The present invention relates to the field of bags having complementary closure strips that are actuated by a cursor both for opening and for closing.
Such bags are described, for example, in documents EP-A-0 051 010, EP-A-0 102 301, and EP-A-0 479 661.
Those bags that are cursor-actuated both for opening and for closing have already given good service.
The cursors make the bags easier to open and close. The presence of a cursor is particularly appreciated by the elderly and the visually handicapped.
Nevertheless, most known bags with cursors do not give full satisfaction. In particular, most such bags are not totally leakproof when the strips are in the closed position. This lack of sealing is due to the fact that the strips remain separate ahead of the cursor.
Nevertheless, leakproofing is required in numerous applications, particularly, but not exclusively, for bags that are used for freezing foodstuffs.
Attempts have been made to remedy that drawback by proposing closure strips that present a local discontinuity in the vicinity of the end which receives the cursor when the bag is in the closed position, such that the cursor penetrates into the discontinuity and ensures that the strips are perfectly engaged in one another over their entire length when in the closed position.
Nevertheless, the means proposed in that context turn out to be very complex. Even so, they do not always ensure that the bags are perfectly sealed. In addition, they suffer from the major drawback of not retaining the cursor reliably and consequently of running the risk of the cursor being swallowed by small children, for example.
The object of the present invention is to improve the performance of known cursor-fitted bags.
The main object of the present invention is to propose bags presenting leakproofing that is better than that of previously known bags.
Another object of the present invention is to propose means that reduce the risk of the cursor being removed by mistake, specifically in order to reduce the risk of the cursor being swallowed by young children.
Another object of the present invention is to propose means enabling bags to be produced automatically and at a high rate of throughput.
In the context of the present invention, these objects are achieved by a bag comprising two generally parallel sheets forming the main walls of the bag, complementary closure strips fixed to respective ones of the sheets, and a cursor for actuating the strips for closing and opening purposes, the bag being characterized in that it further comprises, parallel to the closure strips, between said sheets, and level with the mouth of the bag, additional means in relief disposed on the insides of the closure strips, designed to provide sealing by forming a barrier between the sheets in the closed position of the bag, said additional means in relief being adapted to be urged towards their sealing position by the cursor when the cursor is moved towards its position for closing the bag.
In certain embodiments, said additional means in relief are placed facing the flanks of the cursor.
As specified in greater detail below, such additional means in relief can be formed, for example, by means of at least one bead secured to the inside surface of a sheet of the bag, or by means of two symmetrical beads secured to the respective inside surfaces of the two sheets of the bag, or indeed by means of complementary male/female elements secured to respective inside surfaces of the two sheets of the bag.
According to another advantageous characteristic of the present invention, the bag, in the vicinity of its mouth includes means situated on the side of the closure strips opposite from the side on which said additional leakproofing means are situated, and adapted to define thrust between opposing inside faces of the walls of the bag, and means are provided on the cursor to urge the walls of the bag inwards in a zone of said walls lying between the additional leakproofing means and the thrust means. This guarantees that said additional means are urged into a sealing position by the cursor. This urging is preferably performed in register with the closure strips.
The present invention also provides films fitted with such sealing means and such closure strips, and also extruded tapes carrying such means.
According to another advantageous characteristic of the present invention, the bag comprises two generally parallel sheets forming the main walls of the bag, complementary closure strips fixed to respective ones of said sheets in the vicinity of the mouth of the bag, and a cursor having two side flanges interconnected by a web, the flanges being placed on the outsides of the sheets at the mouth of the bag and co-operating with a central elongate tongue to define two converging passages for the complementary closure strips, and the bag is characterized by the fact that the tongue is interrupted so as to be set back from the longitudinal end of the cursor, at least at the wider end of the cursor corresponding to the diverging ends of the passages, and that the side flanges are provided in the vicinity of their free edges remote from the web with urging means for urging the sheets of the bag towards each other, said means occupying the entire longitudinal extent of the tongue and extending longitudinally beyond each end thereof so as to ensure that the bag is leakproof when it is in its closed position.
Other characteristics, objects, and advantages of the present invention will appear on reading the following detailed description with reference to the accompanying drawings, given by way of non-limiting example, and in which:
FIGS. 2 to 11 are similar section views showing a first series of variant embodiments in accordance with the present invention;
FIGS. 12 to 29 show a second series of variant embodiments of the present invention;
FIGS. 30 to 39 show a third series of variant embodiments of the present invention;
FIGS. 40 to 42 are three diagrammatic cross-section views of a bag fitted with a cursor of the present invention, on views given references I-I, II-II, and III-III respectively in
The bag 10 is made up of two main sheets 16 & 18. These are interconnected at their bottom 14 (by a fold, when the two sheets 16 & 18 are originally a single sheet as shown in FIGS. 1 to 3, or by heat sealing or adhesive when the two sheets 16 & 18 are initially separate sheets that are superposed during manufacture, as shown in FIGS. 4 to 9, or indeed by heat sealing or adhesive along the edges of a single sheet that is folded over at the mouth, e.g. as shown in
At the mouth 12, the two sheets 16 & 18 are provided with complementary closure strips 20.& 22.
These complementary closure strips 20 & 22 can be implemented in numerous ways. The invention is not limited to the specific embodiments shown in the accompanying figures. It should also be observed that two variant embodiments of such closure strips 20 & 22 are shown in the accompanying figures, respectively in one embodiment in FIGS. 1 to 3 and 12 et seq, and another embodiment in FIGS. 4 to 11.
In particular, the invention applies to closure strips 20 & 22 that are respectively of the male and female types as is well known to the person-skilled in the art and as is shown diagrammatically in FIGS. 1 to 3 and 12 et seq. However the invention is not limited to that particular disposition and can also extend, for example, to closure strips 20 & 22 of the hook type as shown in FIGS. 4 to 11.
As shown in
Nevertheless, in a variant embodiment, the closure strips 20 & 22 can initially be formed on respective support webs 21 & 23 that are fitted to the sheets 16 & 18 level with the mouth 12 of the bag, as shown in
The webs 21 & 23 can be bonded to the films 16 & 18 by any suitable conventional means, e.g. by heat sealing or by adhesive.
The use of closure strips that are not extruded on the films 16 & 18 but that are fitted thereto by heat sealing or adhesive is shown in the accompanying drawings only in
As mentioned above in the context of the present invention, the bag also has a cursor 50 adapted to actuate the strips 20 and 22 for opening and closing purposes, and also, parallel to the closure strips 20 and 22, between said sheets 16 and 18, and level with the mouth 12 of the bag, additional means in relief 100 designed to provide leakproofing by forming a barrier between the sheets 16 and 18 when the bag is in the closed position, said additional means in relief 100 being placed in register with the flanks 52 and 54 of the cursor 50 so as to be urged towards their sealing position by the cursor 50 when it is moved towards its sealing position.
The cursor 50 can be embodied in numerous conventional ways. In particular, the cursor 50 can be in accordance with the dispositions described in document EP-A-0 479 661.
That is why the cursor 50 is not described in greater detail below.
Nevertheless, it should be observed that the cursor 50 which is made of plastics material preferably has two side flanges 52 & 54 (or “flanks”) interconnected via a web 56 and co-operating with an elongate central tongue (not shown in the accompanying figures at the location of the section plane shown) to define two converging passages for the interfittable complementary closure strips 20 & 22. Thus, when the direction of relative displacement between the cursor 50 and the closure strips 20 & 22 tends to move the cursor 50 so as to force the closure strips 20 and 22 into engagement, the bag is closed. When the cursor 50 is moved in the opposite direction, the bag is opened.
The films 16 & 18, the closure strips 20 & 22, and the additional leakproofing means 100 can be made of any suitable plastics material known to the person skilled in the art. Preferably, they are made of polyolefin, most advantageously of low or high density polyethylene, or even of polypropylene.
In the context of the present invention, it is preferable for the means 100 to be placed on the inside of the closure strips 20 & 22 (i.e. towards the inside of the bag relative to the closure strips 20 & 22) and they preferably extend over the entire length of the bag (i.e. they have the same length as the closure strips 20 & 22).
In the first embodiment shown in
Such a bead 102 is placed facing the flanks 52 & 54 of the cursor 50 and on the inside thereof. Thus, the bead 102 is urged to press against the opposite film 18 when the cursor 50 is moved to its closure position.
The shape of the strips 20.& 22, of the means 100, and of the cursor 50 are preferably such that the flanks 52 & 54 of the cursor 50 impose transverse play (i.e. perpendicularly to the sheets 16 & 18) on the means 100 that is smaller than that tolerated for the closure strips 20 & 22.
For this purpose, for example, when the inside surfaces of the flanks are parallel, as shown in the accompanying figures, the thickness L1 of the means 100 is greater than the thickness L2 defined by the closure strips 20 & 22 when they are mutually engaged.
This preferred relationship L1>L2 is not limited to the embodiment shown in
This disposition makes it possible to guarantee that the means 100 provide a leakproof barrier between the two films 16 & 18.
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The leakproofing means 100 shown in
In
As shown in FIGS. 1 to 6 and 10, the means 100 can be extruded onto the sheets 16 & 18 that constitute the bag (more precisely onto the inside surfaces of the sheets 16 & 18 in the embodiments of FIGS. 1 to 6, and on the outside surfaces of the sheets in the embodiment of
Nevertheless, in a variant embodiment, the means 100 can initially be formed on respective support webs 121 & 123 which are applied to the sheets 16 & 18 in the vicinity of the mouth 12 of the bag, as shown in FIGS. 7 to 9 and 11. Here again it should be observed that in FIGS. 7 to 9 the support webs 121 & 123 are fixed to the inside surfaces of the sheets 16 & 18, whereas in
It would also be observed, as shown in
The bonding between the webs 121 & 123 and the films 16 & 18 can be provided by any suitable conventional means, e.g. heat sealing or adhesive.
The use of means 100 that are not extruded onto the films 16 & 18, but that are fitted thereto by heat sealing or adhesive is shown in the accompanying drawings only in FIGS. 7 to 9 and 11. However, the use of such means 100 fitted to the films 16 & 18 could apply to all of the variant embodiments of the invention.
Accompanying
The operation defined in this way between the grooves 160 & 180 and the ribs 522 & 542 can serve to improve the urging applied by the cursor 50 the means 100. This co-operation makes it possible to ensure that the urging from the cursor 50 is applied in a precise zone. It also makes it possible to retain the cursor 50 quite safely on the bag. This co-operation prevents any unexpected removal of the cursor 50.
The use of ribs 522 & 542 with complementary grooves 160 & 180 is shown in the accompanying drawings only in
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
The same applies to the embodiment shown in
Thus, these support webs 121, 21, 123, 23, and 24 form a tamperproofing web for showing whether or not the mouth 12 has been opened. In order to gain access to the inside of the bag it is necessary to break the web 24. This tamperproofing web 24 constitutes a bellows folded towards the inside of the bag at its mouth 12 and it extends in continuity from the support webs 121 & 21 and 123 & 23.
Such a bellows 19 directed towards the Inside of the bag can be shaped by any suitable known means, e.g. by means of a blade urging the bellows 19 towards the inside between the sheets 16 & 18, as is well known to the person skilled in the art.
The person skilled in the art will readily understand that it is appropriate in entirely conventional manner to break the tamperproofing web 24 or 19 in order to gain access to the substance contained inside the bag 10.
Thus, the state of the web 24 or 19 serves to indicate whether or not the bag 10 has already been used.
In order to make it easier to open the web 24 or 19, it can be provided in conventional manner with a line of weakness or of scoring, e.g. halfway across its width, as shown diagrammatically under reference 190 in
The bags obtained in application of the present invention provide numerous advantages over known prior bags.
In particular, they make it possible to have a high rate of productivity and to provide bags that are indeed leakproof.
Furthermore, the co-operation defined between the grooves 160 & 180 and the ribs 522 & 542 of the cursors 50 makes it possible to avoid any unexpected removal of the cursors 50 under the effect of pressure inside the bags or under the effect of a user pulling too hard.
Where appropriate, in the embodiments shown in
Naturally, the present invention is not limited to the particular embodiments described above, but extends to any variant coming within the spirit of the invention.
Bags of the present invention can be made on any suitable known type of machine, and in particular on form, fill, and seal (FFS) type machines, i.e. machines that are designed to perform automatically the operations of forming, filling, and sealing the bags.
The present invention also applies equally well to implementations in which the closure strips are placed longitudinally relative to the travel direction of the film and to implementations in which the closure strips are disposed transversely.
In addition, the present invention applies equally well to implementations in which the closure strips are prefitted with a cursor on being conveyed to the bag-forming machine, and to implementations in which the cursor is fitted to the strips subsequently.
It will also be observed that the present invention is not limited to the grooves 160 & 180 and the ribs 522 & 542 having the shapes shown in accompanying
As mentioned above, in the context of the present invention, it is preferable for the leakproofing means 100 and the closure strips 20 & 22 to extend across the entire width of the bag. However, by definition, the cursor 50 occupies only a limited fraction of this width. Consequently, the cursor 50 cannot on its own urge against the leakproofing means 100 continuously over the entire length thereof.
As mentioned above, to ensure leakproofing, it is possible to consider giving the means 100 a thickness L1 that is greater than the thickness L2 of the closure strips 20 & 22.
Other means can be provided to apply transverse pressure P at the walls 16 & 18 on the means 100 when the bag is in its closed position in order to ensure good leakproofing. This pressure P is shown diagrammatically in
Thus, in the context of the present invention, in a variant thereof, the closure strips 20 & 22 are adapted to provide such pressure P automatically on the means 100 when the bag is closed.
Various shapes can be used for the closure strips 20 & 22 to achieve that.
When complementary closure strips of the male/female type are used as shown in
The person skilled in the art will understand that by means of this disposition, the inner element 220 of the female strip 22 applies stress to the leakproofing means 100 when the bag is in the closed state, i.e. when the male element 20 is engaged in the female element 22, and that this takes place along the entire length of the means 100.
A similar effect can be obtained with a male strip 20 that is asymmetrical (possibly in combination with a female strip 22 that is likewise asymmetrical as described above).
With complementary closure strips of the hook type as shown in
As shown in
It will be observed that in the embodiments shown in FIGS. 12 et sea, the cursor 50 is preferably provided on the ends of its side flanges 52 & 54 with respective rims 53 & 55 directed towards the inside of the bag. These rims 53 & 55 are positioned so as to be situated beyond the leakproofing means 100. The rims 53 & 55 contribute to leakproofing the bag. The rims 53 & 55 also participate in holding the cursor 50 on a bag so as to prevent unexpected removal of the cursor. As can be seen in
It will also be observed that in the embodiments shown in
In the embodiment of
In the embodiments described above, the cursor 50 is symmetrical about a longitudinal plane. Thus, in FIGS. 12 to 14, its flanks 52 & 54 are provided with respective rims 53 & 55.
However, in the variant shown in
On examining
Thus,
In a variant, such a flexible and resilient lip 130 can be secured to the sheet 16 which carries the male closure strip 20.
In
As can be seen in
It will be observed in
Similarly, the rims 53 & 55 provided on the flanges 52 & 54 of the cursor 50 can converge towards the web 56 as they come closer to the end of the cursor 50 which is situated adjacent to the opening of the bag, for the purpose of improving bag leakproofing at this point.
In this case also, to achieve this effect at least one of the two lips 130 when in the rest position, i.e. when the bag is open, preferably extends beyond the associated closure strip, as shown diagrammatically in
The cursor 50 used in the variant embodiment of
The description below relates to the variant embodiment shown in accompanying FIGS. 30 to 39.
As mentioned above, in these variants, the bag has means 150 at its mouth 12, said means 150 being situated on the opposite side of the closure strips 20 & 22 to said additional leakproofing means 100 and being adapted to ensure pressure is applied between facing inside faces of the walls of the bag. In addition, the cursor 50 is provided with means suitable for urging the walls of the bag inwards in a zone of said walls that extends between the additional leakproofing means 100 and the thrust means 150. This guarantees that said additional means 100 are urged into a leakproofing position by the cursor 50. This urging is preferably performed in register with the closure strips 20 & 22.
As can be seen in the accompanying figures, it is thus preferable for the additional leakproofing means 100 to be situated on the inside of the closure strips 20 & 22 while the thrust-defining means 150 are situated on the outside of said closure strips 20 & 22.
This disposition having means 150 associated with the means enabling the cursor 50 to press together the leakproofing means 100 can be applied to all of the variant embodiments described above. They are therefore not limited to the embodiments of FIGS. 30 to 39. In particular, this disposition applies to any type of leak-proofing means 100, to any type of closure strip 20 & 22, and to all variants of the cursor 50, or to a bag fitted with a tamperproofing web, etc.
Similarly, in
In
It will be observed that in
The person skilled in the art will understood that by means of the above-mentioned characteristics, when the elements 152 & 154 are pressed against each other and the cursor 50 is pressing against the above-mentioned segments of the walls 16 & 18 situated between the means 100 and 150, the leakproofing means 100 are themselves urged into their position of contact and maximum leak-proofing.
In
In
It will also be observed in
In the variant shown in
In above-described FIGS. 30 to 33, the thrust elements 152 & 154 are symmetrical and make contact with each other in the midplane of the bag. In a variant, these elements 152 & 154 can be asymmetrical, thereby making contact with each other of the midplane.
In above-described FIGS. 30 to 34, the leak-proofing means 100, the closure strips 20 & 22, and the thrust means 150 are integrally formed by extrusion out of the same material(s) as the walls 16 & 18. In a variant, these various means can be supplied on respective support webs that are then secured to the inside faces of the sheets 16 & 18, e.g. by heat sealing or adhesive. These webs can be respective separate support webs for each of the means 100, strips 20 & 22, and means 150, or else support webs that are common to a plurality of these means. Thus, for example,
Where appropriate, the elements constituting the leakproofing means 100 can be coextruded with the bag and/or the closure strips, out of a material that is more flexible than the material forming the other portions. For example, the lips 170 & 172 can be coextruded out of a copolymer of ethylene or using a synthetic elastomer.
As mentioned above, the present invention is naturally not limited to the particular embodiments described above, but it extends to any variant within the spirit of the invention.
The term “leakproofing” is used in the context of the present invention to indicate that the means 100 are adapted (by their shape and/or their thrust force) either to provide a complete barrier preventing any penetration from the outside towards the inside of the bag or any leakage from the inside towards the outside of the bag, or else to act as means that provide a barrier in one direction, i.e. to prevent penetration from the outside towards the inside of the bag, or to prevent leakage from the inside towards the outside of the bag.
It should also be observed that the rim means 53 & 55 and the structures such as 522 & 542 provided on the bag and contributing to holding the cursor 50 on the bag are generally not the only structures that provide such holding, but for example provide assistance for this purpose for flared means provided in the central tongue of the cursor 50.
The person skilled in the art will also understand that in the embodiments shown in FIGS. 30 to 39, the leakproofing means 100 need not be placed facing the flanks 52 & 54 of the cursor, but can be placed outside them. In other words, under such circumstances, the end of the cursor is situated between said means 100 and the closure strips 20 & 22.
As mentioned above, in a variant embodiment the tongue 59 is interrupted before the longitudinal end of the cursor (i.e. the tongue is set back from the end), at least at the broader end of the cursor which corresponds to the diverging end of the passages 590 & 592, as can be seen in particular in
In the preferred embodiment shown in FIGS. 40 to 43, these urging means are constituted by ribs 520 & 540 projecting towards the inside of the cursor 50 from the edges of the flanges 52 & 54 remote from the web 56, or where appropriate from part of the way along the height of the inside surfaces of the flanges 52 & 54 lying between the web 56 and the free edges of the flanges 52 & 54. It will be observed that although the ribs 520 & 540 are not necessarily situated at the free edges of the side flanges 52 & 54, these ribs 520 & 540 are nevertheless situated beyond the tongue 59 (i.e. between the tip of the tongue 59 remote from the web 56 and the free edges of the flanges 52 & 54), so that the ribs are not level with the tongue.
The ribs 520 & 540 overlie the tongue 59 without discontinuity and extend beyond it, at least at the broader end of the tongue 59 corresponding to the diverging end of the passage 590 & 592. More precisely, in the preferred embodiment shown in the accompanying figures, the ribs 520 & 540 extend over the full length of the cursor 50 while the tongue 59 is interrupted at its broader end (diverging end of the passages 590 & 592) at a distance l1 from the end of the cursor 50, while at its narrower end (converging end of the passages 590 & 592), it terminates at a distance l2 from the end of the cursor 50.
The width 16 of the empty space defined between the tips of the ribs 520 & 540 is substantially equal to the sum of the thicknesses of the sheets 16 & 18 at the mouth of the bag. Thus, the cursor 50 urges the sheets towards each other beneath the tip of the tongue 59, thereby guaranteeing that the bag is leakproof.
In the embodiment shown in accompanying FIGS. 40 to 44, two ribs 520 & 540 are provided that are symmetrical and of the same height, one rib on each of the flanges 52 & 54. In a variant, ribs 520 & 540 can be provided that are asymmetrical. Thus, it is possible to provide a single rib on only one of the flanges 52 & 54 of the cursor 50.
In the figures, the following are referenced:
In the context of the present invention:
In the context of the present invention:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
98 07658 | Jun 1998 | FR | national |
98 08019 | Jun 1998 | FR | national |
98 08525 | Jul 1998 | FR | national |
98 13732 | Nov 1998 | FR | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09948551 | Sep 2001 | US |
Child | 11146272 | Jun 2005 | US |
Parent | 09462101 | Jan 2000 | US |
Child | 09948551 | Sep 2001 | US |