The present invention relates to a closure device for releasing an additive liquid into a liquid in a container by operation of the closure device, which allows the contents of the container to be reached without removal of the closure device. The invention also relates to a container including such a closure device and to a method of introducing an additive liquid by means of operating such a closure device.
In a number of applications, such as mixtures of different liquids, it may be necessary to release and mix an additive liquid into another liquid shortly before the liquid mixture is used. It may not be possible or desirable to store the liquids in a premixed form, as they may react undesirably with each other when stored as the mixture for a period of time. An example of this may be two component pharmaceuticals which have a longer shelf life when unmixed than they do when mixed. However, it can also apply to other liquids or to mixtures of liquids and gases, such as water, alcoholic beverages, other beverages, and other solvents or solutions. The liquid to which the additive liquid is introduced may be a carbonated or a non-carbonated liquid.
An assembly for releasing an additive liquid into a liquid in a container upon release of a closure from the container is known from the prior art. International Patent Application WO97/05039 discloses a device for releasing a liquid into another liquid held in a container. The known device is for use with containers having releasable closures. The device according to the prior art comprises a fluid chamber for storing a fluid. The fluid chamber is positioned adjacent an opening in the container. The fluid chamber comprises a fluid outlet for releasing fluid into the liquid.
The known device has the disadvantage that the closure must be at least partially opened to enable the mixing of the fluid stored in the fluid chamber with the liquid in the container. Moreover the closure must be completely removed to allow access to the mixed contents of the container.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a closure device for use with a container having a main liquid compartment and an opening with a neck,
The term “bottom wall” includes any wall of the fluid chamber in which a bottom wall aperture can be provided to allow additive fluid in the fluid chamber to be ejected under pressure into the main liquid compartment.
The term “plug member” includes any member capable of closing an aperture. The plug member may be a unitary or composite member on which are formed the first and second plug portions. Alternatively the first and second plug portions may be formed on separate elements.
The plug member may be provided on a housing having an inner housing wall adapted to fit inside the neck of the opening and the closure device may include sealing means which seals between the fluid chamber and the inner housing wall. This maintains a seal between the fluid chamber and inner housing wall, and therefore between the fluid chamber and the neck as the cap member and fluid chamber are lifted relative to the housing and container, in both the closed and open positions. The contents of the fluid chamber can thus pass into the main liquid compartment and be mixed, for example by shaking the container, while the container is still sealed closed by the closure member, so that there is no risk of the contents escaping between the closure member and the container.
In one embodiment the cap member may include an internal thread which engages with an external thread on the housing, so that the cap member is lifted relative to the housing by rotation of the cap member. However other forms of engagement are possible, for example a bayonet type engagement or a friction pull engagement or a longitudinal sliding engagement, or any other suitable form of engagement. The engagement means may prevent the cap member and the housing from being completely separated from each other.
The cap member may include a top cap wall, an outer cap wall on which is provided the internal thread and an inner cap wall extending from the top cap wall to the bottom wall and arranged inside the outer cap wall. The bottom wall may be formed separately from the remainder of the cap member, which may be formed as a single moulding.
The fluid chamber may be defined by the top cap wall, the inner cap wall and the bottom wall.
The housing may comprise an outer housing wall on which is provided the external thread. The thread may have a relatively steep angle, so that the cap member rises quickly when rotated. However the external thread may instead be provided on the neck of the container, and the housing may be secured inside the neck of the container by any suitable means, such as bonding.
The outer housing wall may be provided with an internal secondary thread adapted in use to engage with an external secondary thread provided on a neck of an opening of the container. Thus in use the outer housing wall may be screwed onto outside of the neck.
The housing further may comprise an inner housing wall arranged inside the outer housing wall and provided with internal sealing means to seal against an outer surface of the inner cap wall-and external sealing means to seal against an internal surface of the neck of the opening. The inner housing wall may be connected to the outer housing wall by a web which sits on top of the neck in use.
The housing may further comprise a frame which supports the plug member so that the plug member is arranged inside the inner housing wall and extends upwardly into the fluid chamber in use. The frame may include apertures allowing fluid passage therethrough, to avoid the creation of a vacuum between the fluid chamber and housing, so that the housing is free to slide relative to the cap member when the cap member is inserted into or withdrawn from the housing.
The plug member may include a nozzle directed away from the fluid chamber.
The first or lower plug portion may include a cylindrical outer surface which engages with a sealing means provided in the bottom wall. Such a sealing means must be capable of holding pressurised fluid in the fluid chamber when this fluid is at higher pressure than the contents of the container.
The sealing means may comprise an upper seal which seals against an upper part of the cylindrical outer surface of the first plug portion when the cap member is in the closed position and which allows the passage of fluid between the upper seal and the plug member when the cap member is in the first open position.
The sealing means may comprise a lower seal which seals against a lower part of the cylindrical outer surface of the first plug portion when the cap member is in the closed and first open positions. This ensures that in the first open position pressurised fluid can only escape into the container through the communication path and nozzle, and does not leak around the plug member. The lower part of the cylindrical outer surface may have a greater diameter than the upper part of the cylindrical outer surface.
The plug member may include an internal fluid passage which extends to the cylindrical outer surface at a position below the upper seal when the cap member is in the closed position, the internal fluid passage being in communication with the nozzle.
The closure device may include a spout connected to the spout aperture. In one embodiment the spout includes a drinking tube and a closeable cap. This allows a user to drink from the spout aperture upon removal of a spout cap or dust cap when the cap member is in the second open position.
The spout aperture may be provided in a top cap wall of the cap member and the second plug portion includes a second cylindrical outer surface which engages with a sealing means provided in the top wall. The plug member may include a reduced portion above the second plug portion having a cross-sectional area smaller than that of the second plug portion, such that in the second open position the reduced portion extends through the spout aperture to provide a communication path in use from the fluid chamber through the spout aperture.
The cap member may include an anti-tamper strip provided on the cap member to prevent rotation of the cap member relative to the housing without at least partial removal of the anti-tamper strip.
The anti-tamper strip may comprise an extension of the outer cap wall connected to the outer cap wall by a neck portion thinner than the outer cap wall, the extension being provided with a flange which engages beneath a detent means provided on the neck of the container to prevent lifting of the cap member relative to the housing. The detent means may be provided on the housing. The strip may have a tab which can be pulled to tear the strip from the outer cap wall along the neck.
The primary engagement means of the cap member and housing may include mutually engageable detent means to prevent the rotation of the cap member relative to the housing beyond a predetermined limiting angle of rotation, corresponding to the second open position.
The fluid chamber may contain an additive liquid and a head space of pressurised gas.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a container having a main liquid compartment, an opening having a neck, and a closure device closing said opening,
The plug member may be provided on a housing having an inner housing wall arranged inside the neck of the opening and wherein the closure device includes sealing means which seals between the fluid chamber and the inner housing wall. This maintains a seal between the fluid chamber and inner housing wall in both the closed and open positions.
The cap member may include an internal thread and the housing may include an external thread, to allow the cap member to be lifted relative to the housing by rotation of the cap member.
The main liquid compartment may contain a primary liquid, which may contain water or be a beverage. However the primary liquid could be an alcoholic beverage, a cosmetic preparation, a pharmaceutical product, a dairy product or an agricultural feed or other product, or any other suitable liquid or semi-liquid substance.
The fluid chamber may contain an additive liquid and may contain a head space of pressurised gas.
The cap member may include a top cap wall, an outer cap wall on which is provided the internal thread and an inner cap wall extending from the top cap wall to the bottom wall and arranged inside the outer cap wall.
The fluid chamber may be defined by the top cap wall, the inner cap wall and the bottom wall.
The housing may comprise an outer housing wall on which is provided the external thread. The outer housing wall may be located outside the neck of the container and may be provided with an internal secondary thread engaged with an external secondary thread provided on the neck of the container.
The housing may comprise an inner housing wall arranged inside the neck of the container and provided with internal sealing means to seal against an outer surface of the inner cap wall and external sealing means to seal against an internal surface of the neck of the opening.
The housing may further comprise a frame which supports the plug member so that the plug member is arranged inside the inner housing wall and extends upwardly into the fluid chamber in use.
The plug member may include a nozzle directed away from the fluid chamber.
The first or lower plug portion may include a cylindrical outer surface which engages with a sealing means provided in the bottom wall. Such a sealing means must be capable of holding pressurised fluid in the fluid chamber when this fluid is at higher pressure than the contents of the container.
The sealing means may comprise an upper seal which seals against an upper part of the cylindrical outer surface of the first plug portion when the cap member is in the closed position and which allows the passage of fluid between the upper seal and the plug member when the cap member is in the first open position.
The sealing means may comprise a lower seal which seals against a lower part of the cylindrical outer surface of the first plug portion when the cap member is in the closed and first open positions. This ensures that in the first open position pressurised fluid can only escape into the container through the communication path and nozzle, and does not leak around the plug member. The lower part of the cylindrical outer surface may have a greater diameter than the upper part of the cylindrical outer surface.
The plug member may include an internal fluid passage which extends to the cylindrical outer surface at a position below the upper seal when the cap member is in the closed position, the internal fluid passage being in communication with the nozzle.
The closure device may include a spout connected to the spout aperture. In one embodiment the spout includes a drinking tube and a closeable cap. This allows a user to drink from the spout aperture upon removal of a spout cap or dust cap when the cap member is in the second open position.
The spout aperture may be provided in a top cap wall of the cap member and the second plug portion may include a second cylindrical outer surface which engages with a sealing means provided in the top wall. The plug member may include a reduced portion above the second plug portion having a cross-sectional area smaller than that of the second plug portion, such that in the second open position the reduced portion extends through the spout aperture to provide a communication path in use from the fluid chamber through the spout aperture.
The cap member may include an anti-tamper strip provided on the cap member to prevent rotation of the cap member relative to the housing without at least partial removal of the anti-tamper strip.
The anti-tamper strip may comprise an extension of the outer cap wall connected to the outer cap wall by a neck portion thinner than the outer cap wall, the extension being provided with a flange which engages beneath a detent means provided on the neck of the container to prevent lifting of the cap member relative to the housing. The detent means may be provided on the housing. The strip may have a tab which can be pulled to tear the strip from the outer cap wall along the neck.
The primary engagement means of the cap member and housing may include mutually engageable detent means to prevent the rotation of the cap member relative to the housing beyond a predetermined limiting angle of rotation, corresponding to the second open position.
According to a third aspect of the invention there is provided a method of introducing an additive liquid into a main liquid compartment of a container having an opening with a neck, the method comprising the steps of:
Although the second plug portion may slide within the spout aperture, the spout aperture remains closed by the second plug portion when the cap member is in the first open position. This ensures that the pressurised additive liquid can only flow along the communication path into the main liquid compartment, and cannot escape to the atmosphere through the spout aperture.
The method may include the further step of causing liquid from the main liquid compartment together with the additive liquid released from the fluid chamber to pass from the main liquid compartment through the bottom wall aperture into the fluid chamber and from the fluid chamber through the spout aperture to a spout. Because the additive liquid is completely expelled from the fluid chamber under the pressure of the gas in the fluid chamber, the liquid passing to the spout through the fluid chamber is a fully mixed liquid.
The plug member may be provided on a housing, and during the raising of the fluid chamber relative to the plug member a seal may be maintained between the fluid chamber and an inner housing wall of the housing arranged in the neck of the container.
The cap member may be raised by rotating the cap member such that the fluid chamber is raised by screw thread action relative to the plug member. The action can be arranged such that a first rotation to a point of resistance is sufficient to open the cap member to the first open position, while rotation beyond the point of resistance to an end stop is sufficient to open the cap member to the second open position.
The method may include the step of at least partially removing an anti-tamper strip provided on the cap member, thereby allowing raising of the cap member relative to the plug member.
The invention will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the drawings in which:
With reference to
The closure device 10 comprises two main parts, a cap member 20, which defines a fluid chamber 22, and a housing 40. The cap member 20 includes a bottom wall 24, which although it may be made of a different material is secured to the remainder of the cap member 20 to form a unitary member. An aperture 25 is provided in the bottom wall 24. The cap member 20 includes a top cap wall 26, an outer cap wall 28, and an inner cap wall 32, which may all be formed as a single moulding from polypropylene or any other suitable plastic. The outer cap wall includes an internal primary thread 30 adapted to engage a corresponding external primary thread on the housing 40, as will be described below. Together the internal and external primary threads allow the cap member 20 to be lifted relative to the housing 40.
The top cap wall 26 includes a spout aperture 34 and a spout 36. An optional spout cap or dust cap 38 is secured to the top cap wall. Such spout caps 38 are known with beverage bottles having a drinking spout and are not further described.
The housing 40 is also preferably formed as a unitary polypropylene moulding, although it can be formed from any other suitable material. It comprises a plug member 42 arranged on the central axis of the closure member 10, an outer housing wall 44 adapted to fit outside the neck 16, a web 45 which sits on top of the neck 15, an inner housing wall 46 which extends down from the web 45 inside the neck and which seals against the neck 10, and a frame 48 which extends from the inner housing wall 46 and supports the plug member 42.
The outer housing wall 44 has an external primary thread 50 which engages the internal primary thread 30 on the cap member. It also has an internal secondary thread 52 which engages the external secondary thread 18 on the neck 16 of the container. The secondary threads are used to fit the housing 40 to the neck 16.
Internal sealing means 54 are provided to seal between the inner cap wall 32 and the inner housing wall 44. In the illustrated example the internal sealing means 54 are formed as ribs on the outer surface of the inner cap wall, but they could be formed as ribs on the inner surface of the inner housing wall, or as any other suitable sealing means. The internal sealing means 54 prevents the contents of the container 12 passing between the inner cap wall 32 and the inner housing wall 44 during storage and while the cap member 20 is raised relative to the housing 40, as later described.
External sealing means in the form of a taper 56 and rib 58 are provided to seal between the inner housing wall 44 and the neck 16 of the container 12. Such seals are well known in the art and serve to prevent the contents of the container 12 passing between the inner housing wall 44 and the neck during storage. A taper seal may be used for the internal sealing means 54 also.
The plug member 42 has a nozzle 60 extending below it. A nozzle passage 61 is provided to convey pressurised liquid from the fluid chamber 22 when the closure device is opened. The plug member 42 has a first lower plug portion 64 which engages sealingly with the bottom wall aperture 25 and a second upper plug portion 90 which engages sealingly with the spout aperture 34.
The lower plug portion 64 is formed with upper and lower cylindrical outer surface portions 62, 64 which engage sealingly with sealing means 64 provided at the aperture 25 in the bottom wall 24. In the example the sealing means comprises a smaller diameter upper seal 66 which when the plug member 42 is in the closed position of
The upper surface 76 of the bottom wall 24 slopes towards the plug member 42, so that all the liquid is drained from the fluid chamber 22 when the plug member is in the first open position. The lower seal 68 is held by a collar 72 provided on the frame 48 which urges the lower seal 68 against the lower plug portion 64.
In the illustrated example the bottom wall 24 includes a flange 74 which locks onto a corresponding flange at the edge of the inner cap wall 32 when the cap member is assembled. However any other suitable method of vapour-tight connection may be used, such as laser welding.
At the lower edge of the outer cap wall 28 is an anti-tamper strip 80, with a tab (not shown) which can be pulled to remove the strip. The strip is an extension of the outer cap wall 28, connected by a neck portion 84, and engaging the underside of the outer housing wall 44 by a detent flange 86. Such anti-tamper strips are known in the art and are not described further. Until the anti-tamper strip 80 is at least partially removed, the cap member 20 cannot be unscrewed from the housing 40. Once the anti-tamper strip 80 is at least partially removed the cap member 20 can be unscrewed from the housing 40 by interaction of the internal thread 30 on the cap and the external thread 50 on the housing. The threads may include mutually engaging detent means (not shown), which serve to limit the relative rotation of the cap member 20 and housing 40. It is to be understood that any suitable mutually engaging shape or protrusion may be used to limit this movement. The anti-tamper strip may be replaced by any other suitable anti-tamper means, or may be omitted.
At the lower edge of the outer housing wall 44 is provided a detent which engages with the neck 16 of the container so that the housing 40 may not be easily removed from the neck 16 by unscrewing. Although in the example illustrated the housing 40 includes an outer wall 44 and web 45, it is to be understood that the outer wall 44 may be omitted and the housing may be secured to the neck in any other suitable manner, for example by bonding the inner housing wall 46 to the neck 16. In this case the primary external thread is the external thread 18 on the neck 16, and the outer cap wall 28 and internal primary thread 30 are dimensioned accordingly to fit the thread on the neck 16.
In
To trigger the firing of the liquid additive 120 into the main liquid compartment 14 of the container 12, the cap member 20 must be unscrewed relative to the housing 40 to the position shown in
Typically the primary thread 30, 50 is a standard 30/25 PET bottle thread with 9 mm pitch, of the type used with PET water bottles, and the closure device 10 is arranged so that the additive liquid 120 is fired into the main liquid compartment 14 when the cap member is rotated through 45° from the closed position under optimum tolerance. In practice this angle could be smaller or greater, in the range 0° to 90°.
The volume of the head space 122 is chosen to be sufficiently large so that all the additive liquid 122 is expelled into the main liquid compartment 14. The top surface 76 of the bottom wall 24 slopes down towards the aperture 25, so that under gravity all the additive liquid flows to the aperture.
Referring now to
As the cap member rises further, the fluid chamber 22 is lifted further away from the lower plug portion 64. When the lower seal 68 of the bottom wall 24 passes above the top of the lower cylindrical outer surface portion 69, as shown in
If the container 12 is inverted the liquid in the main liquid compartment 14 is free to flow past the lower plug portion 64 into the fluid chamber 22 and past the upper plug portion 90 into the spout 36, enabling a user to drink from the container in a manner similar to that used with conventional sports-type spout containers.
If required, the closure device 10 can closed again by screwing the cap member 20 back down, and the container device will be sealed closed when it reverts to the position shown in
A method of assembling a closure device 10 according to the invention will now be described. The cap member 20, without the bottom wall 24, is formed by moulding from polypropylene for example. The housing 40 is also formed separately by moulding from polypropylene for example. The bottom wall 24 can be formed of any suitable material or combination of materials and is formed so that it can be readily secured to the inner cap wall 32 of the cap member 20 to form the fluid chamber 22. The seals 6668 may be formed of softer sealing material on a frame of more rigid material. Suitable materials for the sealing portion are natural or synthetic rubber or thermoplastic elastomers. Suitable materials for the frame are metal or rigid plastics.
The bottom wall 24 is secured to the inner cap wall 32 by any appropriate technique, for example by engagement of a detent flange 74 on a corresponding groove in the external face of the inner cap wall 32, or by laser, sonic or spin welding. The fluid chamber 22 is then defined by the bottom wall 24, the top cap wall 26 and the inner cap wall 32.
The cap member 20 is placed in an inverted position. After purging with nitrogen or other suitable purging means to remove contaminants, the additive liquid 120 is then introduced into the fluid chamber 22 through the aperture 25 in the bottom wall 24, while closing the spout aperture 34 by any suitable means.
The housing 40 is then placed on the cap member 20 by engagement of the external primary thread 50 on the housing 40 with the internal primary thread 30 on the cap member 20 so that the plug member 42 enters and closes both the aperture 25 in the bottom wall 24 and the spout aperture 34 in the top cap wall 26, thereby sealing the additive liquid 120 in the fluid chamber 22.
The fluid chamber 22 may be pressurised either at the time of filling or at any other time before using the closure device 10 to close a container 12. The pressurising step may be accomplished by providing pressurised gas to the nozzle passage 61. The nozzle passage 61 is in communication with an internal fluid passage 70 which exits on the cylindrical outer surface 62 of the of the plug member 42, and so is in communication with the volume 63 between the upper 66 and lower seals 68. The lower seal 68 is held against the lower plug portion 64 by a collar 72 on the housing 40, and continues to seal against the lower plug portion 64 even when the volume 63 is pressurised. The upper seal 66 provides a one-way valve means to enable the fluid chamber 22 to be pressurised. The upper seal 66 functions as a flap valve. When the pressure in the volume 63 is greater than the pressure in the fluid chamber 22 the upper seal 66 is urged away from upper cylindrical outer surface portion 67 of the plug member 42 so that pressurised gas can flow from the volume 63 past the upper seal 66 to the fluid chamber 22. When the source of pressurised gas is removed, and the pressure in the volume 63 and the nozzle passage 61 reverts to atmospheric pressure, the upper seal 66 is urged against the upper cylindrical outer surface portion 67 of the plug member 42 to seal the fluid chamber 22 closed.
Typically the gas forms a head space 122 in the fluid chamber 22 of between 0% and 60% of the volume of the fluid chamber 22.
Alternatively the additive liquid 120 can be introduced after the housing 40 has been fitted to the cap member 20, by introducing the liquid under pressure through the nozzle passage 61 in the same way as described above for the introduction of the pressurised gas.
After the fluid chamber 22 has been pressurised, the closure device 10 is secured to the neck 16 of a container 12 by engagement of the internal secondary thread 52 on the housing 40 with the external secondary thread 18 on the neck 16 of the container, to seal the contents of the container.
An alternative spout arrangement is shown in
The present invention provides a closure device which requires fewer components than prior art devices. The closure device is simple to manufacture, as in one embodiment it requires only three moulded components, the cap member body 20, the cap member bottom wall 24 and the housing 40. The closure device can be assembled and filled with the liquid additive 120 and then stored or transported before use on a standard container 12. It does not require separate filling at the bottling location.
The closure device allows introduction and mixing of the liquid additive 120 into the contents of the main liquid compartment 14 of a container 12 without removal of the closure device 10 from the container 12.
The closure device allows a user to access the mixed liquid through a spout without removal of the closure device 10 from the container 12.
The closure device can be used with any standard container 12, of any shape or volume, of any material, for example PET, glass, metal or any suitable plastic. The external secondary thread 18 on the neck 16 of the container 12 can be any standard thread.
The closure device optimises use of the volume within the neck 16 of the container 12, since the fluid chamber extends across the whole available area of the neck 16. The internal diameter of the fluid chamber 22 is limited only by the thickness of the inner housing wall 46 and the inner cap wall 32. The volume of the fluid chamber 22 may be varied by varying the length of the fluid chamber.
The closure device cannot be operated to introduce the liquid additive 120 into the main liquid compartment 14 unless the anti-tamper strip 80 is at least partially removed, thereby providing security to the consumer that the additive has not been mixed with the contents of the container prematurely, for example while sitting on a shelf in a shop.
The internal shape of the fluid chamber 22, which has a top surface 76 of the bottom wall 24 which slopes down towards the aperture 25 and lower plug portion 64, ensures that only a minimum amount of residual liquid additive remains in the fluid chamber after release of the additive. The sloping shape allows the full amount of liquid additive 120 to be delivered even if the container is tilted from the vertical during operation of the closure device to fire the additive.
The materials of the closure device can be selected to avoid any compatibility problems with the liquid additive 120. During storage the liquid additive is only in contact with the cap member 20 and the plug member 42. The plug member can be made separately from a different material to the remainder of the housing, if required. A liner, for example of stainless steel, can be used inside the fluid chamber to avoid contact with the moulded cap member 20, if required. Certain flavouring or colouring additives are not compatible with sealant materials. The bottom wall 24 can thus be manufactured, for example by inset moulding, so that the upper surface 76 of the bottom wall 24 is polypropylene or other suitable inert material, while the seals 66, 68 are protected below the material of the upper surface.
In the illustrated embodiments the plug member 42 is shown as a unitary element on which are arranged both the lower plug portion 64 and the upper plug portion 90. However the plug member 42 may be formed as two or more separate elements with the lower plug portion 64 and the upper plug portion 90 arranged on different elements, and with connecting means such that both the lower plug portion 64 and the upper plug portion 90 remain connected to the housing 40 as the cap member 20 is raised.
The closure device of the invention offers a simplified process for filling and assembling the closure device, and can be assembled and fitted to a container without the need for adhesive. The fluid chamber 22 can be easily pressurised, using any appropriate source of pressurised gas, which can simply fit to the nozzle 60 on the housing 40 once the closure device has been assembled. No specialised aerosol technology is necessary. The liquid additive 120 can be denser or more viscous, and the area of the nozzle passage 61 and internal fluid passage 70 can be increased if required, to improve the flow of a more viscous additive. Additives which require shaking to dissolve them can be used with the closure device of the invention, since it permits shaking of the container after firing with no risk of spillage through between the closure device and container, because the closure device remains sealed to the neck.
Modifications and variations are possible without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition to the modifications and variations described above, the liquid additive may be replaced by a gel or a free flowing powder or the like. The bottom wall 24 may be formed integrally with the remainder of the cap member 20. The closure member may be used with a container holding a carbonated beverage, providing the pressure of the main liquid compartment 14 is less than the pressure of the fluid chamber 22. The primary threads 30, 50 may be of any suitable thread design, and arranged so that the closure device fires, that is ejects the liquid additive 120 into the main liquid compartment 14, after any suitable angle of rotation, for example 45°, and allows access to the main liquid compartment 14 through the spout 36 and fluid chamber 22 after any suitable further angle of rotation, for example 45° to 450°.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0616743.1 | Aug 2006 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2007/050484 | 8/10/2007 | WO | 00 | 9/8/2009 |