This invention is directed to strap-reinforced compressed package assemblies, including paperboard packages with separation of wares in the package, and the integration of the articles in the package with separation spacers, a tensioned strap, and the package itself, to form a tightly-held load-bearing structural unit suited to multi-layer palletizing, the rigors of transportation, storage and shelf display purposes, with significant economic and ecological benefits.
Paperboard packaging is extensively used for the transportation and display of goods. Current packaging practice does not follow structural engineering principles of integrating all the elements of a package contents with those of the packaging, per se. Thus the available, intrinsic strengths of the articles forming the package contents are not utilized with that of the package per se to provide a robust integrated package unit.
This failure to optimize package strength is then reflected in potential failure of individual packages. This failure to optimize package strength can also be reflected in potential failure of the aggregated transported load structure. There can be consequent damage to the integrity of a whole pallet load, consequent to the stresses resulting from the static and dynamic forces encountered in transportation and storage.
Current packaging practice relies in large measure on the structural strength and rigidity of the exterior carton per se for pallet load stability, thus requiring a cardboard box structure of undue strength and rigidity, with correspondingly high cardboard and glue content. The profligate use of materials and energy to construct and then recycle such monocoque packaging for multi-layer palletizing, transportation and storage is a little-recognized but important factor that contributes to the generation of greenhouse gases, global warming, the denuding of forests and pollution of water resources.
The current modes of packaging frequently permit relative movement and fretting between adjacent articles within a package, which translates, under shipping conditions, into goods articles damaged from mutual impact with other goods articles within the package. Such internal movement of articles within a package can include sliding, spinning, pivoting, and tilting, and can result in skewing of articles in the package, which renders the packaging unstable, thus destroying the stability and integrity of the pallet load, with consequent further damage to packages and their contents.
The prior use of strapping has been generally ineffective, and raises problems of pallet-load-bearing stability, having been used primarily in a bundling role, with a failure to recognize the strap's potential contribution as an integrated load bearing structural component. Earlier theoretical packaging work generally resulted in undependable packages in the load-bearing sense with predictable failures. These shortcomings are particularly disadvantageous in the supply and distribution service, where the primary focus is on palletized handling and transportation of packages of wares, so that commercial application in the supply chain was not achieved.
The present invention provides a transportation suitable package assembly of significantly reduced packaging material content, being based upon the principle of combining the structure and load bearing capability of the goods articles in the package with the structure of the package per se, using tensioned binding members, such as inelastic straps to compress the package and its contents of goods articles into an integrated, stable, structural load-bearing unit.
The long-standing problem of constructing a suitable reduced material content package for substantially vertical containers that can independently withstand the rigors and dynamic forces encountered during transport and distribution, and subsequently function as a storage and/or display package, is solved by combining the package components, the articles, and sheet blank with a compressively engaged binding member so as to immobilize the elements in an integrated unitary structure that will not cant, skew or otherwise deform when impacted by external forces.
The present invention satisfies the long felt need of packaging professionals to create a more robust package assembly that better protects contents, reduces overall package cost and/or minimizes package weight and dimensions, creates a more environmentally-friendly assembly that consumes less resources and materials to produce and is easier to recycle/dispose, and creates a shelf-ready or pallet ready display assembly that requires minimal handling by retailers that can independently survive distribution handling. This package assembly meets each of those objectives and further affords carrier attributes.
It will be understood that to meet the needs of industry, packages are required to be suited for loading onto pallets. Packages should also to be able to withstand the rigors of long-term rugged transportation and potential mishandling. In this context, more than simple load-bearing capability of the package, its contents, and the contents of the containers is required, as transverse dynamic (i.e. skewing and pivoting) forces during transportation may be an inescapable reality, so that resistance to skewing loads may be an essential characteristic of the subject packages, which are referred to as “substantially rigid,” to encompass the requisite anti-skewing capability.
Separation between articles or containers within the package of the present invention is provided by the provision of spacers. Spacers are sandwiched by the tensioned binding member and members against the walls of the articles in the package, serving as a frictional linking element to prevent skewing of the articles in the package, and further integrating the package and its contents into a stable unitary structural load-bearing, substantially rigid unit that can be arranged in layers upon pallets. Spacers provide positional conformance and relative immobility of the articles.
Such pallet loads may consist of a plurality of packages of a single, uniform product, or may consist of mixed, multi-product pallets, for convenient shipping and distribution in the supply chain.
The open product faces that result from the subject invention are particularly helpful in affording improved package ventilation, in the case of products requiring a changing of packaged product temperature, by allowing faster temperature stabilization, with concomitant savings in plant cooling/heating cycle time and operating costs.
Further advantages of the present system are: the provision of pallet loads of enhanced stability; improved capability for palletizing with a mixture of goods packages; faster shelf transfer due to reduced de-packaging requirements; reduction in material return shipment and discard; facilitated package breakdown due to reduced adhesive affixed joints and reduced use of glue, with improved return handling and transportation; and enhanced re-use of packaging.
The rising costs of packaging, in both materials and labor costs for packaging production and for the handling of packaged goods, together with the adverse impact upon the environment from the higher levels of corrugate production presently required, all combine to make commercial application of the present invention both feasible and highly desirable.
Thus, there is provided a package construct having an outer wall structure; a plurality of articles such as containers in tightly packed relation, spacers and spacer walls between some articles, and tensioned binding means wrapped about the wall structure in compressing relation with the wall structures of the plurality of articles and the spacers, to provide a substantially rigid unitary structural unit well-suited for stacking in self-supporting, multi-layers, including palletization for storage and shipping. In the present invention, the walls, spacers, and containers need not be of the same height.
A package of the present invention may contain rigid articles and alternatively may contain semi-rigid articles. The articles have a load bearing capability. The individual articles within a package assembly must be substantially uniform. The individual articles within a package assembly should have a substantially vertical wall. The articles should be generally rectangular and alternatively should be generally cylindrical or any other shape as is known in the art. The articles should have at least two outer contact points that are vertically displaced, the contact points being the points of contact between articles, spacers, and walls. The articles can be containers, goods, packages, tubes, cans, bottles, jars, cartons, barrels, boxes, carboys, and drums among others.
Spacers also provide a protective cushion between the articles of the package, and also protect adjacent articles. Spacers can be divider media, flaps, cut-outs, die-cuts, a protrusion between containers, inter-spacial material, occlusions, affixments, and independent material.
The spacers can be paper, paperboard, plastic or paperboard corrugate, hot melt and other adhesives, expanded and non-expanded plastics, labels and sleeves, carpet, rubber, fabric, preformed egg-carton style material, plastic ring carriers such as Hi Cone® brand, semi-structural and structural wood/cellulose/oil-based product. A spacer can comprise multiple spacers, and can be composed of a combination of materials.
The spacers must frictionally engage the articles. Each article is compressively engaged with at least one other article and at least one spacer. In instances where the spacer provides structural support for top load, the spacer can be reinforced to provide added stiffness and more crush resistance to enhance load carrying ability.
A package of the present invention can be handled as a structural unit, in the manner of a traditional rigid box.
The package of the present invention also serves favorably for display purposes as individual package constructs by the simple expedient, in many instances, of removing a binding member from a de-palletized package. The packages also lend themselves to pallet, multiple construct displays.
The surfaces of the packaging lend themselves to printed advertising, and for purposes of contents determination in warehouses and storerooms. The reduction in material likewise lends itself to increased article visibility and package contents determination.
In addition to stabilizing the integrated package, the use of interposed spacers between the articles also limits and prevents mutual working and fretting between the goods articles during prolonged and rugged shipping and handling.
The simplified packaging of the present invention protects the package contents against damage due to impact with adjoining package units and/or the application of external forces by distributing forces to other package members that are coupled to each other, stabilizes product content against mutual slipping, sliding, skewing and impact, and the packaging and its contents form structural, load bearing unit, which function in a support role to overlying layers of packages in multi-tier pallet loads.
The use of a tensioned binding member such as strap can serve to trap, compress and immobilize the intervening spacer members and the articles in the package, in a compressed relation with adjoining product article surfaces. Multiple binding members can also be used. This stabilized contact induces high frictional forces between the compressed surfaces, such that the spacer members are effectively anchored, and serve as effective bracing struts between package wall, spacers, and the article per se. These high frictional forces also oppose skewing and pivoting tendencies of the articles under transportation forces.
The tensioned binding member affixes the outer wall at some point along its height. The wall is also affixed to the base. Thus, the walls of the subject package are cantilevered. In some instances, the spacer may also be cantilevered.
In the present invention, there is usually a cantilevered section of the outer wall and alternatively of the center vertical spacer. That cantilever section is the unsupported portion of the wall that extends above the top strap and is not compressed by articles on both sides. In those packages where the articles have a shoulder and the center wall extends to the top of the package, the cantilever portion of the wall is the portion that extends between the shoulder and the top.
Uniquely, some embodiments of the present invention provide a strong vertical supporting cantilevered wall because the wall section is supported and fixed at a point by a binding member. This greatly decreases the effective column height and greatly reduces flexure of the wall. Additionally, the midpoint support shortens the effective column length of the strap-encircled containers and may make the articles themselves cantilevered sections. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the load carrying capacity of a wall can be enhanced by shortening the effective length of the cantilever. Standard structural engineering formulas such as Euler's formula for cantilever columns and cantilever walls, show that a mid-point column or wall brace such as the tensioned binding member of the present invention will effectively shorten the effective length of the wall or columns thus increasing resistance to buckling and enhancing the load carrying capacity of the wall or column. Less material can be used to accomplish the same load result. Alternatively, a greater load capacity can be gained from the same wall material construct. Prior art that includes boxes or typical inserts are usually attached to adjoining right angle walls and do not have cantilevers and do not have midpoint support.
The tensioned binding member of the present invention compressively interconnects the entrained articles. Each article is in compressive abutment with at least one of another article, a spacer, and a wall. Impact forces are distributed across the compressively interconnected array of articles. The binding member applies lateral compressive force to the package. The compressive force generates frictional forces among and between the spacer, wall, and article.
In a subject package, containing a number of such stabilized product articles, the package, combined with the articles, becomes a structural unit with enhanced stability and load bearing and load sharing capability. In many instances, such as semi-rigid and rigid articles or containers per se, the articles and the paperboard constructs can serve as rigid components, compressed together and integrated by the classic compressive forces of the binding member into a substantially rigid, load-bearing package unit.
When a container such as a bottle is loaded with material, the material in the bottle produces a vertical load and an axial horizontal load. The vertical load is the weight of the entrained material and the top load weight from any material that is above the container. However, because fluid equalizes pressure in all directions, a horizontal axial load presses against the container walls with a force equal to the top load. As that top load and corresponding axial load increases, the containers walls have a tendency to stretch horizontally in bulging fashion, or after an impact to fracture at the weakest wall portions. When containers bulge, the top surface of the containers has a tendency to sink and support less load. If the load is sufficient then a container can start to collapse and deform, which in turn increases the load on adjoining containers, causing a cascade of failure and an overall shipping unit collapse. The current invention precludes this failure by providing axial support around the articles that presses back against the increasing axial load by means of the tensioned binding member.
The positioning of the tensioned binding member is typically determined by the physical properties and attributes of the articles. The tensioned binding member can be located in recessed cut-outs, in notches, and directly on the walls and articles. The cut-outs can also form associated spacers by which the tensioned binding member compresses each spacer into engagement with an adjacent article. The tensioned binding member can engage the articles directly. The location can serve to secure non-glued package components.
The use of a tensioned binding member possessing significant inelasticity facilitates both manual and machine deconstruction/reconstruction of the subject packages, by hand and by machine using the same package components, while assuring maintenance of the requisite compressive forces applied by the tensioned binding member to sustain package integrity.
The securing tensioned binding member of the present integrated package may utilize a variety of strap features to optimize the use of these packages, both in packing and unpacking, and in repackaging. Such binding members are selected from a wide range, including self-adherent strap, pealable strap, friction-welded strap, strapping with interlocking tabbed ends that are separable by transverse sliding disengagement, and knotted strapping having a pull-release free end. The binding member commonly used is a strap made of a plastic such as polypropylene or PET, but the tensioned binding member can be metal, paper, fiber, plastic, twine, cord string, line, wire, The binding member must be relatively inelastic, tensionable and joinable after tensioning.
The lateral extension of the outer walls can exceed, equal and be less than the combined length of the articles adjacent to the wall. In an embodiment, the tensioned binding member extends around the exterior corners of the assembly walls, which is dictated by the shape of the articles. When the walls are equal to or longer than the combined length of the articles, the exterior walls can be planarly indented with a slot or occlusion to allow the tensioned binding member to engage the articles for wraparound. The walls can be cut along the folded base to allow a binding member to wrap around the containers so that the tensioned binding member engages the walls compressively into frictional contact with the containers. Where the walls are shorter that the combined articles and the binding member is above or below the walls, the tensioned binding member will directly engage the articles and the articles will form the corners of the package.
The material generally used in carrying out the present invention is a sheet blank. The sheet blank can be corrugated paperboard, wherein the inherent stiffness and compressive strength of the “board” in line with the corrugations is utilized where feasible to enhance the strength and rigidity of the finished package. Such corrugate typically has the property of laying flat when unpackaged, for facilitated return and re-use, or recycling. Alternatively, other materials such as molded, fabricated members, cardboard, plastic, paper, and support sheets may be used functionally to serve the purposes normally envisioned for paperboard.
A further, major advantage of the subject packaging system is the facilitation of product handling from pallet to shelf, wherein the removal of the tensioned binding member then enables the package contents to be bulk-transferred to the shelf in the carton and carton portion, in a readily viewable and hand-accessible condition, without further unpacking, providing significant manpower reduction. The package can be slide transferred from the paperboard portion, which acts as a magazine. The package can be positioned on a shelf and the binding member removed. This obviates the current practice of carton slashing with a box cutter. The use of glues between surfaces of the board package and the articles can provide additional integration and stability to the package, while facilitating recycling by enabling the ready reduction of glued corner pieces to their original planar form.
Environmentally, a package constructed in accordance with the present invention leads to significant and measurable reduction in the mass of cardboard required per unit of goods shipped, and the elimination of one ton of cardboard production has been equated to a one ton reduction of carbon dioxide emissions, so that significant ecological benefits clearly accrue from this invention.
In one embodiment, the present invention comprises a unitary load-bearing package formed from a single blank of cardboard or paperboard product that is scored and folded into a fourfold package having a plurality of double-walled spacers in the center of the package when the blank is folded inwardly along a first plurality of fold lines to form several compartments in the package. Side portions of the package are attached to the corners of the blank, and the side portions form the outer walls of the package when folded along a second plurality of fold lines. The corners, upon folding of the blank, form a base portion of the compartments. A plurality of articles having rigid or semi-rigid side walls are located in each of the compartments and are supported by the base portion.
At least one tensioned inelastic binding strap extends horizontally around the package and is in contact with each of the articles through a plurality of recesses in the package side walls in which the tensioned strap resides. The tensioned strap applies a tight compressive force to the outer side walls of the package, the article walls, and the double-walled spacers to form a unitary load-bearing transportation package, such that the walls of the articles in the package, as well as the tensioned binding member or strap, the spacers, and the package itself combine to resist the load or transport forces on the package generated under rigorous conditions.
A further embodiment of a composite integrated package can be used for the transportation, storage, and display of a plurality of substantially identical articles. The package is made from a single sheet blank. The blank has a first fold line. A double-wall center spacer is formed by folding the blank inwardly along the first fold line. The double-wall center spacer has an apex formed at the first fold line. The package has a base portion adapted to receive a plurality of substantially identical articles. The base portion comprises a first and second article-receiving base, where the first article-receiving base is foldably attached to the double-wall center spacer along at least a first base fold line. The second article receiving base is foldably attached to the double-wall center spacer along a second base fold line. The package has two vertical walls foldably attached to the two ends of the base portion along two wall fold lines. The two vertical walls are substantially parallel to the double-wall-center spacer. A plurality of substantially identical articles is positioned between the double-wall center spacer and the vertical walls, and the base portion receives and supports the plurality of articles. Each article is compressively engaged with the adjacent articles on the same side of the double-wall center spacer, and each article is compressively engaged with at least a portion of the double-wall center spacer. At least one tensioned binding member is in contact with and applies compressive forces in a horizontal plane to the vertical walls, and the first tensioned binding member further compresses the articles. The articles are compressed against the double-wall center spacer and vertical walls in an immobilized position within the package to form a stable, load-bearing package unit.
Another embodiment of the present invention comprises a unitary load-bearing package formed from a single blank of cardboard or paperboard product that is scored and folded into a W-shaped package. The package has a plurality of walls, spacers, and base portions formed by folds and cuts. A plurality of articles having rigid or semi-rigid sidewalls are located between the walls and spacers and supported by base portions. A first tensioned binding member horizontally encompasses the circumference of the package and is in contact with the walls and articles. The tensioned binding member applies a compressive force to the walls, spacers, and articles to form a unitary load-bearing transportation package, where the walls of the articles in the package, as well as the tensioned strap, the spacers, and package walls combine to resist the load or transportation forces on the package generated under rigorous conditions.
Referring to
The sheet blank 10 in
While illustrated as an eight-article package, it will be readily understood that multiples of similar blanks can be formed to have pluralities of spacers and alternatively to receive additional, or less, pluralities of articles.
In the embodiment of
The blank 601 is illustrated as being essentially square shaped, and having one pair of foldable side portions 603 at each corner 611, thus providing four pairs of side portions 603 in total. It will be understood that a substantially unlimited range of arrangements of fourfold blanks can be readily fabricated from sheet stock and made into articles and spacers, with differing sizes and variations in relative proportions.
A series of eight fold lines, lines F1 enables the side wall portions 603 to be turned up (or down if required), at right angles to the plane of the blank 601. A series of fold lines W1, W2 enable adjacent panels 610 bordering the recess 602 to be doubled up and folded against the adjacent panel, (see
While illustrated in
Specific embodiments of a compression bound packaging assembly have been described for the purpose of illustrating the manner in which the invention is made and used. It should be understood that the implementation of other variations and modifications of the invention and its various aspects will be apparent to one skilled in the art, and that the invention is not limited by the specific embodiments described. Therefore, it is contemplated to cover the present invention and any and all modifications, variations, and equivalents that fall within the true spirit and scope of the basic underlying principles disclosed and claimed herein.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/594,187, filed Nov. 8, 2006, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No 11/082,984, filed Mar. 18, 2005.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11594187 | Nov 2006 | US |
Child | 13680362 | US | |
Parent | 11082984 | Mar 2005 | US |
Child | 11594187 | US |