This invention relates to a threaded closure for being screwed onto a container.
A variety of packages, including dispensing packages that include a container and a closure, have been developed for personal care products such as shampoo, lotions, etc., as well as for other fluent materials. A closure is typically mounted over the container opening. In many types of packages, both the closure and container are threaded so that the closure can be initially screwed on the container by an automatic capping machine.
Depending upon the size of the container, the size of the closure, and the materials from which the container and closure are made, it can be desirable in some applications to provide the capability for screwing the closure onto the container with a relatively high torque.
In a typical conventional design of a closure, the closure is provided with a cylindrical, exterior, peripheral wall. In conventional, high speed, high-volume manufacturing processes, the closure is installed on the container by an automatic capping machine which incorporates rubber rollers or rolls for engaging the peripheral wall of the closure. The automatic capping machine rollers are typically made from a somewhat soft, resilient material, such as rubber. The capping machine rollers are rotated while in frictional engagement against the closure peripheral wall to impart a rotation to the closure for screwing the closure on to the container.
In some conventional closure designs, the peripheral wall of the closure is includes vertical flutes or ribs. The flutes or ribs have a generally V-shaped transverse cross section (as viewed in a plane perpendicular to the vertical height of each rib), and such a flute or rib feature increases the frictional engagement between the capping machine rollers and the closure.
It would be desirable in some applications to provide an improved closure having an enhanced capability for being gripped by the rollers of an automatic capping machine. Further, it would be advantageous if such an improved closure could accommodate a relatively high torque installation without slipping in an automatic capping machine.
It would be desirable to provide an improved closure wherein the enhanced gripping feature would work well with conventional capping machine rollers. Such an improved closure should also preferably accommodate closures constructed from a variety of materials and having various sizes.
It would also be beneficial if such an improved closure could accommodate the efficient, high-quality, high-speed, high-volume processing techniques for applying closures, and could accommodate such techniques with a reduced package reject rate to produce packages having consistent operating characteristics package-to-package with high reliability.
An improved closure of the present invention can accommodate designs that include one or more of the above-discussed desired features or capabilities. According to one aspect of the present invention, a closure is provided for a container that has an opening to the container interior where a product may be stored and that has a screw thread form. The closure includes (A) a screw thread form for engaging the container screw thread form to permit the closure to be screwed on to the container, and (B) a peripheral, gripable wall having a plurality of circumferentially spaced flutes or ribs. At least some of the flutes or ribs each have (1) a leading side that generally faces toward the screwing on direction of rotation, and (2) a trailing side that (a) generally faces toward the unscrewing direction of rotation, and (b) has a hook-like configuration defining a recess which is open toward the unscrewing direction of rotation.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention, each hook-like configuration has a distal end that is radially outwardly of the recess and that defines a projection extending in or toward the unscrewing direction of rotation relative to the recess.
The present invention permits the use of mechanical advantage or leverage when applying a threaded closure to a container. The novel design of the flutes or ribs permits increased torque to be transferred by the conventional automated capping machine rollers without the use of additional mechanical devices or torque application modifications of the capping machine. The novel flute or ribbed design can be used either intermittently around a 360° vertical, peripheral surface of the closure or substantially continuously around the closure. The flutes or ribs can have varying heights at various locations around the circumference of the closure. The radially projecting, distal, vertical end portions of each flute or rib can have variations in shape from flat, to rounded, to a single sharp edge. The angle or orientation of the flutes or ribs can vary depending upon the closure size and aesthetic design considerations.
Numerous other advantages and features of the present invention will become readily apparent from the following detailed description of the invention, from the claims, and from the accompanying drawings.
In the accompanying drawings forming part of the specification, in which like numerals are employed to designate like parts throughout the same,
While this invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms, this specification and the accompanying drawings disclose only some specific forms as examples of the invention. The invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments so described, and the scope of the invention will be pointed out in the appended claims.
For ease of description, the closure of this invention is described in particular orientations, and terms such as upper, lower, horizontal, etc., are used with reference to these orientations. It will be understood, however, that the closure may be manufactured, stored, and used in orientations other than the ones described.
With reference to the figures, a first embodiment of a closure of the present invention is illustrated in
The container may be stored and used in an upright orientation wherein the closure 40 is at the top of the container. The container may also be normally stored in an inverted position (not illustrated). When stored in the inverted position, the container employs the closure 40 as a support base.
In the preferred first embodiment illustrated in
The illustrated, preferred embodiment of the closure 40 is adapted to be used with a container having an opening to provide access to the container interior and to a product contained therein. The closure 40 can be used to dispense many materials, including, but not limited to, relatively low or high viscosity liquids, creams, gels, suspensions, mixtures, lotions, etc. (such as a material constituting a food product, a beverage product, a personal care product, an industrial or household cleaning product, or other compositions of matter (e.g., compositions for use in activities involving manufacturing, commercial or household maintenance, construction, agriculture, medical treatment, military operations, etc.)).
The container with which the closure 40 may be used would typically be a squeezable container having a flexible wall or walls which can be grasped by the user and squeezed or compressed to increase the internal pressure within the container so as to force the product out of the container and through the opened closure. Such a flexible container wall typically has sufficient, inherent resiliency so that when the squeezing forces are removed, the container wall returns to its normal, unstressed shape. Such a squeezable container is preferred in many applications but may not be necessary or preferred in other applications. For example, in some applications it may be desirable to employ a generally rigid container, and to pressurize the container interior at selected times with a piston or other pressurizing system, or to reduce the exterior ambient pressure so as to suck the material out through the open closure.
It is presently contemplated that many applications employing the closure 40 will conveniently be realized by molding the closure 40 from suitable thermoplastic material or materials. In the preferred embodiment illustrated, the closure could be molded from a suitable thermoplastic material, such as, but not limited to, polypropylene.
As can be seen in
At the top of the closure base skirt 46 as shown in
With reference to
In the preferred embodiment, the closure a lid 44 (
The rear end of the lid 44 is connected to the hinge structure 70. To accommodate the hinge structure 70, the rear part of the peripheral wall 76 of the lid 44 has a notch 78 (
As can be seen in
The hinge structure 70 is preferably integrally molded as a unitary part of the closure with the base 42 and lid 44. One preferred material for molding the closure is polypropylene. It has been found that this material provides a relatively strong, durable closure hinge. The material has the capability for withstanding typical loads imposed on the hinge structure 70 by a user of the closure when the user opens and closes the lid 44, and has the capability for accommodating a relatively high number of opening and closing cycles without failure.
One suitable hinge structure 70 is the snap-action hinge disclosed in the U.S. Pat. No. 5,642,824. Other hinge structures could be employed, such as a living film hinge, a tether or strap, etc. The detailed design and operation of the hinge structure 70 form no part of the present invention.
In the preferred form of the closure illustrated, the lid 44 is normally maintained closed with a friction fit or interference fit between the lid spud 84 (
It will also be appreciated that the closure of the present invention may be provided with a variety of dispensing passage structures other than the aperture 60 (
The closure body skirt 46 maybe characterized as defining a peripheral, gripable wall with a plurality of circumferentially spaced, vertically oriented, flutes or ribs 110 (
The configuration of the ribs 110 will next be described in detail, particularly with reference to
Each rib 110 has a leading side that faces generally toward the screwing on direction of rotation, and a portion of the length of the rib 110 designated by the reference letter G in
Each rib 110 includes a trailing side that generally faces toward the unscrewing direction of rotation and that has a hook-like configuration defining a projection in the unscrewing direction that is designated by the projection length F in
As can be seen in
With reference to
The inner circular arc surface 130 between two adjacent ribs 110 at the roots of the ribs 110 has an arc length D as shown in
With reference to
Further, in the presently preferred embodiment illustrated in
As can be seen in
In the preferred embodiment illustrated in
As previously described, two adjacent ribs 110 define between them the a circular arc length C (
In the preferred embodiment illustrated in
In the preferred embodiment illustrated in
The novel rib configuration permits an automatic or automated capping machine to grip the closure body 42 with an enhanced, or stronger, engagement so that a greater torque can be applied to the closure 40 as it screwed on to the container. In particular,
As can be seen in
A second embodiment of the rib configuration is illustrated in
If desired, the ribs 110 or 110 A need not project outwardly beyond, or even be coextensive with, the farthest radial projection of the overlying closure lid. That is, the ribs 110 or 110 A may project radially somewhat less than the maximum radial projection of the overlying closure lid. However, any projection of the overlying closure lid beyond the closure body ribs must not be so great as to prevent sufficient engagement of the automatic capping machine roller material with the ribs.
It will be readily observed from the foregoing detailed description of the invention and from the illustrations thereof that numerous other variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the true spirit and scope of the novel concepts or principles of this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2586775 | Benner et al. | Feb 1952 | A |
4278180 | Willis | Jul 1981 | A |
5381912 | Walker et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5941404 | Charrette | Aug 1999 | A |
20080197101 | Rapoport | Aug 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080217286 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |