The disclosed concept relates to adapters. The disclosed concept also relates to bottling line arrangements including adapters. The disclosed concept further relates to methods of filling and sealing in a bottling line using a bottling line arrangement.
Systems for filling and capping round bottles and vials are very well known. Such systems are designed for automatic filling and include conveyers for moving the bottles from a filling station to a capping station. The conveyers are typically designed to provide turns from one station to the next. Stations can include filling, capping, labelling, shrink banding, and sometimes other functions. Typical bottling lines are not capable of filling and capping flip-top vials efficiently and at high throughput rates. Such typical bottling lines do not include means to orient bottles rotationally. Flip-top vials need to be angled at the hinge to ensure that the cap moves only toward a fully closed position when touched and must be predictably oriented and spaced. Such vials must flow by conveyor track and not tip over, must be open, and must be predictably oriented and spaced.
Until this time a solution to the problem of filling and capping flip-top vials on conventional bottling lines in a very cost efficient manner has not been available.
As one aspect of the disclosed concept, an adapter configured to hold a flip-top vial is provided. The vial includes a body and a lid. The body of the vial has a base and a sidewall extending therefrom. The body defines an interior including a product space configured for housing at least one product and having an opening leading to the interior. The lid is configured to be attached to the sidewall by a hinge. The adapter comprises a receiving portion having an opening configured to receive the body, and a base portion extending from the receiving portion. The base portion has a shelf portion proximate the opening. The shelf portion is configured to engage the lid of the vial when the lid is in a predetermined opened position in order to maintain the lid in the predetermined opened position with respect to the body.
As another aspect of the disclosed concept, a bottling line arrangement is provided. The bottling line arrangement comprises the aforementioned adapter, a holder, and the flip-top vial. The body is located in the receiving portion. The adapter is located in the holder.
As another aspect of the disclosed concept, a method of filling and sealing in a bottling line utilizing the aforementioned bottling line arrangement is provided. The method comprises the steps of inserting the body of the vial into the receiving portion of the adapter, disposing the lid of the vial on the shelf portion, the lid being in the predetermined opened position, filling the product space of the body of the vial with the at least one product, and moving the lid off of the shelf portion and onto the sidewall of the body in order to seal the at least one product within the vial.
Exemplary embodiments of the present disclosed concept are shown in the enclosed drawings as follows:
As employed herein, the term “component” shall mean a single unitary piece or element that does not require separate assembly steps. For example and without limitation, a molded piece is a “component.” Additionally, a piece that is manufactured by overmolding or co-molding one element onto another element is a “component.” However, a piece that comprises several elements that must be separately assembled together is not a “component.”
As employed herein, the statement that two or more parts or components “engage” one another shall mean that the parts exert a force against one another either directly or through one or more intermediate parts or components.
As employed herein, the term “number” shall mean one or an integer greater than one.
Adapter 2 includes a receiving portion 4, a base portion 8 extending from receiving portion 4, and a tail portion 20 extending from receiving portion 4 away from base portion 8. Base portion 8 and tail portion 20 are located on opposing sides of receiving portion 4. Receiving portion 4 has an opening 6, and base portion 8 has a shelf portion 10 proximate opening 6. As shown in
In operation, opening 6 of receiving portion 4 is configured to receive body 102 of vial 100 such that body 102 is located in receiving portion 4. In this position, tubular-shaped surface 12 of receiving portion 4 is located external and is concentric with respect to sidewall 106 of body 102. Additionally, shelf portion 10 of adapter 2 is configured to engage lid 120 of vial 100 when lid 120 is in a predetermined opened position in order to maintain lid 120 in the predetermined opened position with respect to body 102. Accordingly, vial 100 is configured to be maintained by adapter 2 in the predetermined opened position with lid 120 engaging shelf portion 10. In one exemplary embodiment, lid 120 of vial 100 is not biased toward a closed position, with respect to body 102. That is, lid 120 may remain in an opened position (e.g., without limitation, disposed generally at an angle between 160 and 200 degrees with respect to opening 110 of body 102 (see
More specifically, shelf portion 10 includes a first wall portion 14, a second wall portion 15 located opposite first wall portion 14, and a platform 16 extending between and being located substantially perpendicular to first and second wall portions 14,15. When vial 100 is in the predetermined opened position, lid 120 engages and extends between first and second wall portions 14,15. As such, engagement between lid 120 and first and second wall portions 14,15 prevents such movement. First and second wall portions 14,15, and platform 16, each extend from proximate opening 6 of receiving portion 4 away from closed bottom 11 of receiving portion. Accordingly, as shown in
Adapter 2 is also configured to be employed in a relatively streamlined automation process. That is, when multiple substantially identical adapters are used to fill and seal multiple bottles in a bottling line, the geometry of each individual adapter allows them to be conveniently moved along conveyor belts and the like. Specifically, when used in automation, each tail portion (e.g., tail portion 20) of an adapter is configured to engage a corresponding distal exterior surface (e.g., exterior surface 22) of an adjacent adapter. In this manner, when the adapters are moved on conveyor belts and take turns going from station to station, adjacent adapters can advantageously have appropriate space between them, and can make the turns smoothly due to the concave (or convex) nature of their distal exterior surfaces. Furthermore, the tail portions are advantageously able to achieve this function by virtue of their relatively narrow width, as compared to the diameter of the receiving portion. In one illustrative embodiment, and as shown in
Additionally, adapter 2 has a mechanism to allow vial 100 to be easily inserted into and removed from receiving portion 4. Specifically, as shown, receiving portion 4 has a number of thru holes 5. It will be appreciated that rather than having a partial vacuum occur when a vial is inserted into a receiving portion, thru holes minimize such an undesirable situation by providing a pathway for air to enter and exit the receiving portion. As a result, vial 100 can be relatively easily inserted into and removed from receiving portion 4 with minimal gas pressures inhibiting such movement.
Adapter 2 is also structured to allow lid 120 to move to a closed position in a relatively efficient manner Specifically, as shown in
In one illustrative embodiment, a tool 300 including a roller 302 is employed to move lid 120. As such, and as can be seen when viewing vial 100 from a first position to a subsequent position,
In one illustrative embodiment, and referring to
In one illustrative embodiment, and referring to
Accordingly, it will be appreciated that a method of filling and sealing in a bottling line utilizing bottling line arrangement 200 includes the steps of inserting body 102 of vial 100 into receiving portion 4 of adapter 2, locating lid 120 of vial 100 on shelf portion 10 with lid 120 being in the predetermined opened position, filling the product space of body 102 of vial 100 with the product, and moving lid 120 off of shelf portion 10 and onto sidewall 106 of body 102 in order to seal the product within vial 100. The method may further include moving lid 120 off of shelf portion 10 and onto sidewall 106 to put lid 120 in a closed position. The method may also include applying heat shrink material 500, optionally a polymeric film, over lid 120 when lid 120 is in the closed position, and heating heat shrink material 500 in order to cause heat shrink material 500 to contract over lid 120 and sidewall 106, thereby forming a tamper evident mechanism. Finally, the method may also include filling and sealing a vial of a second bottling line arrangement configured the same as bottling line arrangement 200, wherein tail portion 20 engages the base portion of the adapter of the second bottling line arrangement in order to provide space between adapter 2 and the adapter of the second bottling line arrangement.
It will thus be appreciated that the disclosed concept provides for a relatively efficient and economical manner to fill, cap, and seal a vial. Specifically, known methods typically require manual labor to hold vials during filling and/or involve significantly elaborate grippers that grip vials during the filing and capping process. As such, employing multiple adapters, each holding a corresponding vial, provides a novel method to streamline filling, capping, and sealing vials. That is, vials can efficiently be filled, capped and sealed at relatively high throughput rates.
Furthermore adapter 2 uniquely allows the use of standard bottling lines and equipment for filling and capping flip-top vials, which are typically of a smaller diameter than standard bottle sizes. Adapter 2 and related components described herein properly orient flip-top vials for automated capping on typical bottling lines, thereby obviating the need for major equipment adjustments to the bottling line of the concept disclosed herein. Accordingly, adapter 2 helps vial 100 maintain proper orientation when open for filling, facilitates hassle-free travel down conveyors and while making turns on the line and assists with automated closure. While standard round bottles have no need to be maintained in any particular rotational position on automated lines, that is not the case with flip-top vials. However, adapter 2 properly orients the flip-top vial to prevent axial rotation during transport on the conveyor. Accordingly, this allows companies with standard bottling equipment to utilize the same equipment for flip-top vial filling and capping with little modification or capital investment.
The present disclosed concept has been described above with the aid of functional building blocks illustrating the implementation of specified functions and relationships thereof. The boundaries of these functional building blocks have been arbitrarily defined herein for the convenience of the description. Alternate boundaries can be defined so long as the specified functions and relationships thereof are appropriately performed.
The foregoing description of the specific embodiments will so fully reveal the general nature of the disclosed concept that others can, by applying knowledge within the skill of the art, readily modify and/or adapt for various applications such specific embodiments, without undue experimentation, without departing from the general concept of the present disclosed concept. Therefore, such adaptations and modifications are intended to be within the meaning and range of equivalents of the disclosed embodiments, based on the teaching and guidance presented herein, it is to be understood that the phraseology or terminology herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation, such that the terminology or phraseology of the present specification is to be interpreted by the skilled artisan in light of the teachings and guidance.
The breadth and scope of the present disclosed concept should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.
This application is a U.S. National Phase of International Application No. PCT/US2018/019309 filed Feb. 23, 2018, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/463,117 filed Feb. 24, 2017, which are each incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2018/019309 | 2/23/2018 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2018/156823 | 8/30/2018 | WO | A |
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