The present invention relates to a package for beverage materials such as coffee grounds, tea, latte and mocha mixes, and particularly to a package for better preserving the aroma and flavor of the beverage materials as well as for easier dispensing of the beverage materials.
To prevent loss of aroma or flavor, coffee grounds and tea have been packaged under vacuum or inert gas in gas-impermeable containers such as cans and bags. A first problem with such package is that the user has to measure and handle the messy loose grounds. A second problem is that once the sealed container is opened, the aroma quickly escapes and the moisture and oxygen in atmosphere quickly enter the container, causing quick flavor deterioration of the remaining coffee grounds in the container.
Recently, coffee grounds has been pre-measured and then sandwiched between paper filters to form a filter pack or cartridge. About a dozen such filter packs are then packaged in one gas-impermeable can or bag to preserve the aroma and flavor of the coffee grounds in the filter packs. This improved packaging solved the above first problem, but still has the second problem. To address both the problems, coffee grounds has been first pre-measured and packaged as filter packs. Each filter pack is then immediately packaged or sealed in a gas-impermeable film pouch. About a dozen such film pouches are then packaged in a box for storage. Although such a package resolved the both the above problems, it significantly increases the cost for a cup of coffee due to its high packaging cost, and is thus not affordable by some consumers. In addition, such a package is inconvenient to use since it requires numerous steps, although each step is simple, to obtain a filter pack. Such steps includes opening the box, removing a film pouch from box, tearing the pouch to open it, pulling the filter pack out of the pouch, and closing the box. Furthermore, such a package may cause deformation to the shape of the filter packs and changes in packing density of the coffee grounds in a filter pack during transportation and handling, thus making the strength of brewed coffee inconsistent. The present invention intends to provide a new packaging method for beverage materials to resolve all above problems.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a combined package and dispenser for coffee grounds and the like. The combined package and dispenser comprises a thin, sufficiently flat sheet of sealed coffee grounds. The sheet of sealed coffee grounds comprises a plurality of coffee cartridges or filter packs, a rigid substrate sheet having a rectangle side wall, a flexible barrier sheet sealed to the substrate sheet via a plurality of ring-shaped hermetic seals to form a plurality of cartridge chambers for containing the plurality of cartridges, a plurality of cut lines outside and around the plurality of hermetic seals for isolating one cartridge chamber from its adjacent ones, and a plurality of grippable tabs for dispensing the coffee cartridges. The plurality of grippable tabs comprise tab bases connected to the hermetic seals and are adapted to enable a user to dispense a beverage cartridge at a time from the sheet of sealed coffee grounds by simply pulling a grippable tab to open a cartridge chamber and release the beverage cartridge therein. The substrate sheet comprises a substantially flat top surface according to one aspect of the invention and comprises a plurality of cylindrical cavities sealed by the flexible barrier sheet via the ring-shaped hermetic seals to form the cartridge chambers according to another aspect of the invention. The sheet of sealed coffee grounds may further comprise a cover having a substantially flat top wall for facilitating the stacking of the sheets of sealed coffee grounds over each other, a side wall and a peripheral fringe 27 sealed to the peripheral edge of the substrate sheet, an anti-bulging device to prevent the cover from bulging out by the out-gas from fresh coffee grounds, and a mechanism for conducting the out-gas from each sealed cartridge chamber to the anti-bulging device.
The thin sheet of sealed coffee grounds offers several unique advantages over known packaging methods for coffee grounds. First of all, it has greatly simplified the dispensing of a coffee cartridge from a package. To dispense a coffee cartridge, one simply picks up a thin sheet from a countertop or shelf and pulls a grippable tab to release a cartridge from the thin sheet. In comparison, to dispense a cartridge from a box of coffee cartridges, the user needs to move out the box, to open the lid of the box, to remove a film pouch from the box, to tear the pouch to open it, to pull the cartridge out of the pouch, and to close the lid for the box. Secondly, the thin sheet of sealed coffee grounds has enabled significant savings in package cost and materials since it eliminate the need for no boxes or cans. Third, the thin sheet takes less and less space as the coffee cartridges in it are dispensed. Forth, the individual cartridge chambers in the thin sheet prevent the cartridges from being deformed and the coffee grounds in cartridges from regrouping during transportation and handling. Finally, the thin sheet enables a consumer to tell instantly how many cartridges are left on it, thus reducing the chance of being caught out of cartridges right before brewing coffee.
According to another preferred embodiment of the invention, the thin sheet comprises a plurality of portions of loose coffee grounds in the cartridge chambers rather than a plurality of coffee cartridges. The cut lines are through both the flexible barrier sheet and substrate sheet to allow each cartridge chamber to be removed along the cut line from the thin sheet as a sealed scoop with a handle. When making coffee, one pulls the grippable tab on the scoop to open the cartridge chamber and then holds the handle to pour the portion of coffee grounds into a basket filter or disposable paper filter for a coffee machine.
According to a further preferred embodiment of the invention, the thin sheet comprises a plurality of coffee cartridges, an top flexible barrier sheet, a lower flexible barrier sheet sealed to the top flexible barrier sheet to form a plurality of horizontal and vertical seal strips to define a plurality of cartridge chambers for containing the cartridges. A plurality of perforated lines are formed on the plurality of horizontal and vertical seal strips to allow the removal of one or more cartridge chambers from the thin sheet along the perforated line(s). A plurality of nips are formed on the horizontal seal strips to allow a user to open a cartridge chamber and remove the cartridge therein. The thin sheet further comprises a plurality of seal protectors on the horizontal seal strips to prevent undesired opening of cartridge chambers during the removal of cartridge chambers from the thin sheet along the perforated line(s).
According to a last preferred embodiment, the thin sheet comprises a plurality of coffee cartridges, a substrate sheet having a plurality of cylindrical cavities for receiving the plurality of coffee cartridges, and an easy-to-break barrier film sealed to the substrate sheet to close the plurality of cavities to form a plurality of closed chambers. The cylindrical cavity has a sufficiently flat bottom wall and rigid side to prevent the breakage of the easy-to-break barrier film cavity during transportation and storage. A punch protector may be removably attached to the top surface of the substrate sheet to protect the easy-to-break barrier film. Prior to use, the punch protector must be removed from the thin sheet. To dispense a coffee cartridge, one simply pushes a bottom wall of a cavity to push the coffee cartridge therein outwards to the easy-to-break barrier film, therefore releasing the cartridge from the thin sheet. The thin sheet may further comprise a gas-impervious cover having a flat bottom wall and a peripheral fringe sealed to the substrate sheet and a plurality of visual indicators on the flat bottom wall of the cover to indicate the positions of the bottom walls of cavities, thus guiding a user about where to push to dispense a coffee cartridge in the sheet.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a coffee package that ensures the freshness for the last filter pack or the last portion of coffee grounds dispensed from the coffee package.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a combined beverage package and dispenser that significantly simplifies and speeds up the dispensing of a beverage filter pack or a portion of beverage materials from the beverage package.
It is object of the present invention to provide a coffee package that eliminates the use of boxes or cans, therefore offering significant savings in package materials and cost.
It is object of the present invention to provide a coffee package that protects the filter packs against deformation in shape and change in degree of packing of the coffee grounds.
It is object of the present invention to provide a coffee package that saves space.
It is object of the present invention to provide a coffee package that allows consumers to tell instantly how many coffee filter packs or how many portions of coffee grounds left in the coffee package.
These and other objectives and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments, taken together with the accompanying drawings.
The accompanying drawing illustrates diagramatically non-limitative embodiment of the invention, as follows:
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b is a sectional view along line b—b of
c is a sectional view of
a is a top view of the sheet of sealed coffee grounds of
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b is a sectional view along line b—b of
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b is a sectional view along line b—b of
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b is a sectional view along line b—b of
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b is a sectional view along line b—b of
c is a sectional view of a sealed scoop of coffee grounds removed from the sheet of sealed coffee grounds
d shows the dispensing of the coffee grounds from the scoop of
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b is a top view of a sealed pouch removed from the sheet of sealed coffee grounds of
c shows the breaking of the sealed pouch of
a is a sectional view along line a—a of
b shows removal of a coffee filter pack from the sheet of sealed coffee grounds of
The grippable tabs 19 are formed approximately 15 to 75 degrees, preferably about 45 degrees, relative to a center lines connecting the center points of the hermetic seals in a row or column of cartridge chambers on the sheet 10. Such an arrangement is found to not only enable a longer grippable tab for better gripping but also increase the number of coffee cartridges that can be sealed on the sheet 10. To facilitate the gripping by a user, the plurality of grappable tabs 19 are raised from the substrate sheet 20 (
The substrate sheet 20 has sufficient rigidity to prevent or reduce its deformation during pulling the grippable tabs to open the cartridge chambers 11, thereby facilitating the dispensing or removal of the cartridges 14 from the sheet 10. The substrate sheet 20 and flexible barrier sheet 21 have sufficient gas barrier to the aroma in the coffee grounds and oxygen and moisture in air to prevent the deterioration of the coffee grounds. To reduce the mass and thus the cost of the substrate sheet, the substrate sheet 20 may comprise a sufficiently rigid sheet of porous materials such as paperboard, paper, plastic foam or wood to achieve the rigidity and a metal foil or polymeric barrier film laminated to the porous sheet to achieve the gas barrier. The substrate sheet can also comprise a plastic sheet of plastics such as polyester and polypropylene with sufficient thickness to achieve the rigidity and a thin metal barrier layer vacuum-deposited on the plastic sheet or polymeric barrier layer attached to the plastic sheet for the gas barrier. The substrate sheet can also be a low-cost metal such as aluminum sheet of 0.05 to 0.5 mm thick to achieve both the rigidity and gas barrier needed. The substrate sheet can also be a sufficiently thick plastic sheet such as a polyester sheet of about 0.1 to 0.5 mm thick to achieve both the rigidity and gas barrier needed. A fringe may be formed around the edge 35 of the substrate sheet to enhance the rigidity of the sheet 10. It is however appreciated that a non-rigid sheet or film can be used, although not preferred, as the substrate sheet according to the invention. The flexible barrier sheet 21 can be a laminated or co-extruded gas-impervious film and should have sufficient strength to prevent breakage of the grippable tabs 17 when the user pulls a tab to dispense a coffee cartridge from the sheet 10. For example, flexible barrier sheet 21 can be a laminated film having an aluminum foil for providing the barrier and a polyester layer for providing the strength. A heat-activable adhesion layer such as a polyethylene, polyacrylic and poly(ethyl vinyl acetate) layer may be formed on one or both of the substrate sheet 20 and flexible barrier sheet 21 to allow the formation of the hermetic seals 15 between the substrate sheet and flexible barrier sheet.
As a result of the thinness and sufficient flatness of the sheet 10, a plurality of such sheets 10 can be stacked over each other (
a show a modified version of the sheet 10 of
For coffee cartridges 14 that contains coffee grounds from coffee beans roasted within a day or several hours, an anti-bulging device 34 is required to prevent the cover from bulging out by coffee out-gassing. The anti-bulging device is placed on the second cover 28 and comprises a supply of absorber materials 42 for carbon dioxide out-gassed from the freshly roasted coffee grounds. A gas passageway (not shown) is formed on the substrate sheet 20 to conduct the carbon dioxide out-gassed by the coffee cartridges on the upper surface of the substrate sheet to the device 34. To prevent the cartridge chambers 11 from being over-pressurized or damaged by the out-gassed carbon dioxide, the flexible barrier sheet 21 can be made perm-selective to carbon dioxide, i.e. can be made to allow carbon dioxide to permeate through at sufficiently higher rate than oxygen and aroma. Since coffee grounds from freshly roasted beans can out-gas up to 3 ml carbon dioxide per gram of grounds within the first two days of roasting, a coffee cartridge containing seven grams of grounds for one cup of coffee would out-gas up to 21 ml of gas, which requires the flexible barrier sheet 21 to have very high permeability to carbon dioxide. An example of a flexible barrier sheet with such high permeability to carbon dioxide is a co-extruded film having a structure of 0.3 mil poly(ethyl vinyl acetate)/0.6 mil amorphous polypropylene/0.3 mil poly(ethyl vinyl acetate) where the amorphous polypropylene layer provides strength for the grippable tabs 17 and barrier and the poly(ethyl vinyl acetate) layer enables the hermetic seal to the substrate sheet. In this case, the flexible barrier sheet 21 is designed to maintain the freshness of the coffee cartridges 14 for a relatively short period of time after the cover 28 is removed from the substrate sheet. Also in this case, the covers 28 should have high barrier to oxygen, moisture and aroma required to maintain the freshness of the coffee cartridges for a long period of time during storage and transportation.
The sheet of sealed coffee grounds 10 of
The base 41 for each of the plurality of grippable tabs is attached by heat staking to the flexible barrier sheet 21. To reduce the force needed to open a cartridge chamber 11, the base 41 of the grippable tab 17 is connected to the part of the flexible barrier sheet that is sufficiently close to the ring-shaped hermetic seal 15. Preferably, at least part of the heat-staking area is at or beyond the outside edge of the hermetic seal 15. One advantage of attaching external grippable tabs to the flexible barrier sheet 21 rather than cutting the flexible barrier sheet to form the grippable tabs is the preservation of the integrity and gas barrier of the flexible barrier sheet. The external grippable tabs make it possible to use low barrier, thus lower cost, rigid materials such as polystyrene for the substrate sheet 20 since the substrate sheet is enclosed or sandwiched between the high barrier cover 28 and flexible barrier sheet 21. It is appreciated that a very tiny amount of oxygen and moisture may permeate through perforated cut lines 16 on the flexible barrier sheet 21 into the space between the substrate sheet 20 and the cover 28, which may later reach coffee grounds 22 in the cartridge chambers 11 through the side wall of the cavities 18. To minimize such permeation, a thin metal such as aluminum layer can be vacuum-deposited on the surface, preferably on the lower or bottom surface, of the substrate sheet. It was discovered that the vacuum-deposited metal layer was damaged or broken in the regions of the substrate sheet where the cavities 18 are formed. Fortunately, the vacuum-deposited metal layer in the regions of the substrate sheet directly below the perforated cut lines 16 remain intact after the formation of the cavities 18 on the substrate sheet to prevent the permeation through the perforated cut lines 16. It is was further discovered that with such vacuum-deposited metal layer on the substrate sheet, the grippable tabs 17 can be formed on the flexible barrier sheet 21 as described in the sheet 10 of
The sheet of sealed coffee grounds 10 of
The sheet 10 of
With the cut lines 18 through the flexible barrier sheet 21, barrier lining film 51 and substrate sheet 20 (
In sheets 10 of
According to a further preferred embodiment of the invention,
To prevent the undesired opening of cartridge chambers 61 during the removal of one or more cartridge chambers 61 from a sheet 10 along a perforated line, the sheet 10 further comprises a plurality of seal protectors 70 on the horizontal seal strips 69. The seal protector comprises an elongated slot 66 and one nip 71 on each side of the elongated slot. The elongated slot 66 should be sufficiently long to allow the nips 71 to be positioned sufficiently away from the ends of the elongated slot. The elongated slot 66 can be replaced by a clean-cut line of the same length.
The sheet 10 further comprises a gas-impervious cover 28 having a substantially flat bottom wall 30 parallel to easy-to-break barrier film 52 for facilitating the stacking of sheets 10, a side wall 40 and a peripheral fringe 27 sealed to the peripheral edge of the substrate sheet 20. A plurality of visual indicators 57 are formed on the bottom wall 30 of the cover 28 to indicate the positions of the bottom walls 79 for cavities 38, thus provide a guide to a user about where to push to dispense a coffee cartridge in the sheet. A punch protector 54 is attached around its edge 55 to the peripheral edge of the substrate sheet 20 for preventing the breakage of the easy-to-break barrier film 52 during storage and transportation. The punch protector has a handle 31 for facilitating its removal from the sheet 10 prior to use and a hole 32 for allowing the sheet 10 to be hanged on a hanger.
Clearly, the modifications for the coffee package can be combined into or removed from any of the exemplar embodiments of the invention. The scope of the invention is obviously not restricted to the embodiments described by way of examples and depicted in the drawings, there being numerous changes, modifications, additions, and applications thereof imaginable within the purview of the claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040149135 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |