This disclosure relates to identification of beverage containers.
Beverage containers such as water bottles are in use worldwide. A case or other container of “grouping” of plastic disposable water bottles sold at retail can include multiple containers. Usually, the containers and the labels are identical. If multiple containers are opened, there is no easy way to track who opened and drank from the container, or when the container was opened. Because of this, much of the contents end up being disposed of and so are wasted.
Featured in this disclosure is a system, device, and method that are used to identify a beverage container. The beverage container may be a disposable plastic bottle filled with drinking water, although that is not a limitation as the container can be made of other materials such as glass or aluminum, and the container can hold other beverages such as soft drinks and juice, to name two of virtually unlimited possibilities.
The beverage container typically has a neck that leads to the outlet opening. The outlet opening is typically capped with a screw-off plastic cap. There is at least one ring around the neck. The ring can be but need not be part of a cap assembly of the type known in the field, where the ring breaks off from the assembly and remains on the container neck when the cap is first screwed off and removed. There can be two, or more, adjacent rings, each encircling the neck. At least one of the rings can be adapted to be moved around the neck. A series of letters and/or numbers and/or other identifying indicia can be placed on the neck and/or one or more rings. A ring can be rotated about the neck to align a particular portion of the ring with a particular identifying indicia. The system, device, and method can thus allow a person who is using the container to particularly identify the container by aligning the particular portion of the ring with an identifying indicium. For example, if the indicia include letters, the alignment can be to one or more letters that identify the person. This allows several people to be able to keep track of which container is theirs, e.g., in situations where they are each drinking from identical containers. As another example, the indicia can include numbers that correspond to days of the month, or numbers or letters that correspond to days of the week. The user can align to the day the container was opened or last used, as a means to keep track of how long the container has been open. This helps prevent a person from drinking contents that are past their useful date. Other examples will be apparent based on the present disclosure.
In another example, a method of identifying the containers in a group of containers, where the containers have removable caps, includes a group comprising a plurality of separate identifying indicia, each indicium of the group unique from the other indicia of the group. One indicium is applied to one container, to uniquely identify the container among the group. The indicia can comprise stickers. Each sticker can carry a graphic that is different than any other graphic carried by any other sticker of the group. One sticker of a group of stickers can be applied to each container. The stickers can be applied to the cap assemblies. In another example, the indicia can comprise a color of the caps. The caps can each be part of a cap assembly that includes a cap and a ring, wherein the ring remains on the container when the cap is removed, and wherein the caps and associated rings of each cap assembly are the same color, so that the color remains on the container even after the cap has been removed from the container.
In another example, the indicia comprise printed graphics. Each graphic can be different than any other graphic of the group. One graphic of a group of graphics can be applied to each container. The graphics can be applied to the cap assemblies.
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In an alternative arrangement, the indicia can be printed on the ring. Also, a particular portion of a ring can include an arrow, or a line, or some other marking that can be aligned with an indicia, through rotation of one or more of the rings.
In another example, the rotatable ring (which can be but need not be a part of the cap that breaks off from a cap assembly when the cap is removed, and remains on the bottle) can be printed or inscribed with indicia. Another added ring that is split in half into two separately rotatable rings (which may each have a projection or other structure to assist a user in grasping and spinning them) can be included. Each of these two rings can have an arrow or other pointer, one pointing up to one series of indicia, and the other pointing down to second series of indicia, which can be printed on the container. This system would allow identification of two items, e.g., both the user and the date.
Also contemplated herein are other means of identifying beverage containers. The containers can be of any style, size, or material, including but not limited to plastic, paper-based, or glass with protective silicone cover. A goal is to uniquely identify each beverage container in a case or other grouping sold at retail. The unique identification can be accomplished at the manufacturing stage and/or by the consumer. Ways that beverage containers can be uniquely identified among their grouping at the manufacturing stage include but are not limited to providing a unique identification on the container, the container label, and/or the container cap. The unique identification can be printed on one, two, or all of the container, label, or cap, or it can be provided in other ways such as with stickers that are applied to the container, label, and/or cap. Ways that beverage containers can be uniquely identified among their grouping by the consumer stage include but are not limited to providing unique stickers that the consumer can attach to the container, label, and/or cap, or providing an area on the container, label, and/or cap for the consumer to place his or her own unique identifier (such as providing an area of scratch-off material that the consumer can manipulate as desired, for example with initials, a symbol, or alphanumeric characters).
An exemplary beverage container 172 can have can have container body 173 and optional label 254. The label can be applied in any known manner. Also optional is area 256 of scratch-off material (which may be covered by a removable protective cover (not shown) when sold, so that the material is not inadvertently marked before it is marked by the consumer)). Cap 174 includes a generally flat upper surface 175.
Also, a case of containers could include a sheet of stickers, with the same quantity of unique graphic stickers as the quantity of containers in the case. The consumers could remove a sticker and apply it anywhere on the beverage container, its label, or its cap, for example.
In another example, the manufacturer or bottler of beverages to be consumed by consumers prints a unique identifying graphic on each cap of the beverage containers that are to be sold as a group, such as a six-pack of containers that are removably held together, or a case of 24 which is often held together with a cardboard case and a shrink-wrap overlay that keeps the containers in the case until the consumer removes one or more from the shrink-wrap. In some examples the label of each container of the group is printed with the same unique identifying graphic that is on the cap of the particular container. When each container in a group that is sold together is uniquely identified from all other containers of the group, the consumers of the beverages can keep track of which container and which cap is theirs. This helps both in terms of personal safety (less sharing of germs) and reduces waste that can occur when people lose track of their beverage and so stop drinking it.
In some examples the disclosure includes a group of beverage containers that are each uniquely identified within the group, each having a container label and a removable cap. There are a plurality of beverage containers removably held together in a group such that a consumer is able to remove one or more containers from the group. There is the same plurality of separate identifying graphics, each graphic of the plurality of graphics unique from all other graphics of the plurality of separate identifying graphics. Each container has one of the plurality of separate identifying graphics applied to both its cap and its label (or directly to the container/bottle if there is no label). Each container of the group is thus uniquely identified relative to all other containers of the group. Thus, if a cap is removed from a container/bottle of the group it can be matched up to its original container by matching the unique identifying graphic that is applied both to the container and to the cap.
In some examples all of the identifying graphics are on stickers that are applied to each of the container labels and each of the caps. In some examples all of the identifying graphics are emojis. In some examples the identifying graphics are directly printed on the caps and labels of each of the containers of the group.
In this example, unique graphic 334a is printed on cap 330 of container 321, and the same graphic 334b is printed on the bottle and/or container label 332 (the identical graphics are labelled with an a and a b because they are separate, one on the cap and the other on the bottle or its label). Also, separate unique identifying graphics 336, 338, 340, 342, and 344 are printed on one of the other bottles and its corresponding cap, identified as one graphic 336a and 336b on container 322, another graphic 338a and 338b on container 323, another graphic 340a and 340b on container 324, another graphic 342a and 342b on container 325, and a sixth graphic 344a and 344b on container 326.
In some examples all of the identifying graphics are on stickers that are applied to each of the container labels and each of the caps. In some examples all of the identifying graphics are emojis. In some examples the identifying graphics are printed on the caps and labels of each of the containers of the group. All of the marking is done at the factory/bottler, so that each container in the group of containers that is delivered to the consumer is uniquely marked on its cap and its bottle, as compared to each other container of the same group.
A number of implementations have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that additional modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the inventive concepts described herein, and, accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation in part of application Ser. No. 16/569,407, filed on Sep. 12, 2019, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/897,380, filed on Feb. 15, 2018, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. This application also claims priority of Provisional application 62/532,432, filed Jul. 14, 2017, and of Provisional application 62/624,435, filed Jan. 31, 2018. The entire disclosures of both provisional applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16569407 | Sep 2019 | US |
Child | 17903407 | US |