Not applicable.
Not applicable.
The present invention relates to full overcoating of fully formed and unused aluminum cans with external printed graphics to conceal existing graphics.
The aluminum can is a ubiquitous form of consumer packaging. About 180 billion aluminum cans are made every year or over 20 cans for every person an earth. The cost of making an aluminum can is about 10 cents and its value as scrap is about 1 cent. A certain percentage of aluminum cans are scrapped before filling because of a misprinted graphic, a graphic which has been changed, or cans with a graphic which were overproduced. The billions of cans made each year means that even a low scrap rate for cans that could be reused, is a loss of substantial value.
Alternatively, it is known to produce cans without printed external graphics which are sold as “brite or silver” cans. Such cans are covered with preprinted shrink sleeves or pressure adhesive labels. Such procedures can be costly and present a different appearance. What is needed is a method for treatment of preprinted aluminum cans to allow their reuse with new graphics with a similar appearance to a conventional can.
The method of this invention allows a fully formed, labeled via inks and coatings and overvarnished aluminum can which is not usable because of label graphic errors, graphic changes, or overproduction, etc. to be conditioned for reuse. The process for reconditioning aluminum cans includes treating the existing overvarnish on the can's external surface to accept an opaque overvarnish. The can may be secured to undergo the process through several methods which support the integrity of the can walls while undergoing treatment. In one method of securement, an expandable elastomeric plug is extended within the narrowed open end of the can and is expanded to grip the inner wall of the can neck. The elastomeric plug incorporates a pin with a gas supply passageway which leads to a gas supply manifold. The pin supports the can on a wheel which contains the gas manifold arranged to supply gas pressure according to the rotational position of the pin. Before or after the treating with the overvarnish, the can is pressurized to make the can rigid so the opaque pigmented overvarnish can be transferred from a printing roll surface onto the cylindrical portion of the can over the existing overvarnish. Following the application of the opaque overvarnish, it is dried or partly cured in an oven. The recoated can surface is then machine inspected to detect any defects in the opaque overvarnish. Following inspection, the internal can coating may optionally be resprayed and the can passed through a final cure oven.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a process for reusing preprinted aluminum cans which have not yet been filled or used for other purposes.
Further objects, features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring more particularly to
The finished can is typically placed on pallets and shipped to the customer to be filled and joined to the lids supplied from a separate manufacturing process. If at this point or later it is determined that the can will not be used due to a label graphic error, graphic change, or overproduction, etc. the process disclosed herein is used to conceal the existing coatings so the cans may be reused by applying a new graphic to the exterior of the can.
By the process of this invention, a fully formed, labeled and overvarnished aluminum can which is not usable because of label graphic errors, graphic changes, or over production, etc. is conditioned for reuse.
The preparation of the existing coatings to accept the concealment coating is accomplished by processes which render the existing overvarnish receptive such that an opaque overvarnish 40 will adhere. Known processes to modify the surface of the original overvarnish include: heat, plasma, abrasion, and application of a chemical such as a solvent or an etchant.
The overvarnish on the can external surface may be treated to accept the opaque overvarnish 40 by heating the existing varnish in in an oven 42 or with a flame for a short period to change the surface properties of the overvarnish. Other possibilities include plasma cleaning typically in a low pressure oven by using oxygen and/or argon to oxidize the outer layer of the polymer, cleaning the overvarnish and increasing polar groups on the surface to improve the printability of the surface. UV irradiation of the can surface, or abrasion are other possibilities.
Before or after treating the overvarnish to accept an additional overvarnish, the can is pressurized in the range of 1-90 psi gauge to make the can rigid so an overvarnish can be transferred from a printing roll 44 or belt surface on to the cylindrical portion 21 of the can 22. At the same time or subsequently a secondary roll or belt is arranged to engage the tapered surface of the neck of the can. The applied overvarnish is preferably water based and is opaque typically by employing a titanium dioxide (the mineral rutile) having a particle size of 0.2-0.3 microns for maximum light scattering effect.
The pressurized can 22 is then sufficiently rigid to accept offset printing. Pressurizing the can may be accomplished by several mechanisms. In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment 76 of
Other can plugs could include a elastomeric plug having an expanding collet within the elastomeric plug, or using mechanical compression of the elastomeric plug in a direction perpendicular to the can opening causing the elastomeric plug to expand to engage the inside neck walls. Alternatively, as shown in
It should be noted that the cans treated in this process may be reprinted by offset printing or other printing techniques, including digital inkjet printing.
It is understood that the invention is not limited to the particular construction and arrangement of parts herein illustrated and described, but embraces all such modified forms thereof as come within the scope of the following claims.
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3937350 | Völker | Feb 1976 | A |
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20180170031 | Vella | Jun 2018 | A1 |
20200055081 | Kingston | Feb 2020 | A1 |
20200406426 | Bao et al. | Dec 2020 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
101372274 | Feb 2009 | CN |
105966740 | Sep 2016 | CN |
09165501 | Jun 1997 | JP |
Entry |
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“Shrink Sleeve Cans,” https://www.kaufmancontainer.com/shrink-sleeve-labeled-cans/, downloaded Jul. 8, 2021. |
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Preliminary Industry Characterization: Metal Can Manufacturing—Surface Coating”, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, Sep. 1998. |