The present invention relates to a container intended to contain a liquid or pasty material, associated with a system for collecting and dispensing without taking in air, called “Airless”, said container being rigid and having a flexible bag holding the material to be dispensed, and being associated with the collecting system.
A first known technique for making such containers consists of obtaining, by molding, a rigid flask and a flexible bag, in a single operation or in several operations.
But these flasks, commonly called “bag flasks”, have a height greater than their diameter, and collapsing of the bag occurs laterally, because it is the sides of the jar that have the greatest surface area and that collapse.
This technique is therefore not suited to jars, for cosmetics for example, which are wider than they are high and have a large-diameter opening, close or identical to that of the jar itself.
Thus it is demonstrated that the technology of “bag flasks” is not applicable to a jar intended to be “Airless” because the flasks are in principle blow-molded, with a neck that is smaller in diameter than the body of the flask, which is not the case with jars where the opening diameter is large, and it is not known how to make bag type “Airless” containers for 15 ml and 30 ml jars and for 200 ml jars, with non-standard blowing ratios.
The solutions proposed and described in documents EP0546898 and GB2184491 related to bags containing the material, the outlet neck whereof has a diameter smaller than the diameter of the bag body, which is necessarily obtained by blow-molding. These solutions therefore do not apply to large-diameter bags with large openings.
A second well-known technique is to make piston-type “Airless” flasks. But these are not compact, due to the thickness needed for the piston to operate, and require the development of a new line of jars. It is not possible to make piston-type “Airless” jars for large diameter 200 ml jars, molding tolerances making fits and seals difficult over large diameters.
Thus the problem of making containers, particularly large-diameter jars with wide openings, which must be associated with an “Airless” piston type jar, remains as before.
According to a first phase of the inventive approach, this consists of seeking a compromise between the “Airfree” technique and the “Piston” technique, that is a container having both a flexible bag and an associated piston, so as to obtain an “Airless” system suited to a large-diameter container according to the object being sought.
To this end, the invention relates to a container intended to contain a liquid or pasty material, associated with a system for collecting and dispensing without taking in air, said container being rigid and including a flexible bag containing the material to be dispensed, and associated with the collecting system, characterized in that the bag is obtained by plastic injection independently of the rigid container and constitutes a generally cylindrical reservoir, having at its upper part a large opening with a diameter equal to its inner diameter, said bag consisting of four areas consisting of:
The advantages of such a container are the following:
The present invention also relates to features that will be revealed in the course of the description that follows, and which will need to be considered in isolation or in all their possible technical combinations.
This description, given by way of a non-limiting example, will make it easier to understand how the invention can be implemented, with reference to the appended drawings wherein:
The container with the overall designation of 1 in the figures is intended to contain a liquid or pasty material 2. It is associated with a system 3 for collecting and dispensing without taking in air, said container 1 being rigid and including a flexible bag 4 holding the material to be dispensed 2, and which is associated with the collecting system 3.
The collecting and dispensing system 3 consist of a dosing chamber 5, communicating on the one hand with a reservoir 6 constituted by the bag 4, through a non-return valve 7, and on the other hand with an outside channel 8, made of elastically deformable material, or any other means for dispensing the material 2.
According to the invention, the bag 4 is obtained by plastic injection independently of the rigid container 1 and constitutes a generally cylindrical reservoir 6, having at its upper part a wide opening with a diameter equal to its internal diameter, said bag consisting of four areas constituted by:
Tests have demonstrated that good results were obtained when, on the one hand, the rigid upper sidewall 9 of the cylindrical reservoir 6 covers substantially half “h1” of the height “H” of this and its thickness and that of the bottom 18, are from about 0.8 to 2 mm, and when on the other hand the flexible lower sidewall 17 of the cylindrical reservoir 6 covers substantially half “h2” of the height “H” of this and extends into the fillet or chamber 19 and into a horizontal plane 20 concentric with the rigid bottom 18, and that its thickness is from about 0.05 to 0.35 mm.
A bag 4 thus constituted can, if it is suitably dimensioned of course, be adapted to any container, jar or tube, with a capacity of 10 ml to 2,000 ml, to make them “Airless” in association with an “Airless” collecting and dispensing system 3 which closes the top of the jar- or tube-type container.
The operation of such an assembly is as follows: under the influence of the “Airless” (without intake of air) collecting and dispensing system 3, a dose of material 2 is discharged outside the container 1, causing a vacuum inside the reservoir 6 because the dose to be discharged outside of the system 3 is not replaced with air. The reservoir 6 experiences a vacuum and compensates for the vacuum by a flexible deformation of its geometry.
During this vacuum action, which can be weak (from 10 mbar to 50 mbar), the rigid bottom 18 is sucked upward, in the manner of a piston, consequently driving the flexible sidewall 17 to deform upward, by folding and rolling back over itself, inside the reservoir 6. The vertical displacement of the rigid bottom 18, associated with the deformation of the flexible sidewall 17, causes a reduction in the volume of the reservoir 6, thus allowing discharge of the material 2 without intake of air.
Moreover, the flexible peripheral articulation area 19 forming a corner fillet, connected to the rigid bottom 18 on the one hand and to the flexible lower sidewall 17 on the other hand, makes it possible for the flexible lower sidewall 17 to fold over itself during the upward movement of the piston as aforesaid. This articulation area 19 makes it possible to initiate and to facilitate the turnover of the flexible sidewall 17 onto itself, then to drive this turnover through the upward displacement of the rigid bottom 18 forming a piston, up to the moment that the fold formed by this turnover reaches the rigid upper sidewall 9, thus blocking displacement of this turnover and of the rigid bottom 18.
At the end of the discharge, the flexible lower sidewall 17 is completely turned over itself and it is raised so as to cover the same height h1 as the rigid sidewall 9. The rigid bottom or piston 18 is then situated at the very top of the reservoir.
The fillet can be straight or rounded.
The half-rigid, half-flexible bag 4 is obtained in a single piece in the course of one and the same molding operation, by plastic injection.
In practice, to be able to form fine thicknesses of 0.2 mm by injection, highly fluid materials and injection machines with high injection pressures, high injection speeds and mold closing force which can vary in the course of the injection cycle are used.
By way of an example, the materials used for making the bag can be LDPE “low density polyethylene” or EVA (ethylene vinyl acetate) or TPE (thermoplastic elastomer) or PU (polyurethane), having very low elastic moduli (<300 MPa) associated with very high fluidity (MFI fluidity >50 g/10 mn of material passing through a calibrated die under 2.16 kg of load and at a temperature of 190° C.).
Injection will be carried out at high speed and high pressure, with a closed mold with a very high or variable mold closing force.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1252358 | Mar 2012 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2013/050249 | 2/6/2013 | WO | 00 |