The present invention relates to a tamper-indicating or tamper-evident closure for a container wherein the closure must be altered in some fashion to obtain access to the container contents, the alteration being evidence that the container has been previously opened or at least that the tamper-evident feature has been altered.
A variety of container closures have been developed or proposed wherein an initial opening of a lid provides visual evidence of such an occurrence—even after the lid has been subsequently closed.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,875,907 and 6,269,986 each discloses a closure that is adapted for mounting on a container and that has a body and a lid. The closure includes a tamper-indicating member connected to the body of the closure. The tamper-indicating member is also connected along a frangible junction to the lid of the closure. When the tamper-indicating member is depressed, the frangible junction is broken to provide an indication that the closure may have been previously opened.
While the above-discussed type of closure can function well for the purposes for which it has been designed, the inventors of the present invention have discovered that it would be desirable to provide an improved tamper-evident closure which could (1) accommodate (a) convenient molding of the closure with the lid in an initially open position, and (b) subsequent closing of the lid by the manufacturer with a simple and easy manipulation to place the closure in its fully closed, tamper-indicating, ready condition for eventual installation on a container and delivery to a user, (2) readily incorporate certain types of lids and/or flow control elements, (3) incorporate the tamper-evident features which could optionally be designed to blend in with, or enhance, the cosmetic appearance of the closure, prior to the initial opening by the consumer, (4) optionally be designed to be molded as one piece, including the lid, body, and tamper-indicating features, and (5) be initially opened relatively easily by the user.
The inventors have also discovered that it would be desirable if, after the tamper-indicating feature of such an improved closure has been initially breached, the closure presented a very clear indication of that breach, without the creation of a separate scrap piece requiring disposal.
The inventors of the present invention have discovered how to construct such an improved tamper-evident or tamper-indicating closure which can accommodate designs having one or more of the above-discussed benefits and features.
According to some aspects of the present invention, an improved tamper-evident closure is provided for being mounted to, or formed as a unitary part of, a container that has an opening to the container interior where a product may be stored.
The closure has a body that is either (1) a separate structure for being attached to the container at the opening, or (2) a structure formed as a unitary portion of the container at the opening. The body has at least one dispensing orifice for communicating with the container opening.
The closure also has a lid that (1) is connected to the body with a hinge and movable between (i) a closed position occluding the dispensing orifice, and (ii) an open position spaced from the dispensing orifice, and (2) has a lifting region against which a force can be applied by the user to lift the lid away from the closed position.
The closure also has a tamper-evident tab that has a proximal end frangibly connected to the lid with a frangible junction.
The closure also has a pressing member that (1) is connected to the body in an initial unactuated configuration, and (2) can be subsequently pressed laterally inwardly to (i) deform to an actuated configuration, and (ii) force the tamper-evident tab laterally inwardly a distance sufficient to break the frangible junction to separate the tamper-evident tab from the lid.
A first receiver is defined on either the tamper-evident tab or the pressing member.
A first connector is defined on the other of the tamper-evident tab and the pressing member for being received in the first receiver to establish a non-releasable engagement between the tamper-evident tab and the pressing member when the lid is initially moved to the closed position for the first time (e.g., by the manufacturer of the lid).
A second receiver is defined on the body.
A second connector is defined on the first connector for being received in the second receiver when the pressing member is pressed laterally inwardly from the unactuated configuration to the actuated configuration to establish a non-releasable arrangement between the pressing member and the second receiver while the pressing member is in the actuated configuration to indicate that the tamper-evident tab has been broken from the lid.
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, the accompanying drawings illustrate only one specific form as an example of the invention that is presently believed to be the best mode. The specification describes the one illustrated embodiment, and also describes various alternate embodiments or variations. 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 illustrated embodiment of the closure that incorporates aspects 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, the closure is identified generally in some of those figures by reference number 40. The closure 40 is adapted to be disposed on a container (not illustrated) which may have a conventional mouth or opening formed by a neck or other suitable structure.
Although the container, per se, does not form a part of the broadest aspects of the present invention, per se, it will be appreciated that at least a body or base portion of the closure 40 optionally may be provided as a unitary portion, or extension, of the top of the container. However, in the embodiment illustrated, the closure 40 is a separate article or unit (e.g., a dispensing closure 40) which is adapted to be removably, or non-removably, installed on a previously manufactured container that has an opening to the container interior.
The illustrated 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 types of materials, including, but not limited to, relatively low or high viscosity liquids, creams, gels, lotions, suspensions, mixtures, discrete items (including particles), 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 could be a squeezable container for a liquid product, and such a container could have 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 extension skirt 46, the skirt 46 joins a transverse deck 56 (
With reference to
The platform 60 has (but need not have) a downwardly extending, annular, internal seal structure 84 (
In the preferred embodiment, the closure a lid 44 (
As can be seen in
The lid primary snap-hinge 88 (
In alternative embodiments (not illustrated), the hinge structures other than those illustrated could be employed instead. For example, the closure of the present invention could employ other hinge structures such as a tether, strap, etc. The detailed design and operation of such alternate hinge structures form no part of the present invention.
When the closure lid 44 is closed, then as can be seen in
The closure body 42 and closure lid 44 incorporate tamper-evident features. In particular, the closure lid 44 includes a tamper-evident tab 120 (
The tab 120 defines a slot 140 (
With reference to
As can be seen in
The post 170 includes a shank 174 (
As can be seen in
The closure 40 is initially molded by the manufacturer from a suitable polymeric material (such as, for example, polypropylene) with the lid 44 in a substantially fully opened position or orientation as illustrated in
The closed closure can be then installed on a suitable container filled with a product, and the completed package is then ready for use.
It will be appreciated that when the user first encounters the initially closed closure 40 with the pressing member 150 in the unactuated configuration (
In order to open the closure 40 on a container for the first time, the user must first press the pressing member 150 rearwardly or laterally inwardly (toward the hinge 88) against the tab 120 with sufficient force to break the frangible junction 130 (
When the pressing member 150 has been pushed rearwardly sufficiently far, the head 180 of the post 170, which is in alignment with the retention wall aperture 164, engages the edges of the retention wall 160 that define the aperture 164. The edges of the retention wall 160 defining the aperture 164 are temporarily and elastically deformed in such a way that they spread laterally further apart to accommodate insertion of the barbs 188 of the post head enlarged retention portion 186 as shown in
If an attempt is made to move the deformed (i.e., actuated) pressing member 150 laterally forwardly (outwardly) away from the concave, actuated configuration illustrated in
With the frangible bridges 134 broken and with the pressing member 150 maintained in the concave, actuated configuration, the user can readily apply a force with a finger or thumb to the lid lift region 96 (
With reference to
When the pressing member 150 is initially pressed inwardly by the user to intentionally break the frangible bridges 134, the tamper-evident tab 120 remains engaged with the post 170 and does not drop away from the closure 40 as a waste piece which might litter the environment.
Because the pressing member 150 has an initial unactuated configuration that is highly visible, and also has a subsequently deformed, actuated configuration that is highly visible, a person can easily determine whether or not the package integrity has been violated.
Further, because the pressing member 150 is maintained or locked in the actuated position once the user has sufficiently pressed in on the pressing member 150 and then subsequently released the pressing force, the actuated pressing member 150 continues to provide the tamper-evident function.
Referring to
It will be appreciated that although the illustrated embodiment incorporates a pressing member 150 with a bi-stable action so that the pressing member 150 is self-maintained in the inwardly concave, actuated condition, the closure could be instead constructed in a way that does not require the pressing member 150 to have such a bi-stable, self-maintained, actuated configuration. For example, in an alternate embodiment (not illustrated), the thickness and initial curvature of the pressing member 150 could be designed, in conjunction with the vertical, lateral side edges (defined approximately at the locations 154 in
It will be appreciated that in the embodiment illustrated in
In the illustrated embodiment, the inward movement of the pressing member 150 to the inwardly concave, actuated configuration results in the pressing member 150 substantially conforming to the inwardly extending recess defined by the concave retention wall 160, and this creates a large space under the lid lifting region 96 that allows the lid 44 to be easily opened, and this also readily provides an enhanced visual indication that the frangible bridges 134 have been broken and that the closure lid 44 can now be lifted open. However, in an alternate embodiment (not illustrated), the pressing member 150 need not necessarily assume a concave shape when pushed to the actuated configuration. It would be sufficient that the actuated pressing member 150 is held inwardly only far enough to provide (1) access to the lifting region 96, and (2) a view of the broken bridges 134A.
The provision of the pressing member 150 in the closure body 42 allows the manufacturer to initially place the closure in a “ready-to-open” configuration for user manipulation that (1) requires only a simple pushing action to permit lifting of the lid 44, and (2) does not require other, more complicated, manipulations, such as rotating and/or pulling a component relative to another component.
In the embodiment illustrated, the tamper-evident tab 120 with its slot 140 functions as a “first receiver” for receiving the post shank 174 in a non-releasable arrangement, whereas the retention wall 160 with its aperture 164 functions as a “second receiver” for receiving a portion of the post head 180 in a non-releasable arrangement. The post shank 174 may be characterized as a “first connector” for being received in the first receiver tab slot 140 in a non-releasable arrangement. Moreover, the post shank 174 together with the enlarged retention portion 186 of the head 180 may be characterized as a “second connector” that is defined on the first connector and that can be positioned in a non-releasable arrangement with the aperture 164 of the retention wall 160 which together define the second receiver.
It will be appreciated that in an alternate embodiment (not illustrated), the closure 40 could have a different configuration wherein the connector post is on the tamper-evident tab (in place of the slot 140) to function as both the “first connector” and “second connector,” and wherein the pressing member has a snap-fit slot (in place of the post 170) to function as a “first receiver” for receiving the post (wherein the enlarged head end of the post would still continue to function as part of the second connector for being retained in the retention wall aperture 164 as in the illustrated embodiment).
It will also be appreciated that the shapes of the frangible bridges 134, side edge connections 154 of the pressing member 150, various wall sections, distances, and tolerances could be altered to adapt to varying sizes and styles of closures.
With reference to the spout 70 illustrated in
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 the principles of this invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2011/026950 | 3/3/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/4/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/118502 | 9/7/2012 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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International Search Report and the Written Opinion mailed May 5, 2011 in the International Application No. PCT/US2011/026950 of which the instant patent application is the U.S. National Phase. |
English translation of German Application Serial No. 100 25 265 A1 published Jul. 19, 2011. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120279966 A1 | Nov 2012 | US |