This invention relates to hand operated liquid dispensing pumps used in the personal care industry and, in particular, to hand pumps comprised of all plastic components.
Hand operated dispensing pumps are well-known in the personal care industry for dispensing liquids, including liquids in the form of mists, sprays, foams and creams. The majority of pumps for dispensing liquids presently available are made from plastic but include at least a metal compression spring to return the pump actuator to its starting position after being depressed. Typically, hand operated dispensing pumps are preinstalled on a fluid filled container prior to sale and are disposed of along with the container when the contents of the container are depleted. The pumps are not typically intended to be reused. Although pumps using metal return springs operate effectively, and are of relatively low cost to make, they have certain drawbacks. In particular, the steel compression springs typically used in such pumps make the pumps difficult to recycle and may cause rust contamination of the product to be dispensed.
Plastic parts are recycled by grinding or shredding the parts. The shredded material may then be reused, typically by melting the material and mixing it with new plastic. To be suitable for grinding or shredding, used plastic must be free of any metal parts. A hand pump using a metal return spring, or any metal components, must be disassembled to remove the metal components prior to recycling the plastic materials which compose the bulk of the pump. The need to disassemble a used hand pump to remove the metal components prior to recycling increases costs and has the effect of decreasing the desirability of used hand pumps as a source of recycled plastic. Thus, there is a need in the art for hand pumps capable of dispensing liquids made of all plastic components. Such pumps would require no disassembly prior to being ground or shredded for use as recycled plastic.
The present invention meets a long-felt need in the art by providing a new hand pump design for dispensing liquids where the pump is fabricated entirely from plastic materials. The all plastic hand pump of the present invention, lacking any metal parts, is easy to recycle and also eliminates potential contamination of the product to be dispensed due to rusting of the steel compression springs typically found in prior art hand pumps.
The major components of the hand pump of the present invention comprise an actuator, a pump housing configured with a ball style lower check valve, a closure, a piston configured with an integral upper check valve and, a plastic return spring. In use, the hand pump will be mounted on a container containing a liquid to be dispensed and a dip tube will attach to a bottom of the pump housing and into the fluid to be dispensed.
The piston of the hand pump is a single injection molded component having a lower portion and an upper portion. The lower portion is configured as a thin wall, hollow, truncated cone which is connected to the upper portion which is configured as a thin wall, hollow cylinder. Suspended within the hollow cylinder of the upper portion is a hollow, inverted cone. The suspended inverted cone functions as the upper check valve.
The actuator of the hand pump includes a nozzle, wherein the actuator has a center tube having upper and lower ends. The upper end of the center tube is in fluid communication with the nozzle and the lower end of the center tube is in fluid communication with the upper portion of the piston. The exterior of the lower end of the center tube slides within the interior of the upper portion of the piston and the interior of the lower end of the center tube slides over the inverted cone suspended within the upper portion of the piston. This configuration allows air or fluid to pass between an interior cylindrical wall of the center tube and an upper circumference of the inverted cone, when the pump housing is pressurized on a downstroke of the actuator and consequently the piston which is connected thereto.
The piston reciprocates within a bore of the pump housing, which is configured with a ball style check valve at its lower end. The pump housing is connected to the collar, which includes threads for attachment to a container of fluid to be dispensed. Disposed between the collar and actuator and about the piston is the plastic return spring.
The hand pump of the present invention operates as follows. Assuming the pump is dry or unprimed, in a first step, a user presses downwardly on the actuator. Downwards motion of actuator simultaneously compresses the plastic return spring and causes the piston to move downwardly, as well. As the piston moves downwardly, pressure increases inside the pump housing which causes the lower check valve to close and the upper check valve to open forcing air to exit thru the orifice.
The upper check valve comprises the inverted cone suspended within the upper portion of the piston. The wall of the inverted cone is flexible and consequently, as a downstroke of the actuator pressurizes the housing, any air or fluid within the housing passes by the interface between the upper circumference of the inverted cone and the interior wall of the center tube of the actuator and subsequently through the center tube and out the nozzle. On a first actuation of a dry pump, air passes the upper check valve. On subsequent actions, fluid passes through the upper check valve.
In a second step, the actuator is released. When the actuator is released, the plastic return spring drives the actuator and the piston connected thereto upwardly. As the piston moves upwardly, the upper check valve is sealed causing vacuum inside the housing, which in turn causes the lower check valve to open and the liquid to be dispensed is then drawn up from the container into the pump housing via the dip tube which is attached to the bottom of the pump housing and which extends into the volume of liquid held within the container.
In the third step, the actuator is pressed downwardly a second time. As the actuator is pressed downwardly, the plastic spring is compressed and the piston connected to the actuator moves downwardly as well. Downwards movement of the piston causes pressurization of the pump housing. Pressurization causes the bottom check valve to close and the upper check valve to open. The liquid in the housing, previously draw up from the container in step 2, is forced through the upper check valve and exits the pump through an orifice of the nozzle. After the hand pump is initially primed in step one, each subsequent down stroke and up stroke cycle of the actuator will cause liquid in the housing to be dispensed from the nozzle and fresh liquid to be drawn from the container into the housing.
The above and other advantages of the all plastic hand pump of the present invention will be described in more detail below.
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. The invention however, may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as being limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
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The actuator 12 also includes a ring element 104 which features at least one air vent 110 formed in the ring element 104. In the exemplary embodiment, a plurality of the at least one air vents 110 is disposed radially about the perimeter of the ring element 104. The at least one air vent 110 vents the volume of the pump body 14 above the level of the piston 20 to atmosphere.
The center tube 46 of the actuator 12 has an upper end 52 and a lower end 48. The upper end 52 is has a cylindrical interior surface 58 and the lower end 48 has a conical interior surface 60 and cylindrical exterior surface 62. The upper end 52 of the center tube 46 is in fluid communication with the flow passage 44 of the nozzle 45 at its second end 56 and the lower end 48 of the center tube is in fluid communication with the upper portion 32 of the piston 20.
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In a third step, the pump housing 14 is snapped into the closure 18, i.e. the upper end 92 of the upper body 70 of the pump housing 14 is engaged with the lower ring-wall 90 of the closure 18 via a snap fit.
In a fourth step, the plastic return spring 24 is added to the closure 18, i.e. the lower circumference 100 of the plastic return spring 24 is seated within the circular retaining channel 82 of the closure 18.
In a fifth step, the actuator 12 is connected to the piston 20. In particular, the lower end 48 of the center tube 46 is configured to slide within the upper portion 32 of the piston 20 and engage via a snap fit with the upper lip 38 of the upper portion 32 of the piston 20. When assembled, the ring-shaped face 105 of the ring element 104 of the actuator 12 abuts the ring-shaped surface 102 of the plastic spring 24.
The hand pump 10 of the present invention has two strokes, i.e. a downstroke and an upstroke, which cause the piston 20 to reciprocate within the upper body 70 of the pump housing 14. A downstroke of the actuator 12 and the piston 20 connected thereto, opens the upper valve 22 and closes the lower valve 16 and thereby pressurizes the internal volume 68 of the pump housing 14. The pressurized contents of the internal volume 68 of the pump housing 14 are consequently forced through the upper check valve 22 and out of the nozzle 45 of the actuator 12. On an upstroke, the upper check valve 22 closes and the lower check valve 16 opens, which causes the liquid 28 in the dispenser container 26 to be drawn into the upper body 70 of the pump housing 14 via the dip tube 30 which is in fluid communication with the dispenser container 26 and the upper body 70.
With reference to
The upper check valve 22 comprising an inverted cone suspended within the upper portion 32 of the piston 20 is flexible and consequently, as a downstroke of the actuator pressurizes the pump housing 14, any air or fluid within the pump housing 14 passes by the interface between the upper circumference 40 of upper check valve 22, i.e. of the inverted cone, and the interior wall 60 of the center tube 46 of the actuator 12 and subsequently through the center tube 46 and out the nozzle 45. On a first actuation of a dry pump, air passes the upper check valve 22. On subsequent downstrokes, fluid passes through the upper check valve 22.
In a second step, the actuator 12 is released. When the actuator 12 is released, the plastic return spring 24 drives the actuator 12 and the piston 20 connected thereto upwardly. As the piston 20 moves upwardly, the upper check valve 22 is sealed causing vacuum to be generated inside the pump housing 14, which in turn causes the lower check valve 16 to open and the liquid 28 to be dispensed is then drawn up from the dispenser container 26 into the pump housing 14 via the dip tube 30 which is attached to the lower body 72 of the pump housing 14 and which extends into the volume of liquid 28 held within the dispenser container 26.
In a third step, the actuator 12 is pressed downwardly a second time. As the actuator 12 is pressed downwardly, the plastic return spring 24 is compressed and the piston 20 connected to the actuator 12 moves downwardly as well. Downwards movement of the piston 20 causes pressurization of the pump housing 14. Pressurization causes the lower check valve 16 to close and the upper check valve 22 to open. The liquid 28 in the pump housing 14, previously drawn up from the container in step 2, is forced through the upper check valve 22 and exits the hand pump 10 through the exit orifice 50 of the nozzle 45. After the hand pump 10 is initially primed in step one, each subsequent downstroke and upstroke cycle of the actuator 12 will cause liquid 28 in the upper body 70 of pump housing 14 to be dispensed from the nozzle 45 and fresh liquid 28 to be drawn from the dispenser container 26 into the pump housing 14.
With reference to
The vent system of the all plastic hand pump 10 operates as follows: In the at rest position (see
While the present invention has been described with regards to particular embodiments, it is recognized that additional variations of the present invention may be devised without departing from the inventive concept.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 63/175,651, filed Apr. 16, 2021 and entitled “All Plastic Mist Sprayer,” which is incorporated here by this reference.
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