This application is a US National Phase Application under 35 U.S.C. ยง371 of International Patent Application No. PCT/BR2008/000270 filed Sep. 3, 2008, which claims priority from Brazilian Patent Application No. PI0703846-1, filed Sep. 3, 2007, each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties. The International Application published in the English language as WO 2009/030009 A1 on Mar. 12, 2009.
The present invention refers to a container constructed in sheet metal and of the type usually used as a device for containing and applying gas pressurized fluids, by means of a spray valve, as it occurs with the aerosols. The invention is particularly related to the construction of the container lower wall, which is usually configured in an inwardly-facing spherical dome, so that the container can be safely vertically stacked onto the other containers presenting the same construction.
There are well known from the prior art the containers for aerosols, gases and similar fluid mixtures, presenting a tubular body formed in sheet metal and comprising: a cylindrical side wall; a bottom wall in the form of a spherical dome projecting to the interior of the container and attached to the side wall by a lower double seam; and an upper wall, in the form of an annular spherical dome, projecting outwardly from the container, and inferiorly attached to the side wall by an upper double seam and defining a central opening in which is adapted the typical valve to be actuated by the final user, to release a jet of sprayed fluid.
The known container construction mentioned above, presenting lower and upper walls in the form of a spherical dome, causes difficulty in stacking said containers in the vertical position, with the bottom wall of a container seating onto the upper wall or on the lid of the container immediately below in the stack.
The vertical stacking of these containers is desirable in different moments, from the formation of the container, still without the spray valve, until its placement in the point of sale to the consumer.
As is known, these containers are produced in sheet metal, and packaged and sent to the filling company (filler) to be filled with the product (pressurized fluid), still deprived of the spray valve. The packaging of these containers at the can manufacturer, to be transported to the filling company, requires the provision of sheets, generally made of cardboard, which are seated on the upper wall of each layer of containers (still without the valve and the lid) which are disposed vertically side by side in the interior of a box or other type of package, the upper layer of containers being seated on the intermediary support sheet, and then successively until the number of layers in each package is completed.
Although allowing stacking multiple layers of vertically disposed containers, this prior art solution presents the inconveniences of requiring the provision of the intermediary support sheet and not providing a mutual retention or locking against relative horizontal (radial) displacements between the containers stacked on top of one another, permitting the occurrence of undesirable shocks between the side walls, which are externally lithographed with the promotional messages that identify the stored product and its manufacturer. These shocks can damage the outer finishing of the cylindrical side wall of these containers, particularly when the lower double seam of a container hits the side wall of an adjacent container. As a consequence of this inconvenience, it is generally applied a solution to reduce the degree of damage of the containers, due to the side shocks which occur in the handling and shipping to the filler. The solution consists in deforming the lower double seam inwards, to maintain it inside the axial projection of the cylindrical contour of the can, which requires an additional and relatively complex operation in the production of said containers. Besides not allowing a safe vertical stacking between the containers still deprived of the spray valve, as a function of the spherical dome shape of the bottom wall and the upper wall, particularly the shape of the bottom wall, the containers of the type considered herein are not safely vertically stackable as well, after receiving the spray valve and the known upper lid in the filler.
Although the upper lid presents a general cylindrical inverted cup shape, with a side wall fitted around the upper double seam and with a flat top wall covering, with an axial gap, the upper wall and the valve already installed therein, the spherical dome shape of the bottom wall of the container prevents it from being safely fitted, with radial locking, on the lid of a container disposed immediately below, in a vertical stack. This feature of the current containers jeopardizes and increases the cost of packaging and transportation of the containers, from the filler to the point of sale, and further leads to limitations in the arrangement of the containers to be displayed to the final consumer, for example, in gondolas or shelves.
As a function of the limitations of stacking the known containers for pressurized fluids, it is an object of the present invention to provide a type of container which is structurally resistant to high inner pressure, without requiring increasing the sheet metal thickness and which can be safely stacked in a vertical position, directly over an identical container stacked below, both in a condition deprived of the spray valve and upper lid and in a condition in which the already filled containers are provided with the usual upper lid covering the spray valve.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a container, as mentioned above and which can present its lower double seam projecting radially outwards from the axial projection of the side wall contour of the tubular body of the container, without this fact incurring damage to the outer lithography of these containers when stored and transported in side-by-side vertical stacks.
The above-mentioned objects, and others to be treated along the present specification, are achieved with a container of the type which comprises: a cylindrical side wall, having a lower edge and an upper edge which presents a reduced diameter; a bottom wall in the form of a spherical dome projecting to the interior of the container and attached to the lower edge of the side wall by a lower double seam; an upper wall in the form of an annular spherical dome, which is inferiorly attached to the upper edge of the side wall by an upper double seam and defining a central opening.
According to the invention, the bottom wall is conformed to define, in a single piece, at least one seating region having a determined circumferential extension disposed according to a plane transversal to the axis of the container and axially spaced back in relation to the lower double seam, said seating region being fitted and axially seated, respectively, around and on a respective circumferential extension of the upper double seam of an identical and adjacent container inferiorly disposed in a vertical stack, so as to define a single contact region between two vertically stacked containers.
The seating region of the bottom wall of a container is constructed so as to be also fitted around a respective circumferential extension of an upper edge region of the side wall of a lid mounted on a container inferiorly disposed in a stack, said seating region being also axially seated on a peripheral region of a top wall of said lid.
The construction proposed herein allows the bottom wall of a container to be fitted and locked, in the radial direction, on the upper double seam of a container, still without the spray valve and the lid, and which is disposed immediately below in a stack or also on the upper edge region of a lid fitted on said inferiorly disposed container, preventing the relative transversal displacement between the two containers.
The invention will be described below, with reference to the enclosed drawings, given by way of example and in which:
As illustrated and previously mentioned, the invention refers to a container R of the type used for storing and applying pressurized fluids, such as aerosols and the like, which require containers in the form of cylindrical cans constructed to resist high inner pressures.
The container R, of the type considered herein, presents a tubular body 1, formed in sheet metal and comprising a cylindrical side wall 10 which is externally provided with messages allusive to the packaged product and its manufacturer and generally obtained by lithography, said side wall 10 having a lower edge 10a and an upper edge 10b with a reduced diameter in relation to the diameter of the side wall 10.
These containers R have the side wall 10 thereof occupying two-third of the total height of said container R, the upper one-third area of the container R presenting an upper cylindrical portion 11 with a reduced diameter in relation to the diameter of the side wall 10 of the tubular body 1, said upper cylindrical portion 11 superiorly presenting a diametrical reduction, generally in a convex arc 11a, for transition to a cylindrical neck 11b, in whose upper end is defined the upper edge 10b of the side wall 10. Therefore, the upper edge 10b of the side wall 10 presents a substantially reduced diameter in relation to the diameter of the side wall 10, as well illustrated in
The tubular body 1 further comprises a bottom wall 20, in the form of a spherical dome projecting to the interior of the container R, which is attached to the lower edge 10a of the side wall 10, by a lower double seam Ri formed in a conventional way, i.e., projecting radially outwards from the axial projection of the contour of the side wall 10 of the tubular body 1. The tubular body 1 further comprises an upper wall 30 in the form of an annular spherical dome, projecting outwards from the tubular body 1, inferiorly attached to the upper edge 10b of the side wall 10 by an upper double seam Rs and defining a central opening A positioned in a plane transversal to the longitudinal axis of the container R and upwardly displaced in relation to the plane in which is situated the upper edge 10b of the side wall 10.
As better illustrated in
As illustrated in
As better illustrated in
Preferably, the guiding skirt portion 21b of the seating region 21 presents a substantially frusto-conical shape, with the smaller inner diameter being substantially identical or slightly superior to the outer diameter of the upper double seam Rs. This construction of the guiding skirt portion 21b permits obtaining a tightly fitting between the bottom wall of the upper container R on the upper double seam Rs of the immediately lower container R, even considering the determined dimensional tolerances used in the manufacture of said container and, particularly, in the double seams thereof.
In the construction illustrated in
As may be better noted in
As can be seen, the frusto-conical shape of the guiding skirt portion 21b of the seating region 21, allows the latter to be seated around the lid 40, producing a mutual radial locking between the two containers, even considering the dimensional tolerance variations of the elements constitutive of these containers. Thus, the guiding skirt portion 21b of frusto-conical shape presents the smaller inner diameter smaller than the outer diameter of the side wall 41 of the lid 40 and the larger inner diameter larger than the inner diameter of said side wall 41 of the lid 40, in an upper edge region of the latter, in which it is connected to the top wall 42.
The construction of each seating region 21 is the same as that already previously described for the first embodiment illustrated in the other figures commented herein. However, in this second embodiment, the annular axial stop portion 21a of each seating region 21 is connected to the bottom wall 20, by an arched wall portion 22 superiorly coincident with the bottom wall 20 and inferiorly coincident with the annular axial stop portion 21a, the guiding skirt portion 21b, of each seating region 21 also being inferiorly connected to the lower double seam Ri by an annular wall portion 23 spaced back in relation to the lower edge 10a of the cylindrical side wall 10.
It should be understood that the seating of the multiple seating regions 21, on the upper double seam Rs or on the lid 40 of a container R disposed immediately below in a vertical stack of said containers, is carried out exactly in the same way already described in relation to the first embodiment of the bottom wall 20. However, it should be considered that the support region between the bottom wall of the upper container and the upper double seam Rs or the lid 40 of the lower container is defined not around the whole circumference of the containers, but only in the circumferential extensions defined in each of the seating regions 21.
As illustrated in the enclosed drawings, and independently of the embodiment of the seating region 21, either single or multiple, its incorporation, in a single piece, to the bottom wall 20 is made through the arched interconnection regions, in order to prevent stress concentrations which are harmful to the resistance required for said bottom wall 20 as a function of the pressure levels maintained in the interior of this type of container R.
While only two embodiments of the invention have been illustrated herein for the construction of the bottom wall 20 of the containers R of the present invention, it should be understood that alterations can be made in the form and physical arrangement of the elements used in the formation of said seating regions 21, without departing from the constructive concept defined in the claims accompanying the present specification.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0703846 | Sep 2007 | BR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/BR2008/000270 | 9/3/2008 | WO | 00 | 5/26/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/030009 | 3/12/2009 | WO | A |
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1083574 | Westerbeck | Jan 1914 | A |
D256652 | Leung et al. | Sep 1980 | S |
5492245 | Kalkanis | Feb 1996 | A |
6095332 | Finand et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6142330 | Sacks | Nov 2000 | A |
6578724 | Owens | Jun 2003 | B1 |
7732035 | Pedmo et al. | Jun 2010 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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11301757 | Nov 1999 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100300916 A1 | Dec 2010 | US |