The present invention relates generally to packages and containers. More particularly, the present invention regards a tamper-evident arrangement that maintains a seal between the closure and the container until after the tamper-evident arrangement has been severed from the closure.
Tamper evident seals have been used to increase consumer safety by showing whether a package has been opened after being produced. Embodiments of tamper evident indicators include a pop-up button in the center of a package and a break-away seal connected to the lower edge of a lid. The pop-up button has the disadvantage that it may be difficult to ascertain whether the seal has been broken. The break-away lower lid section may be too sensitive and may break away inadvertently during normal jostling. Alternatively, the break-away lower lid section may be insensitive to tampering or pilfering, and may not break away until after the seal between the closure and the container has been breached. The latter situation raises the possibility that the container may be accessed and resealed without breaking the tamper evident seal. This possibility undermines the purpose behind the tamper-evident seal, thereby reducing consumer confidence in a product sealed in this manner.
The following patents discuss tamper evident seals. U.S. Pat. No. 4,378,894 is believed to describe a tamper-evident screw threaded closure having bridges that fracture from the application of removal torque to the closure prior to breaking the seal between the liner and the container.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,448,318 is believed to describe a screw threaded closure for containers having a tamper-evident ring or band connected to the lower terminal edge of a skirt by at least a pair of fracturable bridge means. The bridge means are oriented in a predetermined manner relative to one another to effect sequential breaking in a given pattern upon relative movement of the cap portion and ring in the direction.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,534,480 is believed to describe a tamper evident closure for use on a screw threaded neck of a container. The closure includes a tamper evident band joined to the cap's sidewall by a plurality of bridge strips that are circumferentially aligned with ratchet teeth on the tamper evident band. During cap removal, the ratchet lugs stop the ratchet teeth and the tamper evident band from moving so that the band is separated from the cap, thereby providing an indication of tampering with the closure.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,567,991 is believed to describe a tamper indicating child resistant package including a screw type closure for use with a container having a threaded neck portion. A tamper indicating means is provided to maintain the lock element in circumferentially aligned relationship relative to the lock member, and is further provided with stop elements to cooperatively engage the stop lugs on the container. The tamper indicating means prevents removal of the closure before separating the tamper indicating means from the remainder of the closure, thereby giving evidence of tampering with the container.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,828,127 is believed to describe a tamper-evident screw-threaded closure in which the skirt of a cap is joined at its lower edge to a band by integral elongated breakable webs. The band has lugs which oppose circumferential, rather than axial, movement in the unscrewing direction.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,936,475 is believed to describe a tamper indicating closure and closure-container package in which a tamper indicating skirt depends from the bottom of the annular wall of a standard threaded cap. The skirt includes a plurality of equally spaced depending ribs that are joined at their extremities by a flexible ring. The ring and the skirt ribs pass over lugs on the container neck when the cap is being threaded onto the closure. When the cap is being unthreaded, the lugs engage the rings to sever them indicating tampering or prior opening.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,320,233 is believed to describe a lug cap or closure that is used in combination with a container for indicating that the container has been opened so as to indicate loss of seal or tampering. The lug cap includes an upper cap portion and a depending tamper or pilfer band, each having a series of circumferentially spaced lugs. The upper cap portion and the pilfer band are joined by a plurality of frangible bridges. The container finish includes combination camming/locking projections for locking the lugs into a locked position and for separating the pilfer band from the upper cap portion by a camming action when the container is opened.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,829,613 is believed to describe a container closure system comprising a threaded cap and a threaded neck wherein the cap is affixed to the neck by direct axial application so that the mating threads slip past one another and into engagement. The cap and neck include tamper-indication means to prevent removal of the cap without activation thereof.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,449,078 is believed to describe a combination of a container and a safety cap therefor in which the safety cap has a closure plane and a circumferential outer skirt for engaging a container and has a circumferential resilient depending inner member. The container has a rigid wall having an end for engagement with the cap internally of the outer skirt. The wall is tapered from a smaller diameter portion adjacent the closure plane of the cap to a larger diameter portion remote from the closure plane of the cap. The tapered wall of the container engages internally the resilient inner member of the cap and the larger diameter portion of the wall expands the resilient inner member outwardly to provide a working seal of the container as well as a bias on the cap in a direction of removal of the cap. The combination also includes means disposed on the container remotely from the end of the rigid wall and cooperative means on the cap for preventing the cap from being removed from the container without depression of the cap on the container and rotation of the cap on the container. When the container is used as a bottle, the container includes means for providing a tamper evident seal, whereby it is evident that the contents have been sealed with a material protecting the contents of the container. Any penetration of the seal prior to the removal and destruction of the seal by the user will be evidence of the lack of integrity of the contents of the container.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention includes a one-piece lug-style closure for a lug-style container. The tamper-evident closure is designed to fracture breakable connectors upon removal before the sealing liner is separated from the container's sealing surface.
The closure is designed with groups of two lugs that are separated from each other by a line of breakable connectors. The upper lug provides the clamping force to create a seal of the container and the lower lug provides the locking of the cap upon the container. The lower lug prevents the lower cap wall from moving upon cap removal, causing the breakable connectors to fracture, thereby indicating tampering. As a further indication of tampering, the lower cap wall will drop down and be separated vertically from the upper wall of the closure. The cap's breakable connectors fracture when the cap turns, before the upper cap wall rises vertically and separates from the lower wall. The container lugs are designed with a cam surface and a clamping surface for the cap's sealing lug. A triangular shaped vertical wall permits the cap's lock lug to cam over and lock the lower cap wall with the container.
A system is provided that includes a container including a sidewall and a bottom wall. A neck region on the sidewall may be adjacent to an opening. The opening may be opposite the bottom wall. The container may include projections spaced around the neck region. Each of the projections may include a cam surface, a lock surface, a ramp, and a clamping surface. The system may include a closure including a closure plane and a circumferentially depending outer skirt extending from the closure plane. A tamper-evident arrangement may be frangibly connected to an edge of the outer skirt opposite the closure plane. Pairs of lugs may be spaced around an inner sidewall formed by the outer skirt and the tamper-evident arrangement. A lock lug of each pair of lugs may be arranged on the tamper-evident arrangement and a sealing lug of each pair of lugs may be arranged on the outer skirt. Each lock lug may be adapted to engage the cam surface of a corresponding projection during an application operation. The lock lug may be adapted to engage the lock surface of the corresponding projection after the application operation. Each sealing lug may be adapted to engage the ramp of the corresponding projection during the application operation. The sealing lug may be adapted to engage the clamping surface of the corresponding projection after the application operation.
In the system, a number of pairs of lugs may be equal to a number of projections.
In the system, the closure and the container may cooperate to provide a tamper-evident closure with the container after the initial application operation. The lock lug may engage the lock surface to prevent removal of the closure until the tamper-evident arrangement detaches from the outer skirt.
In the system, the sealing lug may engage the clamping surface until after the tamper-evident arrangement detaches completely from the outer skirt.
In the system, the tamper-evident arrangement may detach from the outer skirt during a first removal operation.
In the system, the closure and the container may cooperate to provide a delay-release mechanism.
In the system, the delay-release mechanism may include the sealing lug and the clamping surface.
The system may further include a child-resistant lock surface adapted to engage the sealing lug in a sealed position and an inner wall on the closure arranged radially inward of the outer skirt. The inner wall may be adapted to engage the neck region of the container. The neck region or the inner wall may be tapered to provide a force biasing the closure open with respect to the container.
In the system, the child-resistant lock surface may prevent removal of the closure from the container until a further force opposing the force biasing the closure open is provided.
A method for sealing a closure on a container in a tamper-evident manner is provided that includes rotating the closure with respect to the container in a tightening direction until a lock lug of each of a pair of lugs first engages a cam surface of a corresponding projection spaced around a neck region of the container and further rotating the closure with respect to the container in the tightening direction until the lock lug of each pair of lugs engages a lock surface of the corresponding projection. In the method, the lock lug of each pair of lugs may be arranged on a tamper-evident arrangement and a sealing lug of each pair of lugs may be arranged on an outer skirt of the closure. In the method, each sealing lug may be adapted to engage a ramp of the corresponding projection during the rotating operation and to engage a clamping surface of the corresponding projection after the further rotating operation.
In the method, the pairs of lugs are spaced around an inner sidewall of the outer skirt of the closure and the tamper-evident arrangement.
In the method, the container may include a sidewall and bottom wall, the neck region being on the sidewall and being adjacent to an opening, the opening opposite the bottom wall.
In the method, the closure may include a closure plane and the outer skirt circumferentially extending from the closure plane; and the tamper-evident arrangement may be frangibly connected to an edge of the outer skirt opposite the closure plane.
In the method, a number of pairs of lugs equals a number of projections.
The method may further include, after the further rotating operation, engaging the lock surface by the lock lug to prevent removal of the closure until the tamper-evident arrangement is detached from the outer skirt.
The method may further include engaging the clamping surface by the sealing lug until after the tamper-evident arrangement detaches completely from the outer skirt.
The method may further include cooperating by the closure and the container to provide a delay-release mechanism.
In the method, the delay-release mechanism includes the sealing lug and the clamping surface.
The method may further include engaging the sealing lug in a sealed position by a child-resistant lock surface and engaging the neck region of the container by an inner wall arranged on the closure radially inward of the outer skirt. The neck region or the inner wall may be tapered to provide a force biasing the closure open with respect to the container.
The method may further include preventing removal of the closure from the container by the child-resistant lock surface until a further force opposing the force biasing the closure open is provided.
A method for removing a closure from a container that is sealed in a tamper-evident manner may include rotating the closure with respect to the container in a loosening direction; detaching a tamper-evident arrangement from an outer skirt of the closure; and maintaining a seal between the closure and the container by a sealing lug of each pair of lugs arranged on the outer skirt engaging a clamping surface of the corresponding projection until after the detaching operation.
The lock lug of each of a pair of lugs may engage a lock surface of a corresponding projection
In the method, the pairs of lugs may be spaced around an inner sidewall of the outer skirt of the closure and the tamper-evident arrangement.
a illustrates a side view of a projection according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention.
b illustrates a cross-sectional view of the projection of
c illustrates a cross-sectional view of the projection of
a illustrates an enlarged side view of projection 12 from
b illustrates a cross-sectional view of the projection of
c illustrates a cross-sectional view of the projection of
Alternatively, tapered biasing surface 100 may taper radially outward toward the edge of neck 18, and therefore an inside radius of neck 18 may be larger at the top edge than away from the edge. This type of taper for tapered biasing surface 100 is adapted to engage with an inner wall that lies on an inner radius on the closure. Therefore, when the closure is applied to container 10, the inner wall of the closure contacts tapered biasing surface 100 on a radially inside surface.
In alternative embodiments, neck 18 may or may not be tapered, and the inner wall of the closure is tapered. The inner wall of the closure may be tapered inward or outward, and the inner wall may lie radially inwards or radially outwards, respectively. The engagement of the inner wall and neck 18 may provide the appropriate biasing of the closure with respect to the container.
Projection 12 of
While the present invention has been described in connection with the foregoing exemplary embodiments, it should be readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that these embodiments are exemplary in nature and is not to be construed as limiting the scope of protection for the invention as set forth in the appended claims.