This invention relates to containers and associated dispensers for liquid material, and more particularly, this application relates to containers and associated dispensers for liquid material wherein dip-tubes extend from the dispensers into the liquid material in such a way as to remove portions of the liquid material remaining on the bottom of containers after the bulk of liquid material has been dispensed from the containers.
Fluid dispensers containing liquid materials such as liquid soap, shampoo, hand cream, lotions and the like are dispensed from containers by pumping action on dip-tubes which pull liquid material from the bottom of the containers. After the bulk of the liquid material has been dispensed there are frequently residual amounts of liquid left in the containers which represent an unnecessary waste to the consumer. As is evident from the Information Disclosure Statement there are numerous patents directed to removing residual amounts of liquid material, however these patents are not efficacious for both handheld and stationary containers and usually require that the containers be lifted and tilted. There are now also containers, frequently containing liquid soap, which preferably remains standing on a countertop during use, frequently next to a sink. It is not necessarily desired to lift and tilt these containers to dispense residual liquid soap. Consequently, the containers are disposed of with residual amounts of liquid soap therein. On the other hand, it may not bother a consumer to lift such containers up to dispense residual liquid soap therein. Accordingly there is a need for a container and an associated dispenser configured for both situations.
In view of the aforementioned considerations, a container and associated dispenser having a pump for liquid materials is configured with a dip-tube that extends to the bottom of the container, the bottom of the container having a convex projection that channels the liquid material to a gutter. The dip-tube is rotatable so as to revolve an open end of the dip-tube in the gutter, so that when the pump is operated, residual liquid material remaining in the gutter is pulled up and dispensed out through the nozzle.
In a further aspect of the invention, the container and associated dispenser for liquid materials comprises a container having a sidewall, bottom wall and a top opening forming an enclosure for the liquid material. The bottom wall has a projecting surface therein sloping down to a gutter forming a sump that is disposed adjacent to the sidewall. The top opening includes an arrangement thereon for mounting the dispenser. The dispenser comprises a liquid pump having an outlet. A dip-tube extends from the pump and has a lower open end positioned in the gutter for pulling liquid from the gutter upon operating the pump. The pump is mounted on a pump support that is rotatably mounted with respect to the dip-tube. A turning arrangement is mounted proximate to the top opening of the container and is fixed to the dip-tube for rotating the dip-tube to revolve the lower open end of the dip-tube around the projecting surface to access all circumferential locations in the gutter, whereby substantially all residual portions of the liquid can be pumped from the container.
In a further aspect of the arrangement, the container is cylindrical and the projecting surface is a cone having an apex.
In a further aspect of the arrangement, the gutter is defined by the side wall and the projecting surface.
In a further aspect of the arrangement, the bottom of the gutter is defined by the juncture of the sidewall and the projecting surface.
In a further aspect of the arrangement, a mounting cap closes the top opening of the container and the turning arrangement is disposed between the mounting cap and dispenser.
In a further aspect if the arrangement, the lower open end of the dip-tube is slanted so that the dip-tube pulls substantially all of the liquid from the gutter.
In a further aspect of the arrangement, the pump support is a tubular projection rotatably received in the dip-tube.
In a further aspect of the arrangement, the liquid material is liquid soap.
In still a further aspect of the invention the turning arrangement is a dial mounted on a closure for the container and integral with the dip-tube.
Various other features and attendant advantages of the present invention will be more fully appreciated as the same becomes better understood when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which the reference characters designate the same or similar parts throughout the several views, and wherein:
Referring to
Referring now more specifically to
The dip-tube 17 has two axes, the first being an axis 50 that coincides with the axis 39 and about which the offset portion 17b rotates and the dip-tube 17 revolves, and the second being axis 52 which is at an obtuse angle with axis 50.
The dispenser 12 is rotatably mounted within the offset portion 17b of the dip-tube 17 by a mounting tube 40 which aligns with the longitudinal axis 39 of the container 10, which axis 39 also passes through the apex 32 of the conical projecting surface 30. The dispenser 12 is free to rotate about the axis 39 because the mounting tube 40 can rotate within the offset portion 17b of dip-tube 17. A seal 42 seals between the offset portion 17b of the dip-tube 17 and the mounting tube 40. The seal 42 may seat within a circumferential groove 43 in the mounting tube 40, or be exteriorly positioned on the offset portion 17b of the dip-tube 17 while engaging the mounting tube 40.
While the container 10 in a preferred embodiment is cylindrical and the projecting surface 30 is in the preferred embodiment conical, these structures may have other shapes as long as the liquid material is directed into a gutter that is accessible by the open end 17d of the dip-tube 17.
Referring now to
In summary, the dispenser 12 is rotatable independent of the offset portion 17b of the dip-tube 17. The dip-tube 17 is free to rotate about the axis 39 of the container 10 so that its free end 17d revolves about the axis 39 with the free end 17d of the dip-tube 17 in the gutter 36. The sloping surface of the conical projection 29 always drains the residual liquid material 15 into to the gutter 36. Consequently, the free end 17d of the dip-tube 17 can pull up residual liquid material 15 from substantially any location in the gutter 36.
From the foregoing description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of this invention, and without departing form the spirit and scope thereof, can make various changes and modifications of the invention to adapt it to various usages and conditions.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12467551 | May 2009 | US |
Child | 13455602 | US |