The present invention refers to a machine and a method for preparing and dispensing a beverage starting from raw material that is contained in a sealed capsule.
Largely known in the art is the use of sealed capsules usually containing a single-dose amount of raw materials that, as a consequence of steam or water under pressure being fed into the capsules themselves, produce a beverage.
An example of a traditional capsule of this kind, which is disclosed in the patent publication EP-A-0 521 510, comprises a body portion having a slightly flared shape, which is made of plastics moulded integrally with the bottom wall thereof, the latter being in the shape of a planar disk with a plurality of reduced-thickness zones and supporting a filter on the inner face thereof. This capsule is completed by an upper wall formed by a membrane. At the moment of its use, the capsule is loaded in a machine, where said upper wall is perforated so as to enable water under pressure to be let into the capsule, while another piercing device provides a plurality of orifices in said reduced-thickness zones of the bottom wall. The beverage practically flows out of the capsule through said orifices in a substantially uncontrolled manner, particularly in the case of capsules containing raw materials in powder form, such as for instance ground coffee of the non-instant kind, which oppose a certain resistance to the flow of water under pressure.
This is basically the reason why machines used in conjunction with capsules of the traditional type must comprise conduits to deliver the beverage from the point at which it flows out of the capsule up to the cup or other vessel in which the beverage itself is due to be received for drinking. In this connection, see for instance the patent publication EP-A-1 034 729. These conduits, however, are subject to soiling, owing to it being quite difficult and awkward—if not right away impossible—for them to be regularly and correctly cleaned. Particularly in the case of a not so frequent use of the machine, when beverages with a certain content of fatty substances (e.g. coffee and meat stock or consommé) are prepared, there exists a real risk for these substances to eventually ferment and grow rancid in the conduits, and this is certainly a development that people due to drink the beverages flowing out of said conduits are quite likely to find rather unpleasant.
Another example of the related state of the art is the machine disclosed in the patent publication U.S. Pat. No. 5,472,719, in which the piercing device used to perforate the bottom wall of the capsule performs at the same time also as a collecting device for the beverage flowing out through the orifices created by the same device. Some of the embodiments discussed in the above-cited patent call for these combined piercing and collecting devices to be provided as disposable one-way parts, in the sense that it is contemplated that a new device has to be used for each single capsule. This, however, further to determining an obvious increase in costs, gives rise to readily appreciable problems in terms of stock management, storage, handling and disposal of these devices. In another embodiment described in the same patent, the combined piercing and collecting device is a part of the same unit of the machine that supports the capsule. It is anyway quite clear that, if it fails to be cleaned frequently, it may well give rise to the same kind of drawbacks as already discussed with reference to EP-A-0 521 510.
It is therefore a purpose of the present invention to provide a machine for preparing beverages, which, when associated to a sealed capsule of an improved construction for containing the raw material, does fully away with the afore-indicated drawbacks, without anyway incurring any penalty in terms of construction complications and costs as compared with traditional machines.
The capsule to be preferably used in conjunction with this machine (see also the patent application No. PCT/EP03/12338 filed by this same Applicant) is illustrated in
The main object of the present invention is therefore a machine for the preparation of beverages, starting from a raw material contained in a capsule of the above-described kind, incorporating the characteristics as recited in the appended claims.
Another object of the present invention is a method for preparing beverages in conjunction with the use of said machine, said method incorporating in turn the characteristics as recited in the appended claims.
Features and advantages of the present invention will anyway be more readily understood from the description of a preferred, although not sole embodiment, which is given below by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The machine being discussed here is an electrically powered machine that enables a beverage to be prepared at a rate of a single dose at a time, such as for example a cup of espresso coffee from each capsule. For reasons of greater illustrative simplicity, and from the viewpoint of the present invention that essentially relates to the brewing unit of the machine, all those parts that are constructively and functionally similar to the ones used in conventional machines will be only dealt with concisely in the following description, considering that they are generally well known to all those skilled in the art.
When viewed frontally from the outside—i.e. as it is illustrated in
From the concave front wall 6 there is protruding forwards, but in any case still within the periphery of the base member 2, a box-like body 62 accommodating the functional unit of the machine, which is indicated generally by the reference numeral 10 and shall be described in greater detail further on. The functional unit 10 of the machine comprises a device 150 for supporting a capsule 200, which is inserted through a window 64 provided in the front wall 63 of the box-like body 62. Part of this device 150 is a handgrip 154 that, as shown in
The portion 22 of the base member 2 that lies below and in front of the front wall 6 of the structure 4 is closed at the top by a metal grille-like cover 24, which is adapted to be lifted by means of a handgrip 26 and is provided with a central portion 28 adapted to receive and support a vessel (a cup or the like, not shown in the Figure) into which the beverage is dispensed for drinking. Within that same portion 22 of the base member 2 there is housed a drip pan (not shown) for collecting possible liquid leaking from the functional unit 10 or the vessel intended to receive the beverage, as well as residues of raw material (coffee grounds) that remain in the capsule upon the beverage having been dispensed. The handgrip 26 enables the grille-like cover 24 to be lifted in order to empty and clean said drip pan.
Inside the structure 4 there are housed various electric devices of a largely known type for operating and controlling the machine, which are connected to a plurality of push-buttons 86 and indicator lights 88 accessible on a control panel 82, which is removable to special maintenance and repair purposes. To this purpose, said control panel is in fact provided with holes 84 for fastening screws (not shown).
As far as the present invention is concerned, the most important part of the machine is constituted by the above-mentioned functional unit 10 which, as already indicated above, is housed in the box-like body 62 below the peripheral mantle 8 of the structure 4. This functional unit—as shown in greater detail in
With respect to
(a) an L-shaped base member 110 made as a unitary piece by casting or press-forming, comprising a vertical arm 111 and a horizontal arm 121, wherein in particular:
The device 150, which forms the so-called passive part of the functional unit 10, comprises a metal container 151, made by casting, the cavity 152 of which accommodates a capsule 200 of the kind that has been briefly described earlier in this description with reference to
Next, the mode of operation of this machine shall be described in greater detail.
In the first place, the user places a suitable vessel, i.e. a cup or similar vessel provided to collect the dispensed beverage for drinking, on the specially provided central support area 28 of the grille-like cover 24, and then loads in the cup-shaped cavity 151 a new capsule 200, which contains a dose of the raw material required to prepare the desired beverage, in such a manner as to prevent the membrane or foil 208 forming the upper wall thereof from protruding upwards from the same container 151. With the help of the handle 154, the passive part 150 of the functional unit 10 is introduced into the window 64 in the front wall 63 of the box-like body 62 and caused to couple with the active part 100 by means of said male and female means 155 and 158 that enable the container 151 to be locked in place on the base member 110 of the functional unit 10.
The capsule 200, which abuts and rests against the afore mentioned step-like configurations of the through-aperture or cavity 152, comes in this way to lie axially aligned not only with the bore 156, but also with the two cup-shaped body portions 130, 140 and the circular bore 123 in the horizontal arm 121 of said base member 110, exactly beneath the piercing device 170. The configuration of the functional unit 10 of the machine as illustrated in
At this point, the user, by operating in a fully traditional manner the buttons 86 on the control panel 82 accordingly, starts the operation of the machine to carry out a cycle for preparing and dispensing the desired beverage.
The operation of the machine starts with a rotation of the lever 114 about the pin 127, which is brought about by supplying power to, i.e. energizing the solenoid 182 via its power-supply terminals 185, so that the magnetic core, i.e. plunger 181 is caused to slide upwards against the reaction force of the counter-spring, thereby acting on the upper concave portion 120 of the lever 114. The lever 114 is in this way caused to move from its resting configuration, as illustrated above, to the operating configuration illustrated in
As soon as the above-cited spout 220 is formed in this manner, the power supply to the solenoid 182 is cut off, and the solenoid itself is de-energized, so that the reaction force of the counter-spring prevails over the overall weight of the plunger 181, the rod 183 and the roller 184 and, as a result, the lever 114, by pivoting back in the reverse direction, is able to move from this operating configuration back to its previously described resting configuration.
In the meantime, or even immediately thereafter, in a manner that is largely known as such to all those skilled in the art, a pump (provided internally in the machine and not shown in the Figures) delivers water under pressure into the second cup-shaped body portion 140, while an electric boiler (provided internally in the machine and not shown in the Figures, either) starts to heat up the dose of water required for the preparation of the desired beverage. Through the apertures 142, 147 and the inner cavity of the second cup-shaped body portion 140, the water under pressure reaches the bottom 136 of the first cup-shaped body portion 130, which is then forced to descend, jointly with the disk 170 of the piercing device for the capsule 200, by sliding down along the second cup-shaped body portion 140.
Owing to this descending movement, the disk 170 goes down to a point at which the upper edge 209 of the capsule 200 snaps into the groove 177 to be retained there, with the result that the capsule 200 is locked in its position in the container 151. Owing to the same descending movement, the needles 173 of the disk 170 come to perforate, at a plurality of positions, the upper membrane 208 of the capsule 200. Immediately thereafter, the boiling water under pressure is let into the capsule 200 by the nozzles 175 in the disk 170, through the perforations that had been previously created by the needles 173 in the upper membrane 208. The beverage is in this way brewed to eventually flow filtered out of the capsule through the orifices 203, whereas, owing also to the particular conformation of the bottom 202 both towards the interior and the exterior of the capsule (in this connection, see the afore cited patent application No. PCT/EP03/12338), the inlet water is allowed to vigorously mix with the raw material inside the chamber 212 that forms immediately upstream of the dispensing spout 220. From this spout 220, the beverage falls freely and directly into the single-dose vessel (cup or similar vessel) that is placed therebelow to collect the beverage for drinking.
At the end of the brewing process, followed by the so brewed beverage being dispensed and the pressure exerted onto the bottom 136 of the first cup-shaped body portion 130 being released, the springs 135 urge the same cup-shaped body portion 130, jointly with the disk 170, upwards into the initial position thereof. The upper edge 209 of the capsule 200 is in this way released, thereby allowing the whole passive part 150 to be removed from the machine with the aid of the handle 154. The exhausted capsule, i.e. the capsule that has in this way been emptied of the raw material contained therein, may in this way be conventionally unloaded from the machine and disposed of as provided for by the applying law regulations. The machine is at this point ready to start a new operating cycle, similar to the above-described one.
Fully apparent from the above description is therefore the ability of the present invention to effectively reach the following aims and advantages, i.e.:
Although a preferred embodiment has been used in the above description and in the accompanying drawings to illustrate the present invention, it will be appreciated that a number of different embodiments and variants thereof are possible without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/IT2004/000541 | 10/1/2004 | WO | 00 | 3/22/2007 |
| Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| WO2006/038227 | 4/13/2006 | WO | A |
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