Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6796449
-
Patent Number
6,796,449
-
Date Filed
Monday, October 1, 200123 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, September 28, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Nixon & Vanderhye, P.C.
- Presta; Frank P.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 215 364
- 215 355
- 215 294
- 215 296
- 215 297
- 215 320
- 220 DIG 19
- 220 789
- 220 790
- 217 110
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A closure for containers having an opening, comprising substantially rigid supporting and sealing means for insertion in a container opening, and a covering body made of flexible and resilient plastic material which covers at least a portion of and is connected to the supporting and sealing means, and is adapted to close the container opening. The supporting and sealing means comprise an upper and lower support and sealing element operatively joined together to support the covering body in a longitudinal direction to prevent elongation of the plastic material of the covering body.
Description
The present invention refers in general to a closure for containers, and in particular to a plug for bottles, preferably adapted to be used to plug bottles of wine.
Due to its preferred application as currently provided, the following description will be oriented to the case in which the closure of the invention is applied to the field of bottles for foodstuff, in particular of bottles of wine, so that the closure will assume the configuration of a bottle plug. It is clear, however, that the teachings of the present invention are equally applicable to containers for any type of substance (foodstuff or otherwise) that needs a sealed closure capable on one hand of preventing the contained substance from leaking out, and on the other hand of preventing gases and/or foreign substances (including, for example, the material of which the closure is composed) from entering inside the container.
In the field of plugs for bottles of wine, the most common material of which they are made is cork: such material is costly, increasingly difficult to obtain, since it comes from specific plants and therefore is available in nature in relatively limited amounts.
Moreover, plugs made of cork have many problems from the functionality point of view: studies in the field have demonstrated that in high percentages such plugs damage the wine contained in the bottles, giving it a taste that is no longer the original one and that is always unpleasant to the palate. When the wine contained in these bottles is precious, the presence of a faulty plug is wasteful and implies heavy costs.
Even when plugs made of cork do not show defects, it is advisable to periodically replace them (10-15 years), to avoid spoiling the bottle contents.
Cork also gives rise to problems in terms of its installation and removal from bottles: in fact, automatic plugging machines are exposed to dust and pieces of cork that become detached, polluting the environment and impairing process quality; moreover, cork is a non-uniform material, so that its behaviour differs from one supply batch to the next; finally, when the plug is removed from a bottle, for example using an ordinary corkscrew, it can happen that small bits of cork fall inside the bottle itself and pollute its contents.
Studies are being carried out to produce plugs for bottles made of plastic material that provide equivalent performances to those of plugs made of cork without the abovementioned problems, but the practical results so far are unsatisfactory in various aspects, so that it has not yet been possible to produce a closure that allows the replacement of cork as material (even with all problems generated thereby, as mentioned above), while providing the same positive characteristics.
The object of the present invention is to solve the abovementioned problems of the prior art by providing a closure made of plastic material for containers that has optimum sealing characteristics, preventing gases and/or foreign substances from entering inside the containers and preventing the substance contained in the containers themselves from leaking out.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a closure of the wine bottle plug type that can be applied to the bottle neck sizes that are currently deemed as standard for bottles of this type, that can be adapted without modifications to the automated machinery for plugging bottles themselves and that can be removed from bottles using ordinary removing means of the corkscrew type. Moreover, the plug of the invention allows the organoleptic characteristics of the wine contained to be preserved, and therefore it finds a preferred application in the storage of wines of the still and lightly sparkling types, and in the storage of precious wines.
The above and other objects and advantages of the invention, as will appear from the following description, are obtained by a closure for containers as claimed in claim
1
. Preferred embodiments and nonobvious variations of the present invention are claimed in the dependent claims.
The present invention will be better described by some preferred embodiments thereof, given by way of non-limiting examples, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
FIG. 1
is a side cross-sectional view of a first embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 2
is a perspective view of the supporting and sealing means of the closure in
FIG. 1
;
FIG. 3
is a side cross-sectional view of a second embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 4
is a side cross-sectional view of a third embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 5
is a perspective view of the closure in
FIG. 4
;
FIG. 6
is a side cross-sectional view of a fourth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 7
is a side cross-sectional view of a fifth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 8
is a side cross-sectional view of a sixth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 9
is a side cross-sectional view of a seventh embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 10
is a side cross-sectional view of an eighth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 11
is a side cross-sectional view of a ninth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 12
is a side cross-sectional view of a tenth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 13
is a perspective view of the supporting and sealing means of the closure in
FIG. 11
; and
FIGS. 14
to
16
are side cross-sectional views of an eleventh embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 17
is a perspective sectional view of a twelfth embodiment of a closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 18
is a side cross-sectional view of the embodiment in
FIG. 17
;
FIG. 19
is an exploded perspective view of a thirteenth embodiment of the closure for containers according to the present invention;
FIG. 20
is a side cross-sectional view of the embodiment in
FIG. 19
;
FIG. 21
is a side cross sectional view of a further embodiment of the closure shown in
FIG. 18
;
FIG. 22
is a perspective view of a still further embodiment of the closure shown in
FIG. 18
; and
FIG. 23
is a perspective view of another embodiment of the closure shown in FIG.
18
.
With reference to the figures, the closure for containers according to the invention will be described hereinbelow. As can be seen from the figures and as will clearly appear from the following description, numerous constructive variations of the closure are possible, all having in common the characteristics claimed in the claims. It will be obvious for the persons skilled in the art, therefore, that the embodiments shown and described are only examples and do not limit the scope of the invention that is defined by the attached claims.
In general, as can be seen from the figures, the closure for containers of the invention comprises substantially rigid supporting and sealing means
3
and a covering body
5
(commonly, but norm a limiting way, placed externally with respect to the supporting and sealing means
3
) made of plastic material (commonly, but not in a limiting way, elastomeric material): the covering body
5
in
FIG. 1
is placed around the supporting and sealing means
3
in order to assume, for example, the external cylindrical shape of a bottle plug (FIG.
2
). The dimensions of the covering body
5
are such as to allow it to be inserted into a traditional bottle neck (not shown) and then to cooperate with the internal walls thereof, due to the elastomeric material of which the plug
1
is made, to guarantee a perfect seal for the substance contained inside the bottle. The covering body
5
in practice cooperates by interference with the container opening to prevent the material contained therein from leaking out and to prevent gases and/or foreign substances from entering inside the container itself. The supporting and sealing means
3
are useful both for supporting the closure
1
in a longitudinal direction, and for strengthening the seal thereof with the container at or more points. The supporting and sealing means
3
are important, since the elastomeric material could in time elongate and partly impair the sealing functionality: this is prevented by the means
3
above all in the part of the closure
1
facing the container interior.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the covering body
5
is made of thermoplastic foam material, or of thermosetting foam material.
According to another preferred embodiment of the invention, the covering body
5
may alternatively be made of crosslinked foam material, of the commonly marketed types such as APO (marketed by the company API). Obviously, other materials with equivalent functionalities, that will become available in the art in the future, can be used.
If the material employed is a foam elastomer, the manufacturing process must include hot molding in the presence of a blowing agent which may be of chemical or physical type and is selected from those usually used in analogous processes. However, a particularly preferred process for hot-molding the closure (
1
) uses a fluid in the supercritical state as a blowing agent. As is known, a fluid in the supercritical state is a fluid maintained at a pressure and temperature above that material's critical pressure and temperature and therefore behaves in ways characteristic of both a liquid and a gas. For example, this fluid will have a solvent power similar to that of a liquid, but a surface tension much weaker than that of a liquid and such as to increase its diffusion through the solute.
The method according to the present invention involves the following steps:
(a) providing a source of supercritical fluid at a temperature and pressure greater than the critical temperature and pressure of that supercritical fluid;
(b) preheating the polymer material to a temperature above the supercritical fluid's critical temperature, preferably above the softening or melting temperature of this polymer material;
(c) saturating the polymer material that was preheated in step (b) with the supercritical fluid by maintaining the interior of the saturation chamber at a temperature and pressure greater than the critical temperature and pressure of the supercritical fluid, said preheated polymer material and said supercritical fluid preferably being mixed in said saturation chamber in order to facilitate the saturation process;
(d) injecting said preheated polymer material saturated with the supercritical fluid into a closure mold, reducing the pressure to below the critical pressure of the supercritical fluid;
(e) and maintaining said polymer material in the mold until formation of the closure is complete.
The preferred supercritical fluid for the process outlined above is nitrogen in the supercritical state, for which the critical temperature and pressure are, respectively, T=−147° C. approx. and P=3.389×10
6
N/m
2
approx.
The process outlined above is particularly advantageous as we have observed that it produces a material with an extremely homogeneous structure of minute microcells (from 10
9
to 10
12
cells per cm
3
, the mean size of the cells being less than 2 microns). The closure therefore acquires remarkable sealing properties and properties of impermeability to gases.
In the abovementioned practical embodiments, the closure
1
of the invention in its shape as a plug is therefore adapted to be placed in a bottle, in order to close it, using an ordinary plugging machine (not shown), and is adapted to be removed from a bottle, when opening, using an ordinary corkscrew (not shown). The material of which the plug
1
is composed guarantees barrier characteristics and characteristics ensuring a lack of material leakage for a period that is not less than the one that can be obtained with a plug made of cork under optimum conditions.
In order to perform the abovementioned barrier function, the closure
1
of the invention may be further equipped with barrier means
8
, for example in the form of at least one circular thin layer placed on the side of the closure
1
facing the container interior; said thin layer is made of a material suitable for forming such a barrier, for example even gold. Other types of barrier means could be at least one disk or at least one washer, for example made of glass for better storage of the product inside the container.
According to a first preferred embodiment of the closure
1
, shown in
FIGS. 1 and 2
, the supporting and sealing means
3
are composed of a threaded hollow fitting
7
, that extends substantially along the whole length of the closure
1
; the fitting
7
is connected to at least one lower support
9
and at least one upper support
11
. The connection between the fitting
7
and the upper and lower supports
9
and
11
can occur by screwing, fixing by complementary shape or other known ways.
The lower support
9
is adapted to be coupled by interference with the container opening walls to prevent gases from entering thereinto, while the upper support
11
is adapted, by means of the insertion recess
12
, to allow insertion of a corkscrew into the closure
1
for the removal thereof, using, in order to engage the corkscrew, a plurality of longitudinal ribs
7
′. The closure
1
of
FIGS. 1 and 2
has the lower support
9
shaped (in
10
) in order to support the covering body
5
that expands therein, and to simultaneously provide insertion means to insert the closure
1
inside the container opening (in this case
According to a second preferred embodiment of the closure
1
2
of the invention, shown in
FIG. 3
, the supporting and sealing means
3
2
are composed of at least one lower threaded support
13
and at least one upper threaded support
15
that are screwed into corresponding recesses formed inside the covering body
5
2
and that engage a hollow elongated support member
14
.
The lower support
13
is adapted to be coupled by interference with the container opening to prevent gases from entering thereinto, while the upper support
15
is adapted, by means of an insertion recess
20
, to allow insertion of a corkscrew into the closure
1
2
for the removal thereof. Moreover, the elongated support member
14
is equipped with a plurality of longitudinal ribs
21
for engagement with the corkscrew when removing the plug
1
2
. Also in this case, the closure
1
2
of
FIG. 3
has the lower support
13
shaped (in
13
′) in order to support the covering body
5
2
that expands inside it, and to simultaneously provide insertion means to insert the closure
1
2
into the container opening (in this case the bottle neck).
In both the above-illustrated arrangements, the upper support (
11
or
15
depending on the case) is further adapted to bear writing and/or other signs relating to the container contents, such as for example product name or manufacturer name, advertising messages, etc.
According to a third preferred embodiment of the closure
1
3
of the invention, shown in
FIGS. 4 and 5
, the supporting and sealing means
3
3
are composed of an elongated support body
26
that extends substantially along the whole length of the closure
1
3
; such elongated support body
26
is further equipped with at least one lower sealing member
28
adapted to guarantee sealing of the closure
1
against the container opening walls.
In the embodiment shown in
FIGS. 4 and 5
, the covering body
5
3
is of cylindrical shape and the lower sealing member
28
is shaped as a frustum of a cone whose radius is less than the radius of the covering body
5
3
.
Always as shown in
FIGS. 4 and 5
, the elongated support body
26
is further equipped with at least one upper sealing member
30
adapted to improve sealing of the closure
1
against the container opening walls. The upper sealing member
30
is also shaped as a frustum of a cone whose radius is less than the radius of the covering body
5
3
and is substantially identical to the radius of the lower sealing member
28
.
Moreover, the elongated support body
26
is of cylindrical shape and is closed at the end thereof that is facing toward the container interior; this obviously serves to increase the sealing strength of the whole closure
1
3
, and can also be used during removal of the closure
1
3
from the container to prevent, for example, the corkscrew from drilling right through the plug
1
3
, such operation being always inadvisable in the field.
According to a fourth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIG. 6
, the supporting and sealing means
3
4
are composed of a first hollow member
30
whose cross section is “T”-shaped and a second hollow member
32
, whose cross section is in the shape of an inverted “T”, that is adapted to contain an end of the first hollow member
30
through threaded engagement of the respective ends
31
and
33
of the two members
30
and
32
. The arrangement in
FIG. 6
allows the closure
1
4
to be used by orienting it and inserting it at will into the container, since both ends
30
′ and
32
′ of the supporting and sealing means
3
4
have the same shape and are equipped with the recesses
35
and
37
for inserting the means for removing the closure
1
4
.
According to a fifth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIG. 7
, the supporting and sealing means
3
5
are composed of a cylindrically-shaped upper hollow member
40
open at both ends
41
and
42
, in order to increase the seal against the container opening walls. The upper member
40
is placed above and outside a lower hollow member
43
that, in its central part
44
, is shaped as an elongated cylinder that is inserted into the upper member
40
, while in its part
46
facing toward the container interior it is shaped as a flat closure with insertion flarings
48
for insertion of the closure
1
5
into the container. Once the upper member
40
and the lower member
43
have been coupled, they are surrounded by the covering body
5
5
so that the plastic material of which this is composed penetrates into the spaces left empty due to coupling of the two members
40
and
43
, and penetrates into the lower member
43
in such a way that its part
46
, substantially performing the function of a barrier, is outside the covering body
5
5
. The recess
49
allowing penetration of the removing means into the closure
1
5
is in this case directly formed in the covering body
5
5
.
According to a sixth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIG. 8
, the supporting and sealing means
3
6
are composed of three mutually coupled internal hollow members, in which the first internal hollow member
50
has an elongated cylindrical shape and a step
51
formed inside it and two respective threaded coupling sections
52
and
53
. The first internal hollow member
50
is further equipped with a circular upper sealing projection
54
. The second internal hollow member
55
has a cylindrical shape and is equipped in its upper part with a recess
56
for insertion of the means for removing the closure
1
6
and is equipped in its lower part with a threaded section
57
adapted to cooperate through engagement wit the corresponding threaded section
52
of the first internal hollow member
50
; moreover, the second internal member
55
abuts against the first internal member
50
on the shoulder of the step
51
in order not to excessively penetrate into the first member
50
. Finally, the third internal hollow member
58
is almost completely threaded in
59
in order to cooperate through engagement with the respective threaded section
53
of the first internal member
50
, and is equipped with a lower flat part
60
that performs sealing and barrier functions for the closure
1
6
, being oriented toward the container interior. In the arrangement in
FIG. 8
, the covering body
5
6
is applied outside the three internal hollow members
50
,
55
,
58
, while, inside, the closure
1
6
remains equipped with a hollow cylindrical recess
61
into which the means for removing the closure
1
6
will penetrate.
According to a seventh preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIG. 9
, the supporting arid sealing means
3
7
are composed of a bearing member
63
having a substantially elongated cylindrical shape, that is externally threaded in
64
all along its length and is internally equipped with a plurality of ribs
65
for engaging with the means for removing the closure
1
7
, around such bearing member
63
are screwed a first closure member
66
and a second closure member
67
that are identical and are composed of an internally threaded cylindrical body
66
′,
67
′ closed at one end by a circular flat cover
66
″,
67
″ with its external edges bent slightly inwards. After the first and the second closure members
66
,
67
have been screwed onto the bearing member
63
, the covering body
5
7
is applied so that it covers the three members
63
,
66
,
67
and is contained inside the bent edge of the covers
66
″,
67
″. The closure
1
7
of this arrangement likewise does not have an upper and a lower part, but can be used under any desired vertical orientation.
According to an eighth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown FIG.
10
. the supporting and sealing means
3
8
are composed of a bearing member
70
having a substantially elongated cylindrical shape, that is internally threaded in
71
all along its length and is internally equipped with a cylindrical threaded structure
72
that is screwed inside it and that helps in further reinforcing it. Inside this bearing member
70
are screwed an upper closure member
73
and a lower closure member
74
. The upper closure member
73
is equipped with a cylindrical threaded body
74
that is screwed inside the bearing member
70
and that is overlapped by a cover
75
containing a recess
76
for insertion of the means for removing the closure
1
8
. The lower closure member
74
is composed of a cylindrical threaded body
77
adapted to be screwed inside the bearing member
70
, and a circular flat lower cover
78
with flarings
79
for insertion into the container opening; in this case, however, the lower closure member
74
is shaped in such a way as to form a circular recess
80
between cylindrical body
77
and cover
78
: the recess
80
is adapted to house an end of the bearing member
70
to increase the sealing and strength of the supporting and sealing means
3
8
as a whole. In this arrangement, after having produced the supporting and sealing means
3
8
by coupling their various components, the covering body
5
8
is expanded in order to surround them, leaving the covers
75
and
78
outside.
According to a ninth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIGS. 11 and 13
, the supporting and sealing means
3
9
are composed of an upper closure member
91
and a lower closure member
92
. The upper closure member
91
is composed of a hollow cylindrical body equipped at one of its ends with a plurality of small teeth
93
and at the opposite end with a cover
94
having a recess
95
for insertion of the means for removing the closure
1
9
. The lower closure member
92
is composed of a hollow cylindrical body equipped at one of its ends with a plurality of small teeth
96
and at the opposite end with a circular flat cover
97
equipped with a circular collar
98
adapted to contain the material of the covering body
5
9
. The covering body
5
9
is expanded around the two closure members
91
and
92
in order to surround their respective cylindrical bodies and to engage their respective small teeth
93
and
96
, penetrating into the recess
98
and leaving only the covers
94
and
97
outside.
Moreover, according to a tenth preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIG. 12
, the supporting and sealing means
3
10
are composed of an upper closure member
101
and a lower closure member
102
. The upper closure member
101
is composed of a hollow cylindrical body equipped at one of its ends with a tooth
103
and at the opposite end with a cover
104
having a recess
105
for insertion of the means for removing the closure
1
10
. The lower closure member
102
is composed of a hollow cylindrical body equipped at one of its ends with a tooth
106
and at the opposite end with a circular flat cover
107
equipped with a circular collar
108
adapted to contain the material of the covering body
5
10
. The supporting and sealing means
3
10
in this case receive an internal reinforcement from the mutual coupling of the two teeth
103
and
106
. The covering body
5
10
is expanded around the two closure members
101
and
102
in order to surround their respective cylindrical bodies, penetrating into the recess
108
and leaving only the covers
104
and
107
outside.
According to an eleventh preferred embodiment of the invention, shown in
FIGS. 14
to
16
, the supporting and sealing means
3
11
are composed of an upper closure member
121
and a lower closure member
122
. The upper closure member
121
is composed of a hollow cylindrical body equipped at one of its ends with a threaded or toothed wall
123
and at the opposite end with a cover
124
having a recess
125
for insertion of the removing means for the closure
1
11
. The lower closure member
122
is composed of a hollow cylindrical body equipped at one of its ends with a threaded or toothed recess
126
and at the opposite end with a circular flat cover
127
equipped with a circular collar
128
adapted to contain the material of the covering body
5
11
. The supporting and sealing means
3
11
in this case are produced through the mutual coupling of the wall
123
and the recess
126
by means of their threads or small teeth. The covering body
5
11
is expanded around the two closure members
121
and
122
in order to surround their respective cylindrical bodies, penetrating into the recess
128
and leaving only the covers
124
and
127
outside.
FIG. 16
shows in detail the coupling between the closure
1
11
and the mouth
182
of the container (not shown).
In the embodiment shown in
FIGS. 17 and 18
, the supporting and sealing means
3
12
are composed of a reinforcing member
129
having a basically cylindrical hollow body
130
terminating at both ends in annular shoulders
131
,
131
′. The lower annular shoulder
131
, which is at the end of the closure
1
12
designed to be inserted in the neck of the container, is of a larger diameter than the upper shoulder
131
′.
On the outer surface of the hollow body
130
, between these shoulders
131
,
131
′, is a plurality of annular reliefs
132
. These lie in essentially parallel planes and are preferably equidistant from each other. The diameter of said annular reliefs
132
is in general less than that of the shoulders
131
,
131
′.
The lower end of the hollow body
130
is closed by a base
133
, while the upper end remains open.
The covering body
5
12
is thermoformed directly on said reinforcing member
129
, in such a way that the elastomeric material fills the cavity of the hollow body
130
and the external space between the two shoulders
131
,
131
′. The annular reliefs
132
give the covering body
5
12
purchase. It is clear therefore that the closure
1
12
will assume a frustoconical shape, with the larger base designed to be inserted into the neck of the container. This maximizes the seal created by the closure. The fact that the annular reliefs
132
do not extend radially as far as the lateral surface of the covering body
5
12
further contributes to the seal of the closure and moreover does not spoil the aesthetic appearance of the closure, as clearly shown in FIG.
17
.
Another important feature of this embodiment is that the base
133
of the hollow body
130
is oriented toward the interior of the container and therefore gives the closure
1
12
excellent impermeability to atmospheric oxygen. Meanwhile, the other end of the hollow body
130
is, as stated earlier, open and filled with the elastomeric foam material. This facilitates the insertion of the corkscrew.
FIG. 21
illustrates a further embodiment of the closure of
FIG. 18
wherein the base
133
of the reinforcing member
129
is recessed and includes therein a barrier means in the form of a washer
150
formed of a suitable material such as a precious metal or glass. Also, a protective film
152
of any suitable material such as silicone covers the exterior surface of the covering body
5
.
FIG. 22
illustrates a still further embodiment of the closure of
FIG. 18
wherein the plastic material of the covering body
5
at the open upper end of the reinforcing member
129
is provided with writing or a sign
154
thereon.
FIG. 23
illustrates another embodiment of the closure of
FIG. 18
wherein laser-marking
156
is provided on the outer surface of the coveting body
5
.
In the embodiment shown in
FIGS. 19 and 20
, the supporting and sealing means
3
13
are composed of a reinforcing member
134
and a closure member
135
. These are coupled together detachably.
The reinforcing member
134
comprises a basically cylindrical hollow body
136
closed at the lower end by a base
137
and open at the upper end. Around the outside of said lower base
137
is an upwardly directed annular profile
138
. Inside the hollow body
136
is a plurality of longitudinal fins
139
that extend from the inside surface of the hollow body
136
into the interior. The purpose of these fins
139
is to strengthen the structure and guide the corkscrew as it is inserted, being tapped by the corkscrew as it goes in.
The closure member
135
comprises a disk
140
whose upper surface includes a central depression
141
. On the lower surface of said disk
140
is a sleeve
142
whose outside diameter is approximately equal to or slightly less than the inside diameter of the hollow body
136
, so that the closure member
135
can be inserted into said hollow body. As with the hollow body
136
, a plurality of longitudinal fins is provided on the inside surface of the sleeve
142
.
The covering body
5
13
is of basically cylindrical form, but with an outward swelling to maximize the seal formed by the closure. The interior is hollow and its surface has ribs
144
lying in planes perpendicular to the axis of the covering body
5
. This covering body
5
is pushed onto the hollow body
136
, and then the closure member
135
is inserted on top of that. In this way the covering body
5
13
is held between the annular profile
138
and said closure member
135
. The ribs
144
encourage the compression of the material and its elastic return, which means that the covering body can be made from a wide variety of different materials, such as, besides those described earlier, silicone, in particular an LSR (Liquid Silicone Rubber, preferably a two-component LSR.
As will appear evident to a person skilled in the art from the above description of some preferred embodiments of the invention, what has been shown and described must obviously be considered as a non-limiting example of the scope of the present invention as defined in the attached claims. In fact, numerous variations of the abovementioned embodiments are possible, through a simple combination of the various members shown or by designing new members performing the same functions of support, seal, barrier and covering of the fundamental members of which the closure
1
of the present invention is composed.
Finally, as further particularity, all closures
1
of the invention, both the abovementioned closures and others that could be easily developed, by a person skilled in the art upon reading the present specification, can be further strengthened by providing their coating with a protective film placed all around them, where in particular the protective film could be a silicone film.
When it comes to producing labels, drawings or captions on the surface of the closure according to the invention, according to the invention, the invention allows the use of laser-based methods in addition to the normal technologies of ink printing. The type of laser and the amount of energy required for this marking process will depend on the plastic material being marked. For the material used in the closures of the present invention it will usually be preferred to use an Nd:YAG laser having a power of 30 to 200 Watts and a wavelength of 1064 nm (secondary waves 531-355-266 nm). The plastic material of which the plug is composed must be treated with a color-changing master that changes coloration when struck by the laser beam. A preferred master is SARMATENE® from Clariant. The color-changing master is added in quantities of between 1% and 4%, preferably approximately
2
T. The choice of a laser-marking method involving the use of a color-changing master, instead of laser processes where the marking is produced by surface carbonization, is fundamental because in the case of a closure for containers in which leaktightness of the container is essential, marking by surface carbonization leads irremediably to unacceptable surface irregularities. These surface irregularities would then prevent compliance with the inside surface of the neck of the container as required for an airtight closure.
Claims
- 1. A closure for containers having an opening, comprising:substantially rigid supporting and sealing means for insertion in a container opening, said supporting and sealing means comprising a substantially cylindrical hollow body having an open upper end and a closed lower end, and first and second outwardly extending generally annular shoulders at said upper and lower ends, respectively; and a covering body made of flexible and resilient plastic material, said covering body covering at least a portion of and being connected to said supporting and sealing means, and being adapted to close the container opening when said closure is inserted therein; said plastic material filling the interior cavity of said hollow body and extending between said first and second shoulders, whereby said covering body is supported in a longitudinal direction by said shoulders to prevent elongation of the plastic material.
- 2. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said covering body is made of an elastomeric material.
- 3. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said covering body is adapted to cooperated by interference with the container opening to prevent the product contained therein from leaking out and to prevent gases and/or foreign substances from entering inside the container.
- 4. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said covering body is made of thermoplastic foam material.
- 5. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said covering body is made of thermosetting foam material.
- 6. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said covering body is made of crosslinked foam material.
- 7. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said closure is a plug for containers for foodstuff.
- 8. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 7, characterized in that said plug is adapted to close bottles containing beverages.
- 9. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 8, characterized in that said plug is adapted to close bottles containing alcoholic beverages, in particular wine.
- 10. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 7, characterized in that said plug is adapted to be placed onto a bottle, in order to close it, using an ordinary plugging machine, and is adapted to be removed from a bottle, when opening it, using ordinary plug removing means.
- 11. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 10, characterized in that said plug removing means are a corkscrew.
- 12. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said closure has gas-barrier characteristics, preventing gases from penetrating inside the container, and characteristics ensuring a lack of leakages of the closure material into the container, said barrier and lack-of-leakage characteristics being guaranteed for a period that is not less than the one that can be obtained with a closure made of cork.
- 13. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 12, characterized in that it is further equipped with barrier means on the closed lower end of said hollow body facing the container interior to provide a barrier to the atmosphere surrounding the container.
- 14. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 13, characterized in that said barrier means are composed of at least one thin layer.
- 15. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 14, characterized in that said at least one thin layer is made of a precious metal.
- 16. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 13, characterized in that said barrier means are composed of at least one disk made of glass.
- 17. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that said second annular shoulder (131) has a larger diameter than said first shoulder (131′) such that said closure is frustoconical in shape, and a plurality of annular reliefs (132) being situated on the outer surface of said hollow body (130) and being covered by said plastic material.
- 18. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 4, in which said thermoplastic foam material is made by a hot-molding process involving the use of a fluid in the supercritical state as a blowing agent.
- 19. The closure for containers as claimed in claim 18, in which said fluid is nitrogen in the supercritical state.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
TO2000A0112 |
Feb 2000 |
IT |
|
PCT Information
Filing Document |
Filing Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/EP01/00566 |
|
WO |
00 |
Publishing Document |
Publishing Date |
Country |
Kind |
WO01/58772 |
8/16/2001 |
WO |
A |
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EP |
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EP |
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Feb 1999 |
EP |
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FR |
2 644 142 |
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FR |