The present invention relates to a closure cap for a liquid container, and more particularly to a closure cap having a lid and a shell, and a hinge region for pivotally connecting the lid to the shell and for locking the lid in an open position thereof.
Particularly in the beverage and food industry, there is a demand for closure caps which can be sealingly fitted onto the neck of a container with liquid contents and have a pivotable lid that can be held in an open position.
In general, such closure caps are injection molded articles. In essence they consist of a lid, a cylindrical body for sealingly fitted onto a container neck, a hinge for pivotally connecting the lid to the cylindrical body and means for locking the lid in an open position thereof. For protecting the lid from unauthorized opening or inappropriate manipulation, the lid usually is connected to the cylindrical body via frangible bridges which break upon a first opening of the lid.
European Patent Application No. 0 908 349 A1 (KLOPFER; PUBLISHED: 14 Apr. 1999) discloses a closure cap for a container having a lid pivotally connected to a fastening ring of the closure cap and means for locking the lid in an open position at an angle of about 90°. The joint is provided by a thin film formed in an upper wall portion of the fastening ring. The locking means consist of a T-shaped stub projecting from a rim of the lid, and a pair of profiled sprung jaws extending from a lower wall portion of the fastening ring. For locking the lid in its open position, the T-shaped stub is pressed between the profiled jaws which grip the same with a ratchet grip.
Applied to a beverage container, the opening angle of the lid of about 90° is unsatisfactory as a lid in such a position renders drinking from the container neck inconvenient. Further, reclosing the lid is cumbersome as in a first place the stub must be disengaged from the sprung jaws.
US Patent Application No. 2004/0178166 A1 (ANTIER et al.; PUBLISHED 16 Sep. 2004) discloses a closure cap having a lid pivotally connected to a skirt of the closure cap and means for locking the lid in an open position at an angle of about 180°. The joint is provided by a pair of elastic lamellae spaced apart from each other and formed in upper wall portions of the skirt and lower wall portions of a rim of the lid. The locking means consist of a tongue-shaped projection integrally formed with the lid and extending beyond the rim, and a wall section of the skirt defined by the spacing between the lamellae. The wall section serves to provide an abutment against which the tongue-shaped projection rests in the open position of the lid.
Whether or not the lid can be held in a position with an opening angle of 180° fully depends on the compliance with given dimensions of the tongue-shaped extension. Thus, any deviations from such given dimensions, likely to occur during the production of the closure cap, inevitably render the locking mechanism to fail.
The object underlying the present invention is to provide a closure cap for a container having a pivotable lid which, at a wide opening angle thereof, can be reliably locked and which also can be readily reclosed.
This object is solved by a closure cap having the features defined by claim 1.
According to the present invention, the hinge region for pivotally connecting the lid to the shell of the closure cap and for locking the lid in a final open position comprises a pair of elongate hinge elements spaced apart from each other, and a ratchet-like member disposed therebetween. The hinge elements are integrally formed with the shell and the top panel of the lid. Each hinge element has a lower portion having a wall thickness and an intermediate portion with an inwardly sloping outer face, thereby providing a wall thickness of an upper portion of the hinge element which, relative to the lower portion of the hinge element, is of a reduced thickness. The ratchet-like member is integrally formed with the shell and has a body with outer and inner contours, each thereof having a lower portion, an intermediate portion and an upper portion. The intermediate portion of the outer contour has at least one inward curvature configured for guiding an end portion of the tongue towards the upper portion of the outer contour during opening of the lid. The upper portion has an outward curvature which provides an abutment for the end portion of the tongue in the final open position of the lid. It is worth noting that in its final open position, the lid can reliably be locked at a wide opening angle, so that the closure cap, if applied to a beverage container, allows for conveniently drinking from the container neck. Further, it is worth noting that the lid, from its final open position, can conveniently be reclosed.
Preferably, the lower portion of the hinge elements has a wall thickness that corresponds to a wall thickness of the shell.
Preferably, the upper portions of the hinge elements each form a recess in the top panel of the lid, so that the recesses in concert form a tongue in the top panel of the lid.
In order to advantageously support the body of the ratchet-like member in the final open position of the lid, the intermediate portion of its inner contour preferably comprises a profile configured to abut, at least in part, against a pilfer proof of a container neck.
Preferably, part of the upper portion of the inner contour of the body comprises a profile that is configured to abut, at least in part, against a portion of a container neck in the final open position of the lid.
According to a first embodiment of the outer contour of the body of the ratchet-like member, the lower portion of the outer contour has a flat face sloping outwardly at an upper section thereof. In this way, it is advantageously ensured that the end portion of the tongue during opening of the lid is properly guided into the inward curvature of the intermediate portion of the outer contour, which inward curvature, in terms of a first variant of this first embodiment, has a substantially semi-circular profile and, in terms of a second variant of this first embodiment, the intermediate portion has a concave profile. An inward curvature having a substantially semi-circular profile has the advantage that it is associated with material savings. The outward curvature of the upper portion of the outer contour has a substantially semi-circular profile which profile thus advantageously supports the sliding of the end portion of the tongue towards an abutment of the outward curvature against which the end portion of the tongue is firmly held in the final open position of the lid. The substantially semi-circular profile of the upper portion of the outer contour preferably has an end section with a nose-like profile such that in the final open position of the lid, the end section either as such can abut against a neck finish of a container or allows an end section of the upper portion of the inner contour to be brought into such an abutment.
According to a second embodiment of the outer contour of the body of the ratchet-like member, the lower portion of the outer contour has a flat profile sloping outwardly, the intermediate portion of the outer contour has first and second inward curvatures with an outward curvature disposed therebetween, and the upper portion of the outer contour has an outward curvature having an end section with a nose-like profile.
Providing a profile of the intermediate and upper portions of the outer contour of the body in terms of the above second embodiment of an outer contour has the advantage that the end portion of the tongue, during opening of the lid, undergoes a stepwise guidance, wherein, in interaction with the second inward curvature of the intermediate portion and part of the outward curvature of the upper portion, the tongue, by virtue of the hinge elements, can be retained in a position at which the lid is in an intermediate open position with an opening angle that is wider than that the lid has in its final open position where the intermediate portion of the inner contour of the body is, at least in part, in abutment with a pilfer proof of a container neck.
According to the aforesaid second embodiment of the outer contour of the body, the profile of the intermediate portion of the outer contour preferably is such that the first inward curvature has a substantially semi-circular profile, the second inward curvature has a substantially semi-circular profile, and the outward curvature disposed therebetween has a substantially semi-circular profile. Preferably, a width of the second semi-circularly profiled inward curvature of the intermediate portion of the outer contour is less than a width of the second semi-circularly profiled inward curvature of said intermediate portion. The outward curvature of the upper portion of the outer contour preferably has a substantially semi-circular profile, and preferably a width thereof is greater than a width of the semi-circularly profiled outward curvature of the intermediate portion of the outer contour. The intermediate and upper portions of the outer contour profiled in such a manner provide for a smooth stepwise guidance of the tongue towards an abutment with the upper portion, while the substantially semi-circular profile of the second inward curvature of the intermediate portion conveniently allows the tongue to be held in an abutment with part of the outward curvature of the upper portion in an intermediate open position of the lid.
According to a first embodiment of the inner contour of the body of the ratchet-like member, the lower portion of the inner contour has a flat profile and the upper portion of the inner contour of the body has a flat profile. The intermediate portion has an inward curvature configured to abut, at least in part, against a pilfer proof of a container neck in the final open position of the lid. Providing such an abutment advantageously supports the body in the final open position of the lid.
According to a second embodiment of the inner contour of the body of the ratchet-like member, the lower portion of the inner contour has a flat profile. The intermediate portion of the inner contour has an outward curvature and an end section having a substantially flat profile. The outward curvature is such positioned that it, at least in part, abuts against a pilfer proof of a container neck in the final open position of the lid, thereby advantageously supporting the body in the final open position of the lid. The upper portion of the inner contour has an outward curvature.
Preferably, the outward curvature of the intermediate portion of the inner contour and the outward curvature of the upper portion of the inner contour each have a convex profile having an apex. Advantageously, the convex profile of the intermediate portion is such positioned that a lower portion thereof abuts against a pilfer proof of a container neck in the final open position of the lid.
According to an embodiment of the closure cap of the present invention, the shell, on a side opposite to the side of the hinge region, has a wall section of reduced height which is provided by way of an inverted trapezoid cut-out having identically inclined cut lines. The wall suspended from the top panel of the lid has a complementarily shaped wall section which is received in the aforesaid wall section of the shell in a closed position of the lid. For opening the closure cap conveniently, the complementarily shaped wall section of the wall suspended from the top panel preferably carries a tongue-like projection integrally formed therewith and having an arced-shaped support structure.
In order to provide that the closure cap can be snugly fitted onto a container neck, the shell, along an inner circumference thereof, comprises a plurality of cam-like stopper components spaced apart from each other and configured to slide over a pilfer proof of a container neck during capping of the closure cap. During capping a lower surface of the cam-like stopper components helps to radially stretch the shell of the closure cap, while during opening of the lid an upper surface of the cam-like stopper components cooperates with a lower surface of the pilfer proof of the container neck to retain the shell on the container neck. In order to stiffen the wall section of the shell of reduced height, adjacent to each of the inclined cut lines of the inverted trapezoid cut-out providing that wall section, the respective cam-like stopper component preferably has a body portion having an inclination similar to that of the inclined cut-lines.
For protecting the closure cap from unauthorized opening or inappropriate manipulation, the lid is connected to the shell via a plurality of frangible bridges which break upon a first opening of the lid. The bridges are each positioned above a space defined by two adjacent cam-like stopper components. In order to allow a user a more precise and convenient opening of the lid, the plurality of bridges preferably is provided only in the front half of the closure cap.
In order to provide a proper seal for the liquid content of a container capped with a closure cap of the present invention, the bottom face of the top panel of the lid comprises a plug seal shaped to sealingly fit into a neck finish of a container neck.
The non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be more fully appreciated by reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The drawings serve the purpose of illustration and are not to scale.
Reference will now be made to non-limiting embodiments of a closure cap according to the present invention. It should be understood that other modifications and equivalents will be evident to those skilled in the art in view of the non-limiting embodiments disclosed herein and that those variants should be considered to be within the scope of the present invention.
Furthermore, it will be recognized by those skilled in the art that certain structural and/or operational details of the non-limiting embodiments discussed hereinafter may be modified or amended.
As illustrated in
As it becomes more apparent from
As set out above, the ratchet-like member 120 has a body with outer and inner contours each having a lower portion, an intermediate portion and an upper portion.
The ratchet-like member 120 employed in the closure cap 100 of
Under continued reference to
From
The ratchet-like member 120 employed in the closure cap 200 of
Under continued reference to
From
The ratchet-like member 120 employed in the closure cap 300 of
As shown in
Under continued reference to
From
As illustrated in
In order to stiffen the wall section 170 of reduced height of the shell 102, adjacent to each cutline of the inverted trapezoid cut-out 172 (shown in
From
It is noted that the foregoing has outlined some of more pertinent non-limiting embodiments. It will be clear to those skilled in the art that modifications to the disclosed non-limiting embodiments can be effected without departing from the spirit and scope thereof. As such, the described non-limiting embodiments ought to be considered to be merely illustrative of some of the mere prominent features and applications.
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PCT/CA2018/051468 | 11/19/2018 | WO | 00 |
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WO2019/113681 | 6/20/2019 | WO | A |
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