operation at first only said surface of the cooling element will touch
the skin. Thereafter, upon the application of a stronger downward force on the apparatus,
the hair-removing element will be lowered and thereafter the cooling of the skin will
continue coincidentally with the removal of hair. Such an arrangement allows the user
to first cool the skin and only after the loss of sensation to start the hair-removing
operation.
[0013] The cooling device may-comprise a cold accumulating cooling element or alternatively
a thermoelectric cooling element. A cold accumulating cooling element should be cooled
prior to use, e.g. by placing it in an ice-box, while a thermoelectric cooling element
is devised to generate cold during operation.
[0014] While a cold accumulating cooling element may in theory be made of a metal alloy
or another heat conducting material, this is in fact impractical since the cold capacity
of such a material is relatively low and therefore, in order to achieve substantial
cooling of the skin for prolonged periods of time, it will have to be large and thus
too heavy for comfortable use.
[0015] A frozen liquid has a very high cold capacity at the phase-changing temperature,
i.e the temperature in which it melts. It has been realized, in accordance with the
invention that this physical phenomenon may be used to advantage of devising cold
accumulating elements which are both small and have a large cold capacity. Thus in
accordance with the invention the cold accumulating cooling element preferably comprises
a small compartment filled with a liquid which is capable of changing its phase from
solid to liquid (or vice versa) at a certain desired temperature. Such a liquid, to
be referred to hereinafter as a "phase changing liquid" may be a mixture of alcohol,
such as ethanol, in water or an aqueous salt solution, all of which change their phase
at a temperature below 0°C Examples of such phase changing liquids are a mixture of
10% ethanol in water or a 7% NaCl solution, both of which have a phase changing temperature
of about -6°C, (which temperature is obtainable in most domestic refrigerator's ice-boxes).
[0016] In addition to the phase changing liquid, said compartment may contain a certain
amount of a heat conducting filler such as metal powder, which significantly improves
the performance of such a cold accumulating cooling element.
[0017] Such cold accumulating cooling elements, when cooled below the phase changing temperature
of the phase-changing liquid, have a cold capacity per unit volume which is several
orders of magnitude higher than that of a metal alloy. Furthermore, unlike such an
alloy the temperature of such a cooling element remains essentially constant over
a relatively prolonged period of time.
[0018] The above described cold accumulating cooling element confers coldness to the skin
through a heat conducting bottom wall portion, e.g. made of metal, while its other
wall portions are preferably heat insulating, either made of an insulating material
or coated by such.
[0019] Since a heat accumulating cooling device has to be cooled prior to use, either the
entire auxiliary device or the cold accumulating cooling element should preferably
be detachable in order to avoid the need to place the entire apparatus in the cold.
Thus for cooling, the auxiliary device or the cold accumulating cooling element are
detached and then placed in the cold for a sufficient amount of time for the phase-changing
liquid to freeze.
[0020] As mentioned above, the cooling element may also be a thermo-electric element. Thermo-electric
elements are known per se and generally consist of two semi-conductor branches connected
in series, one of which has n-conductivity and the other p-conductivity. These two
branches are situated between two commutation plates which realise the hot and cold
junctions of the thermo-electric element, generated as a result of a DC current flowing
through these junctions. It is a characteristic feature of such elements that heat
is pumped from one junction to the other, namely one of the plates cools while the
other heats up. In an auxiliary device utilising a thermo-electric element, the cold
junction's commutation plate is brought into contact with the skin or cools another
heat conducting, e.g. metal, plate which in turn is brought into contact with the
skin.
[0021] For efficient cooling of the skin the heat produced at the hot junction has to be
removed. This may be performed by an attached heat conducting body having heat exchange
fins or pins attached thereto, or integral therewith, usually on its upper surface.
For increasing the efficiency of the heat conduction between the heated plate and
the heat exchange fins or pins, the heat conducting body may comprise an internal
compartment partially filled with a liquid which boils at a relatively low temperature
such as various types of freon of the type which boils between 30° - 40°C. The improved
heat conduction is a result of the evaporation of liquid in consequence to heating
by the hot commutation plate and then subsequent condensation on the internal compartments'
surfaces which underly those surfaces of the heat conduction body which are are provided
with heat exchange fins or pins. Possibly, some of the internal surfaces of said compartment
may be coated with a capillary coating for increasing the efficiency of the heat conduction.
[0022] The heat from the heat exchange fins or pins is removed either by natural convection
or by the aid of an air stream produced by a small blower fan.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023]
Fig. 1 is a side elevation of a conventional hair-removing apparatus, having an auxiliary
cooling device of the invention attached thereto;
Fig. 2 is an upper view of the hair-removing apparatus of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a bottom view of the apparatus of Figs. 1 and 2;
Fig. 4 is a top view of an auxiliary cooling device, having a cold accumulating cooling
element;
Fig. 5 is a cross-section through the line V-V in Fig. 4;
Fig. 6 is a side elevation of a hair-removing apparatus having an auxiliary cooling device,
with part of its casing broken away showing a thermo-electric cooling element attached
to 10 heat exchange pins bearing cooling body;
Fig. 7 shows a different embodiment of an auxiliary cooling device, with part of its casing
broken away showing a thermo-electric element bearing heat exchange pins and a heat
removing fan.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0024] The invention will at times be described in the following, with reference to the
non-limiting specific embodiments depicted in the annexed drawings. It may easily
be appreciated by the man of the art that various modifications of these embodiments
are possible, all being within the scope of the invention, as defined in the claims.
[0025] The auxiliary cooling device in accordance with the invention may be designed to
fit any hair-removing device. In the annexed drawings the invention is described,
only as an example, with reference to a known hair-removing apparatus manufactured
in accordance with U.S. Patent 4,524,772, which is sold throughout the world under
the tradename
EPILADY (manufactured by MEPRO, Hagoshrim, Israel).
[0026] The hair-removing apparatus 1 shown in Figs. 1, 2 and 3 comprises a casing 2, a rotatable
helical coil 3, which is the hair-removing unit of the apparatus, and an electric,
on-off, switch 4. The electric current for the apparatus operation is provided by
an external power supply (not shown) connected to the apparatus via a socket at the
apparatus rear (also not shown). The auxiliary device 5 is shaped so as to fit the
front casing 2 of the hair-removing apparatus 1 and comprises a cooling element of
which only the lower skin touching surface 6 is seen protruding below the lower edge
of the auxiliary device 5.
[0027] With particular reference to Fig. 3 it may be seen that the lower surface 6 of the
cooling element is essentially in front of the hair-removing unit. It should be emphasised
that it may also be possible in accordance with various other embodiments to design
the auxiliary cooling device so that its cooling element's lower surface will be circumferential
or semi-circumferential so that it will totally or partially surround the hair-removing
unit.
[0028] The cooling element in the auxiliary cooling device of 15 the present invention should
preferably have temperature below 0°C at the skin touching surface. In an embodiment
of the auxiliary skin-cooling device shown in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, the lower surface
6 of the cooling element is slightly above the lower level of the hair-removing unit
3 of apparatus 1. In an alternative embodiment, the auxiliary unit is elastically
fastened to the apparatus and the cooling element may thus be devised in a manner
that its lower surface will be at a lower level than that of the hair-removing unit.
While light pressure is applied, only said lower portion is in contact with the skin.
When applying a stronger pressure on the apparatus, the hair-removing unit is lowered
to the skin and brought into contact therewith.
[0029] The auxiliary cooling device 7 in the embodiment shown in Figs. 4 and 5 consists
of a plastic base portion 8 and a cooling element 9. Base portion 8 may be detachably
attached to the casing of the hair-removing apparatus (not shown) by various means
such as, for example, by a hook-velvet fabric, e.g. that sold under the trade name
VELCRO (Velcro S.A. Lenzerheide, Switzerland), one piece of which will be attached
to a base portion 8, and a complementary piece on a matching surface of the casing
of said apparatus.
[0030] The cooling element 9 is a small container consisting of plastic side wall portions
10 and 10′ which are integral with base portion 8 and forming together with a heat
conductive metal bottom wall portion 11 a liquid-containing compartment 12. Thus,
the only heat conducting wall portion of compartment 12 is bottom wall portion 11,
while the other wall portions 10 and 10′ are insulating. The liquid is preferably
a solution having a phase transition temperature below 0 6, such as an aqueous ethanol
solution (e.g. 10% ethanol in water), other aqueous alcohol solutions, a salt solution
(e.g. 7% NaCl in water) and the like. Since during freezing a liquid solution slightly
expands in volume, the internal compartment has a small enclosed volume of gas 13
to allow for such an expansion.
[0031] In such a cooling element the temperature remains fairly constant over a prolonged
period of time, due to the solid-liquid phase transition which occurs at a constant
temperature - the phase changing temperature. Thus, for example, in the above specified
solutions, transition between solid and liquid is at about -6° to -7°C, and in operation
the surface of the cooling elements will remain at about this temperature for a relatively
long period of time.
[0032] In the auxiliary cooling device shown in Fig. 6, the cooling element is a thermo-electric
element 14, having attached thereto a heat conducting body 15 bearing heat-exchange
fins 16 on its upper surface and has an internal elongated heat conducting compartment
17 which contains a liquid, such as freon, which boils at a temperature between 30
-40°C. Heat is transported to the fins by evaporation of the liquid and its subsequent
condensation on the fin-bearing portions of said compartment. In order to ensure proper
heat exchange, the upper front portion 19 of the casing of the auxiliary cooling device
has to be perforated and may at times even be removed.
[0033] The thermo-electric element requires a supply of DC current which is preferably provided
by an external power supply (not shown) which may be the same as that providing power
to the apparatus.
[0034] While in the embodiment shown in Fig. 6 heat is removed by convection, in the embodiment
shown in Fig. 7, heat is removed by means of a small dual-sided blower fan 20 (only
one side of which is seen in this view). As a result of the blower fan's rotation,
air enters through opening 21 and flows through conduit 10 22 over heat exchange pins
23 and t-hen after heating, out through opening 24 designed to direct the air flow
upwards to avoid skin heating.
1. An auxiliary device (5) for a hair removing apparatus (1) capable of reducing sensitivity
of the skin to pain prior to - hair removal, comprising a cooling element (6) adapted
to cooling the skin from which hair is to be removed.
2. A hair removing apparatus (1) characterized in that it comprises an auxiliary device
(5) according to claim 1.
3. An apparatus according to claim 2, wherein either the attachment of the cooling
element to the body of the auxiliary device and/or the attachment of the auxiliary
device to the casing of said apparatus is elastic.
4. An auxiliary device according to claim 3, wherein in a slack state of said elastic
attachment, or when light pressure is applied, the lower, skin touching surface (6)
of the cooling element is at a lower level, in relation to the said apparatus's frame
of reference than that of the hair-removing unit (3) of the apparatus, and is capable
of changing its relative level in consequence of the application of force on its said
surface.
5. An apparatus according to any one of claims 2 to 4, wherein the auxiliary device
(7) comprises a cold accumulating cooling element (9).
6. An apparatus according to claim 5, wherein said element comprises a small compartment
(9), the bottom portion of which (11) is heat conductive, and which contains a liquid
capable of changing its liquid to solid phase at a desired temperature.
7. An apparatus according to claim 6, wherein said liquid changes its phase below
0°C.
8. An apparatus according to claim 7, wherein said liquid is selected from the group
consisting of alcohol - water mixtures and an aqueous salt solutions.
9. An apparatus according to any one of claims 6 to 8, wherein said compartment also
contains a heat conducting particulate filler.
10. An apparatus according to any one of claims 5 to 9, wherein said auxiliary device
is detachable.
11. An apparatus according to any one of claims 2 to 4, wherein the auxiliary device
comprises a thermo-electric cooling element (14) and an attached heat conducting body
(15) bearing heat exchange fins or pins (16).
12. An apparatus according to claim 11, wherein the heat conducting body comprises
an internal compartment (17) partially filled with a liquid (18) which has a relatively
low boiling temperature.
13. An apparatus according to claims 11 or 12, wherein the auxiliary device comprises
a small blower fan (20) for the removal of accumulated heat from heat exchange fins
or pins (23).