This invention relates to vaporizers, and more particularly to electrically activated vaporizing fragrance emitters.
Various devices have long been used in households to provide pleasant smells. More recently, electronic vaporizers such as the type shown in Ruffolo et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,236,807 have been developed to dispense a more uniformly intense fragrance by vaporizing a fragrance infused liquid from a container such as a bottle having a sealed upper spout through which passes a wick which, through capillarity, draws up an amount of liquid from the bottle. The upper tip of the wick is exposed to a heater which volatilizes the liquid into the ambient air.
The bottle carrying the fragrant liquid can be mounted to the emitter through a number of means including a screw-type receptacle which engages threads on the outer surface of the spout of the bottle. Unfortunately, such a screw-type threaded engagement can limit the range of bottles which will properly engage the threads.
In order to address the variability of bottle sizes, Yip et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,950,607 provides a spring-loaded clamp system for grasping the neck of a bottle having a diameter of between about 14 mm and 24 mm.
Yip et al. uses movable blocking plates to adjust the amount of vapor exiting the device. This can be inefficient because the liquid in the bottle is still exhausted within roughly the same amount of time, even though not all vapor has exited the housing. It is assumed some vapor may condense in the inner parts of the device when ventilation is restricted by the blocking plates.
Therefore, there is a need for an electronic fragrance emitters which addresses one or more of the above problems or inadequacies.
The principal and secondary objects of the invention are to provide an improved electronic fragrance emitter. These and other objects are achieved by providing an emitter including an automatically adjustable container mounting structure.
In some embodiments there is provided an apparatus for emitting a fragrance, said apparatus comprises: a housing; a container carrying a supply of liquid fragrance, wherein said container comprises a wick having a substantially vertical axis; a heater movably mounted to said housing; wherein said heater comprises an electrical heating element; a docking station located on said housing releasably mounting said container so that said wick is intersected by a vertical plane intersecting said housing; wherein said docking station comprises a first support tab movable along said plane.
In some embodiments said housing comprises a vent intersected by said plane.
In some embodiments said first support tab is biased toward a first radially inward position on said plane.
In some embodiments said first support tab comprises: a first cantilevered beam having a fixed end secured to said housing, and a free end; a hook structure extending radially inwardly with respect to said axis from said free end; wherein said hook structure comprises a concave arcuate tip oriented to bear against said container.
In some embodiments said docking station further comprises: a pair of angularly spaced apart guide tabs substantially straddling said plane; wherein each of said guide tabs is biased toward said axis.
In some embodiments said guide tabs are substantially equidistantly angularly spaced apart from said plane.
In some embodiments said guide tabs are angularly spaced apart from one another at an angle of between 110 degrees and 130 degrees.
In some embodiments said guide tabs have a substantially equivalent resiliency whereby their combined biasing force acting upon said bottle drives said wick toward a position on said plane.
In some embodiments said first support tabs and said guide tabs mount said bottle in absence of any additional structure contacting said bottle.
In some embodiments said first cantilevered beam can deflect angularly at least 5 degrees.
In some embodiments said apparatus further comprises: a second support tab; a third support tab; wherein each of said support tabs is resiliently cantileveredly connected to said docking station; and, wherein said first, second and third support tabs are angularly spaced apart from one another.
In some embodiments said first, second and third movable support tabs are symmetric about a vertical plane bisecting said body and said container.
In some embodiments said heater further comprises a carriage structure slidingly mounted to said housing and moveable in a direction along said plane.
In some embodiments said carriage structure can move between a first position proximal to said wick and a second position distal from said wick.
In some embodiments said first position and said second position are located on said plane.
In some embodiments said apparatus further comprises a hand-manipulable button connected to said carriage and extending from a surface of said body for moving said carriage between said first and second positions.
In some embodiments said heater further comprises: a ceramic cradle in thermal communication with said heating element; wherein said cradle comprises a substantially U-shaped open-ended nook formed between a pair of spaced apart arms; wherein said open end is oriented along said plane; wherein said arms straddle said axis while said heater is located in a first position and do not straddle said axis while said heater is located in a second position.
In some embodiments there is provided that in an electronic fragrance emitter for mounting an heating the wick of a fragrant liquid-carrying container, an improvement which comprises: a bottle mounting station; at least one radially movable support tab oriented to engage a groove on said container; a carriage comprising a heater element; said carriage being movable between a first location disengaging said wick and a second location engaging said wick;
In some embodiments there is provided a method for mounting a fragrance container to an electronic fragrance emitter, said method comprises: removing a first liquid fragrance container having a first neck diameter from a docking station on said emitter; selecting a second liquid fragrance container having a second neck diameter different from said first neck diameter; and, inserting said second liquid fragrance container into said docking station; wherein said inserting comprises: urging said second liquid fragrance container toward a plane intersecting said emitter; wherein said urging comprises: guiding said second liquid fragrance container using a pair of resilient guide tabs straddling said plane; latching said second liquid fragrance container using a support tab biased in a direction along said plane and opposing said guide tabs.
The text of the claims is incorporated herein by reference as describing features in some embodiments.
In this specification, the references to top, bottom, upward, downward, upper, lower, above, below, vertical, horizontal, sideways, lateral, back, front, etc. can be used to provide a clear frame of reference for the various structures with respect to other structures while the fragrance emitter is oriented to be installed on a wall-mounted electrical socket as shown in
The term “substantially” can be used in this specification because manufacturing imprecision and inaccuracies can lead to non-symmetricity and other inexactitudes in the shape, dimensioning and orientation of various structures. Further, use of “substantially” in connection with certain geometrical shapes, letter shapes, such as “U-shaped” and orientations, such as “parallel” and “perpendicular”, can be given as a guide to generally describe the function of various structures, and to allow for slight departures from exact mathematical geometrical shapes, letter shapes, and orientations, while providing adequately similar function. Those skilled in the art will readily appreciate the degree to which a departure can be made from the mathematically exact geometrical references.
If used in this specification, the word “axial” is meant to refer to directions, movement, or forces acting substantially parallel with or along a respective axis, and not to refer to rotational nor radial nor angular directions, movement or forces, nor torsional forces unless otherwise noted.
In this specification the units “millimeter” or “millimeters” can be abbreviated “mm”.
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The ceramic cradle 24 can include a substantially U-shaped, open-ended nook 31 formed between a pair of spaced apart arms 32,33. The nook can be oriented so that its open end opens in the direction of the plane P and toward the position of the wick. Further, the nook can be sized to nest the wick when the carriage 25 is in its forward position so that the arms straddle the wick and provide heat to a greater surface area of the wick increasing volatilization. The laterally deepest part of the nook can have a substantially cylindrically shaped sidewall 35 to more closely nest the substantially cylindrical upper end portion of the wick. The length of the arms and thus the depth of the nook can be selected so that the arms do not straddle the wick while the carriage is located in its rearward position. The bottom edge of the nook can include a beveled surface 34 to facilitate vertical insertion of the wick into the nook as may occur when a bottle is mounted while the carriage is in or near its forward position.
In this way the lateral position of the heater can be adjusted along the plane to more closely engage the wick in order to adjust the amount of heat being imparted on the wick and thereby adjust the intensity of the emitted fragrance. In addition, this function allows for flexibility in the positioning of the wick along the plane for those bottle necks having slightly different dimensioning.
Although the above exemplary embodiment uses a hand-manipulable heater carriage, it shall be understood that the emitter can be adapted to include automated and/or motorized elements.
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In this way the guide tabs 41,42 forcefully urge the bottle neck and consequently the substantially vertical axis A of the wick toward being in alignment with the plane P, while the latch tab 43, being more resilient, can engage the neck at a position which is more radially outward than would be achieved with all the tabs having the same rigidity. The difference in rigidity helps overcome small manufacturing imperfections in the shape, location and dimensioning of the tabs and their resultant inaccuracies in biasing which could otherwise lead to possible improper positioning of the wick with respect to the heater.
In other words, the above features of the docking station causes the axially central wick of the mounted bottle to remain substantially radially fixed within emitter regardless of the size of the bottle being engaged. Thus, the location of the upper end portion of the wick can be predictably located for a range of bottle sizes. Indeed, the combined biasing force of the support tabs can drive the wick toward a position on the plane in absence of any additional guide structure contacting the bottle. Further, the support tabs can mount the bottle in absence of any additional structure contacting the bottle. In this way a single docking station can successively mount a plurality of fragrance bottles having differently dimensioned bottle necks in absence additional docking stations.
The above-described mechanism provides a docking station allows for simplified, snap-fit mounting and de-mounting of the bottle by simply forcefully pushing the bottle into the docking station or forcefully pulling the bottle from the station in absence of any other attachment steps or mechanisms. This simplified approach allows unskilled and untrained persons to intuitively operate the emitter.
In an alternate embodiment, the three support tabs can be substantially identical to one another in size, shape and material properties, and be evenly angularly spaced apart so that they have similar lengths, angular coverage and hook sizes to accommodate differently sized bottles while maintaining the central axis of the wick in substantial allignment with the emitter central vertical plane.
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been described, modifications can be made and other embodiments may be devised without departing from the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.