The invention relates to dispensing containers. More particularly, the invention relates to dispensing containers for powdered food product.
Powdered food product is sold in a variety of containers. One exemplary product is infant formula. Other products include adult meal replacement mixes. In recent decades, such food products have been sold in containers along with a measuring scoop. In one basic example, the container is a metal can and the scoop is initially packed as loosely within the can. The can is typically sold along with a plastic snap-on cover which is used to close the can once the metal lid is removed (e.g., via can opener). Such cans have largely been replaced by molded plastic jars with screw-on plastic closures (but also loosely containing a measuring scoop). More recently, dedicated containers have been proposed. In one example, US2006/000840 discloses a molded plastic container having a rounded rectangular planform. The lid includes features for mounting the scoop. The scoop has a round bowl of profile (e.g., radius selected to be complementary to a radius of corner junctions between the sidewall and the base of the container) so as to allow clean scooping of material from the bottom of the container.
It has also been proposed to unitarily mold the scoop with the closure of the container and connected thereto via a frangible connection. The user ruptures the connection for first use and may then replace the scoop with its bowl in a complementary hole in a web extending partially across a frame of the closure.
In one aspect, a container assembly has: a container body having a mouth; and a container closure member having a mounting portion mounted to the body. The closure member mounting portion has a lower portion having an inward barb projection which engages an underside of a hollow annular flange of the body. A closure member mounting portion includes an additional annular projection above the barb projection and engaging an underside of an outwardly projecting portion of the container body.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements. Various of the drawings include artifacts of computer aided design (CAD) such as stitching lines which may be unseen in the actual container but help illustrate shape.
The bowl has an exemplary distal portion 150 which has/defines a profile (e.g., cross-section) shaped complementary to at least one of the vertical edges of the tub (e.g., to closely accommodate the interior surface along such vertical edge to allow thorough scooping of material from such vertical edge) (e.g., the edge 70). This is in distinction, for example, to the profiling of the scoop of the '840 publication which is complementary to the edge/junction between the sidewall and the base rather than between individual sides of the sidewall. If the user is seeking to extract the last scoops full of product from the container, the user may hold the container at an angle, with the desired edge (e.g., the edge 70) lower than the other edges and thus better remove the product from the tub.
The distal profile of the scoop may be asymmetrical to the proximal profile. For example, whereas the exemplary distal profile is a shallow arc, the exemplary proximal profile is a tighter rounded corner (e.g., a rounded right angle corner). This asymmetry keys the scoop when the scoop bowl is fit into a complementary aperture 160 in the web after initial use. The exemplary bowl planform is thus like a modified rounded corner square or rhomboid where two adjacent sides and their corner junction are replaced by an arc, so as to resemble a baseball field, diamond where the arc is the beginning of the outfield grass and the intact portions of the square are the first and third base lines (or, the overall field where the arc would be a continuously curving outfield wall).
Additionally, the elongate nature of the edge 142 allows it to be used to level the contents of the scoop.
The cover extends upward from a lower rim 200. In the exemplary embodiment, the cover includes a lower portion 202 extending upward from the rim 200 to a shoulder 204. A further portion 206 extends upward from the shoulder to a second shoulder 208. An upper portion 210 extends upward from the shoulder 208 to a top web 212. At the exemplary junction of the shoulder 204 and portion 206, a flexible sealing gland 214 extends downward and inward and seals against the portion 216 of the frame above the flange 190 when the cover is in its closed position. The tapered outside surface of the gland provides a lead-in action to guide closing of the cover. In the closed condition, the radiused rim area of the portion 216 seals with a radiused root area of the gland outer surface to prevent product from getting between the outside of the frame and the inside of the cover.
For sealing between the frame and the top, the frame has an exemplary three inward projections 220, 222, and 224. The exemplary projection 220 is along the inner surface along the lower portion 182 and also serves to retain the closure to the tub. The exemplary projections 222 and 224 are along the inner surface of the upper portion 186 and essentially serve only sealing functions.
The exemplary system thus provides three inwardly-directed sealing projections from the frame and may avoid the need to add additional separate sealing material (e.g., there is no additional elastomeric seal over molded to the frame to intervene between the primary plastic material of the frame and the tub).
Above the portion 262, an uppermost/terminal portion 270 extends at a shallow upward angle (e.g., about 10° off-radial) to an annular vertical mouth surface 272 at the rim 54. Along the outer surface of the body, the portion 270 may bear an induction foil or other seal (e.g., for pre-use sealing or preservation and/or for tamper-evidence ruptured or peeled away by the consumer at first use). The exemplary seal 274 is shown schematically of exaggerated thickness. After filling of the tub and before closure installation, the seal may be applied (e.g., via pressing and heating). The slight upward/inward taper of the portion 270 provides a springback-resistance when the seal is pressed in place so as to facilitate good bonding between the seal and the tub.
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, when implemented in the modification of an existing container configuration, details of the existing configuration or its use may influence details of any particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Benefit is claimed of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 61/321,837, filed Apr. 7, 2010, and entitled “Container Assembly”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety as if set forth at length.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/31364 | 4/6/2011 | WO | 00 | 10/6/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61321837 | Apr 2010 | US |