[0001] The present invention relates to a footwear sole construction as presented in the
preamble of the accompanying claim 1.
[0002] In the soles of the footwear, air-containing porous plastic has been used as heat-insulating
material, which plastic has poor thermal conductivity and which therefore serves as
an insulator. The construction of the insulator is so dense that the convection, i.e.,
in this case the air flow through the insulator, is prevented. A material of this
type is most commonly of foamed polyurethane, EVA (ethylene-vinylacetate) foam or
latex foam. Another generally used solution is to "lighten" the somewhat thick sole
construction by shaping projections on the sole surface which is against the foot,
between which projections there is left material and weight saving air pocket which,
at the same time, is a heat-insulating construction.
[0003] Due to the cellular construction of the plastic used, the proportion of the heat
radiation in the heat transfer increases, because the heat radiation penetrates easily
the gas pore or the air pocket, although conductivity and convection are insignificant.
To prevent the heat loss caused by heat radiation, a reflective layer can have been
glued on the surface of the insulating layer, which reflective layer is most commonly
a thin metal film, e.g. a lustrous aluminium foil. A lustrous metal surface well reflects
the heat radiation coming via the insulating layer and it should thus prevent heat
loss by radiation.
[0004] In prior art solutions, the reflective layer is attached to the insulating layer
by gluing. Although the glue layer is thin (0.02-0.03 mm) and e.g. visually seen it
is transparent, it can affect the heat-insulating properties. Many materials used
as a glue absorb well heat radiation in the wavelength area of 8 to 15 µm, and the
quantity that is absorbed can well exceed even 80 %. Also the radiation reflecting
back from the reflecting surface of the reflective layer is absorbed when returning
to the glue layer, so that over 95 % of the heat radiation can be absorbed even to
a thin glue layer. The quantity of the heat radiation returning to the insulating
layer can thus be very small. Hence, the problem is that the materials of the reflective
layer also conduct well heat, wherein when the heat is transferred by conducting from
the glue layer to the reflective layer, heat is transferred out exactly due to the
good heat conductivity of the reflective layer, e.g. to the glue layer on the opposite
side of the reflective layer.
[0005] These problems are present both in situations in which it is desired to protect the
foot in the footwear against cold or against heat surrounding the sole from below.
In the former case, the heat should be prevented from transferring out from the interior
of the footwear, and in the latter case from outside into the footwear. A metal foil
glued to the insulating layer does not operate, i.e., reflect heat radiation, as planned.
[0006] British Patent application GB-A-2137866 discloses a separate insole in which a surface
which is facing the inner sole is made of polyester coated with a metal film, and
between the outermost metal surface and the inner sole there is an additional intermediate
layer, having a thickness of 1 mm, attached to the metal surface, perforated and made
of polyethylene. The polyester layer (PET) on the side of the foot behaves in the
same manner as the glue layer; it conducts well heat, and the openness of the intermediate
layer facing the inner sole subjects the metal layer to mechanical damages and the
heat is capable of transferring partially by convection through holes, particularly
in the case of a separate Insole, which will move during the use.
[0007] Document EP-A-0 042 138 shows an insole where a film of aluminized polymeric material
is placed on the underside of a central layer of elastomeric material .
[0008] Document EP-A-0 182 245 describes a shoe having a heat reflecting layer made of Aluminium.
[0009] The object of the invention is to eliminate the above mentioned disadvantages and
to present a sole construction with improved heat insulation properties, the sole
construction being most commonly an insole used between the inner lining and the wear
sole. To attain this object the sole construction is mainly characterized in what
is presented in the characterizing portion of the accompanying claim 1. The reflective
surface of the reflective layer is attached directly to material of an insulating
layer without an intermediate absorbent glue layer. The significance of this construction
has until now remained undiscovered, but it can be proved that the advantage achieved
by means of it is distinctly to be noticed in connection with insulating layers permeable
to heat radiation. The construction has two such reflective surfaces facing opposite
directions so that they can act in both directions.
[0010] In the following, the invention will be described in more detail with reference to
the accompanying drawings, wherein
- Fig. 1
- illustrates a cross section of a conventional construction and phenomena taking place
therein,
- Fig. 2
- illustrates a cross section of a construction in accordance with the invention and
phenomena taking place therein,
- Fig. 3
- shows how the construction in accordance with the invention is located in the footwear,
and
- Fig. 4
- shows a second alternative of the sole construction.
[0011] In Fig. 1 the reference numeral 1 refers generally to an insulating layer having
the predominant task of preventing heat transfer from taking place by conduction.
The insulating layers employed advantageously in the construction of the invention
are discussed later. To this layer there is attached, by using a glue layer 2, a reflective
layer 3 made of such material that its surface reflects more than 90 %, preferably
more than 95 % of the heat radiation coming thereto in the wave-length area of 8 to
15 µm. Such materials include metals, and the most employed material is aluminium.
The reflective layer 3 can be further attached to its other side to another construction
by means of a glue layer 2. The above described heat transfer phenomena are further
illustrated schematically by arrows, of which an arrow 6 refers to incoming heat radiation,
an arrow 7 to reflected heat radiation, arrows 8 to absorbed heat radiation and arrows
9 to heat transfer taking place between the layers by means of conduction.
[0012] Fig. 2 illustrates a construction according to the invention, in which, as in Fig.
1, the thickness of the layers has been exaggerated for the sake of clarity. The insulating
layer 1 is generally of plastic material with good heat-radiation permeability but
poor heat conductivity being characterized in the employed layer thickness by a heat-radiation
permeability of 40 to 90 % taken as average in a wavelength area of 8 to 15 µ m, particularly
in the wavelength range between 9 and 10 µm, which corresponds to foot temperature.
Furthermore, a material of this type is characterized by the fact that, particularly
compared to an ordinary polyethylene-terephthalate (polyester) of the same thickness,
it is in the employed layer thickness characterized by at least twice, preferably
at least three times, higher heat-radiation permeability in the wavelength range of
9 to 10 µm. The material is advantageously of some expanded polyolefin having a cellular
construction brought about by orientation. Most advantageously suitable are such films
which have a thickness not exceeding 0.1 mm, and most commonly in an area between
0.025 and 0.06 mm and having a closed-cell cellular construction brought about by
cavitation technique. One suitable film material is polypropylene, and applicable
for this purpose is e.g. a commercial OPP-film, which is known from other contexts.
A reflective layer 4 is attached directly on the surface of the insulating layer 1,
wherein a reflective surface 4a crucial to the heat-insulation has a direct contact
with the material of the insulating layer 1. It is important that the interface is
sharp so that the material having the above mentioned properties of the insulating
layer 1 changes at the interface layer to the material of the reflective layer 4 without
an intermediate layer having distinctly different properties from those of the insulating
layer. Non-glue attachment of this kind to the insulating layer can be obtained e.g.
by vacuum evaporating the material of the reflective layer 4 onto the surface of the
insulating layer 1, and this can be obtained by a known vacuum evaporation technique
of metals, by which technique plastic materials are metallized. Also other methods
can be considered for attaching the film directly onto the surface of the insulating
layer, e.g. a closed cellular construction could be formed directly on top of the
metal film.
[0013] Due to this construction the heat radiation (arrow 6) is reflected almost entirely
(arrow 7) from the reflective surface 4a, because there exists no heat-absorbing material
between the insulating layer 1 and the reflective layer 4, and only the portion (arrow
8) determined by the properties of the material of the reflective layer 4 is absorbed
and is transferred away by conducting. E.g. the emission coefficient of a vacuum-evaporated
aluminium film is 0.04 at temperature of 20°C, which corresponds to a reflectivity
of 96 %.
[0014] The thickness of the reflective layer 4 is most advantageously not more than 50 nm,
which is a relatively thick layer in vacuum-evaporation technique, corresponding to
a basis weight of 0.15 g/m
2 for aluminium.
[0015] Further, the insulating layer 1 is characterized by the fact that it is a film having
a uniform macroscopic construction and covering the reflective layer 4, i.e., it is
closed having no holes in the middle through which the heat could pass through the
film by convection, the air operating as the medium, and through which the reflective
layer would be subject to damages.
[0016] The above mentioned layers constitute the minimum conditions for the invention to
be functional. Provided that it is desired to maintain heat in the interior of the
footwear, the insulating layer 1 is in the insole on the side of the inner lining
and the reflective layer 4a faces consequently the inner linings. In case it is desired
to protect the foot from hot surroundings, e.g. the footwear being intended for walking
on hot grounds, the insulating layer 1 is positioned in the insole on the side of
the wear sole and the reflective surface 4a of the reflective layer faces consequently
the wear sole. However, Fig. 2 shows at the same time a two-sided construction according
to the invention which construction can be used for preventing the heat from transferring
from both sides. In this case the construction has a second insulating layer 1 and
a reflective layer 4 attached directly thereon, the layers being situated in a mirror
symmetrical manner in relation to the first layered construction in a manner that
the reflective layers 4 are situated in the middle of the construction and their reflective
surfaces 4a reflecting heat radiation are facing to the opposite directions towards
their own insulating layers 1. These layered constructions comprising an insulating
layer 1 and a reflective layer 4 can be attached together by attaching the reflective
layers 4 at their free surfaces together, e.g. by means of an intermediate glue layer
2, which has no disadvantageous effect in this position. Also in case of the two-sided
construction only a small proportion of the heat radiation coming through one insulation
layer 1 is transferred by conducting away through the reflective layers 4 and the
glue layer 2 and is radiated to a second insulating layer (arrow 10). Fig. 2 further
shows how the insulating layers 1 are joined at their outer surfaces to the rest of
the sole construction 5, e.g. to an ordinary insole material, and at this point a
glue line also can be used for joining. The inner lining can serve as the layer 5
above, and beneath there can be the uppermost blank piece of the insole, having the
size of the shoe sole. As for the use and manufacturing, the two-layer construction
includes the advantage that the inner thin reflective layers 4 are well protected
and the outermost insulating layers 1 function as attachment surfaces with the other
layers. Particularly in the insole, but also elsewhere in the shoe sole, the thin
layer 4 is not subject to bending to the degree that it would be damaged.
[0017] The insulating layer 1 can be used for separating the reflective layer 4a from such
layers of the sole construction which have a distinctly poorer heat-radiation permeability
than the insulating layer 1 or which are practically non-permeable to heat radiation.
[0018] The above-mentioned two-sided protection can also be obtained by means of a construction
having the reflective layer 4 attached on both sides of the insulating layer 1 in
accordance with the invention, wherein on both sides of the insulating layer there
is a reflective surface 4a directly against it, which reflective surface is capable
of receiving the heat radiation coming through the insulating layer 1 without intermediate
absorbent material. The glue line is also in this situation elsewhere than between
the reflecting surface and the insulating layer. On the other hand, the heat radiation
in this construction is low as such, because the reflective layer 4 has a poor emissivity
and it does not radiate much when warmed up.
[0019] Fig. 3 shows a cross section of a footwear in which the sole construction is situated.
The construction is most advantageously a layered construction situated close to the
interior of the footwear, in the example of Fig. 3 a fixed insole 11, to which the
vamp or upper 12 is attached by using methods generally known in footwear industry.
An outsole to which the ready-made vamp part is connected by means of a soling method
is denoted by reference numeral 13, and the filling which is left between the insole
11 and the outsole 13 is denoted by reference numeral 14. The entity constituted of
one or several insulating layers 1 and reflective layers 4 is placed to a correct
position in relation to the direction of the incoming heat radiation, preferably in
the middle of the insole, wherein they are supported and protected by its layers.
[0020] Fig. 4 shows yet another sole construction, i.e., a separate insole 15 or insert
positioned on top of the inner sole (interior bottom) of the footwear. Also here the
layered construction composed of the insulating layer 1 and the reflective layer 2,
most advantageously the two-sided construction of Fig. 2, is situated preferably in
the middle, wherein on its other side there is a layer having the suitable properties
and placed against the foot sole, and on the other side there is a layer placed against
the inner sole.
[0021] The invention is further illustrated with the following two Examples, which are not
to restrict the scope of protection.
Example 1.
[0022] The effect of the glue layer on heat reflection was measured by means of a long-wave
camera. The test included three samples, the order of the samples from the top to
the bottom being:
- Sample 1:
- OPP-film - vacuum-evaporated aluminium layer - glue layer - OPP-film.
- Sample 2:
- OPP-film - glue layer - vacuum-evaporated aluminium layer - OPP-film.
- Sample 3:
- OPP-film - glue layer - OPP-film.
[0023] The OPP-film is a biaxially oriented polypropylene film. The samples were placed
side by side on a surface of room temperature (23°C). On the other side of the samples
a vessel of warm water (36°C) was placed to serve as the heat source and on the other
side a heat camera was placed by which the temperatures of the heat source and the
sample surfaces were measured. The surface of the sample 1 showed a temperature of
27°C and the surfaces of the samples 2 and 3 both showed a temperature of 25°C and
the surface below showed a temperature of 23°C. According to the measurement, the
glue layer between the OPP-film and the aluminium surface prevented the heat-reflecting
effect of the aluminium and the reflectivity showed the same value as the sample without
the aluminium layer.
Example 2.
[0024] Various insoles were manufactured for tests. The basic materials were common commercial
insole materials. An element according to the invention was laminated to a part of
the samples. The warmth of the different solutions were measured by employing a device
in which the sample to be measured was pressed against an aluminium surface in a cold
weather room (-10°C) by means of a heating element constructed for this purpose. The
heating element was heated at a constant power and the temperature was measured on
the surface of the sample after the stabilization time of two hours. The better the
insulation was, the higher the temperature that was measured. In the test, the insole
provided with the element of the invention was 2°C warmer than a corresponding construction
without the element (8.9°C versus 10.8°C). When a construction corresponding to the
element and having the same thickness but having no reflective layer was laminated
to a corresponding insole construction, the insulation properties were improved but
distinctively less than when the construction was provided with a reflective layer.
1. A footwear sole construction having:
- an insulating layer (1) permeable to heat radiation;
- a reflective layer (4) attached directly on a surface of said insulating layer (1);
the insulating layer (1) and the reflective layer (4) attached thereto being placed
between the inner lining and the wear sole,
characterized In that the sole construction further comprises:
- a second reflective layer (4) directly attached on said insulating layer or on a
second insulating layer (1), wherein each reflective surface (4a) of each reflective
layer (4) faces opposite directions and each forms a sharp interface with the material
of the respective insulating layer (1) without an intermediate absorbent glue layer,
such a construction reflecting heat radiation incoming from opposite directions of
the sole.
2. A sole construction as set forth in claim 1, characterized in that said two reflective layers (4) are attached against each other, wherein the insulating
layers (1) directly attached to them are outermost and serve as attaching surfaces
to the rest of the construction.
3. A sole construction as set forth in claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the reflective layer (4) is a metal foil attached to the insulating layer (1) by
vacuum evaporation.
4. A sole construction as set forth in any of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that it is a fixed insole (11).
5. A sole construction as set forth in any of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that it is a separate insole (15).
6. A sole construction as set forth in any of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that the insulating layer (1) is a uniform plastic film having a thickness not exceeding
0.1 mm.
7. A sole construction as set forth in claim 6, characterized in that the insulating layer (1) is an oriented closed-cell cellular film.
1. Ein Sohlenaufbau für Schuhwaren, umfassend:
• eine Isolationsschicht (1), welche für Wärmestrahlung durchlässig ist;
• eine Reflexionsschicht (4), welche direkt auf einer Oberfläche der Isolationsschicht
(1) angebracht ist;
wobei sich die Isolationsschicht (1) und die daran angebrachte Reflexionsschicht
(4) zwischen dem Innenfutter und der Laufsohle befinden,
dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass der Sohlenaufbau ferner beinhaltet:
• eine zweite Reflexionsschicht (4), welche direkt auf der Isolationsschicht oder
auf einer zweiten Isolationsschicht (1) angebracht ist,
wobei jede reflektierende Oberfläche (4a) einer jeden Reflexionsschicht (4) in entgegengesetzte
Richtungen gerichtet ist und jeweils eine scharfe Grenzfläche zum Material der jeweiligen
Isolationsschicht (1) ohne dazwischenliegende absorbierende Klebeschicht bildet,
so dass ein derartiger Aufbau Wärmestrahlung, welche von entgegengesetzten Richtungen
der Sohle einfällt, reflektiert.
2. Ein Sohlenaufbau nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die beiden Reflexionsschichten (4) aneinander angebracht sind, wobei die direkt an
ihnen angebrachten Isolationsschichten (1) zuäusserst sind und als Oberflächen zur
Befestigung des verbleibenden Aufbaus dienen.
3. Ein Sohlenaufbau nach Anspruch 1 oder 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Reflexionsschicht (4) ein Metallbelag ist, welcher auf der Reflexionsschicht
durch Aufdampfen im Vakuum aufgebracht ist.
4. Ein Sohlenaufbau nach irgendeinem der Ansprüche 1 bis 3, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass er eine Brandsohle (11) ist.
5. Ein Sohlenaufbau nach irgendeinem der Ansprüche 1 bis 3, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass er eine Einlegesohle (15) ist.
6. Ein Sohlenaufbau nach irgendeinem der Ansprüche 1 bis 5, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Isolationsschicht (1) eine gleichförmige Kunststoffschicht mit einer Dicke von
nicht mehr als 0.1 mm ist.
7. Ein Sohlenaufbau nach Anspruch 6, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Isolationsschicht (1) ein ausgerichteter geschlossenzelliger Schaumstoff ist.
1. Ensemble de semelle pour chaussures comportant :
- une couche isolante (1) perméable à un rayonnement thermique,
- une couche réfléchissante (4) fixée directement sur une surface de ladite couche
isolante (1),
la couche isolante (1) et la couche réfléchissante (4) fixée à celle-ci étant
placées entre le revêtement intérieur et la semelle d'usure,
caractérisé en ce que l'ensemble de semelle comprend en outre :
- une seconde couche réfléchissante (4) directement fixée sur ladite couche isolante
ou sur une seconde couche isolante (1), où chaque surface réfléchissante (4a) de chaque
couche réfléchissante (4) est orientée dans des directions opposées et chacune forme
une interface marquée avec le matériau de la couche isolante respective (1) sans couche
de colle absorbante intermédiaire,
un tel ensemble réfléchissant un rayonnement thermique provenant de directions
opposées de la semelle.
2. Ensemble de semelle selon la revendication 1, caractérisé en ce que lesdites deux couches réfléchissantes (4) sont fixées l'une contre l'autre, dans
lequel les couches isolantes (1) qui leur sont directement fixées sont les plus à
l'extérieur et servent de surface de fixation au reste de l'ensemble.
3. Ensemble de semelle selon la revendication 1 ou 2, caractérisé en ce que la couche réfléchissante (4) est une feuille métallique fixée à la couche isolante
(1) par évaporation sous vide.
4. Ensemble de semelle selon l'une quelconque des revendications 1 à 3, caractérisé en ce qu'il s'agit d'une semelle intérieure fixe (11).
5. Ensemble de semelle selon l'une quelconque des revendications1 à 3, caractérisé en ce qu'il s'agit d'une semelle intérieure séparée (15).
6. Ensemble de semelle selon l'une quelconque des revendications 1 à 5, caractérisé en ce que la couche isolante (1) est un film de matière plastique uniforme ayant une épaisseur
ne dépassant pas 0,1 mm.
7. Ensemble de semelle selon la revendication 6, caractérisé en ce que la couche isolante (1) est un film cellulaire orienté à cellules fermées.