Materials (Apr 2021)

Towards Customized Footwear with Improved Comfort

  • Rafaela Teixeira,
  • Carlos Coelho,
  • João Oliveira,
  • Joana Gomes,
  • Vera Vaz Pinto,
  • Maria José Ferreira,
  • João Miguel Nóbrega,
  • Alexandre Ferreira da Silva,
  • Olga Sousa Carneiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14071738
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. 1738

Abstract

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A methodology enabling the customization of shoes for comfort improvement is proposed and assessed. For this aim, 3D printed graded density inserts were placed in one of the critical plantar pressure zones of conventional insoles, the heel. A semi-automated routine was developed to design the 3D inserts ready for printing, which comprises three main stages: (i) the definition of the number of areas with different mesh density, (ii) the generation of 2D components with continuous graded mesh density, and (iii) the generation of a 3D component having the same 2D base mesh. The adequacy of the mesh densities used in the inserts was previously assessed through compression tests, using uniform mesh density samples. Slippers with different pairs of inserts embedded in their insoles were mechanically characterized, and their comfort was qualitatively assessed by a panel of users. All users found a particular pair, or a set, of prototype slippers more comfortable than the original ones, taken as reference, but their preferences were not consensual. This emphasizes the need for shoe customization, and the usefulness of the proposed methodology to achieve such a goal.

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