The billions of pounds of plastic products and packaging produced in this country every year create numerous concerns. At every step in the production of plastics, resources are consumed and waste is produced. Plastics are made from finite, nonrenewable petroleum and natural gas raw materials. Reducing the amount of plastic needed to make a plastic container, such as a bottle or jar, has many benefits.
While the amount of plastic used in making a plastic container can be reduced by thinning the walls of the container, this can create structural problems with the container. Thin walls also increase the oxygen permeability of the container. That may adversely affect the ability of the container to protect and preserve the contents, particularly for foodstuffs.
Container can be made from plastic films which offer the possibility of producing containers with very thin walls that provide a good oxygen barrier. However, making containers from plastic films creates a number of structural challenges.
A container including a fitment providing a closure and a plurality of panels of plastic film. Each of the panels has a pair of opposing longitudinal edges with each edge joined to a longitudinal edge of an adjacent panel to form an outwardly extending seam. The panels collectively form a tube-like structure. A first end of the tube-like structure is sealed to the fitment. An opposing second end of the tube-like structure is closed by seams joining adjacent panels. A first portion of each of the panels adjacent the second end of the tube-like structure is expanded such that the first portion of each of the panels is not flat. A second portion of each of the panels between the first end and the second end is left substantially unexpanded such that the second portion of each of the panels is flat.
The present invention provides a container made largely from a plastic film and thereby substantially reducing the amount of plastics in the container. The films may be chosen to provide a good oxygen barrier. The structure of the container provides for a container that is stable when filled and amenable to an attractive graphic treatment.
Film as used herein refers to a thin, generally flexible, sheet of plastic suitable for packaging. The film may be of organic polymers that can be classified by how permeable they are to gases (e.g., oxygen or carbon dioxide) and moisture vapor. Those organic polymers that significantly restrict the ability of gases to pass through them are referred to as gas barrier polymers or high barrier polymers. The use of high barrier polymers is very important in the packaging of certain foods and beverages, which require protection from oxygen and moisture. Vinylidene chloride based polymers (PVDC) and copolymers are examples of suitable high barrier polymers for films for use in the present invention. Perhaps the most familiar examples of the vinylidene chloride based polymers used in packaging are commercial Saran® products. Other high oxygen barrier polymers may be used, such as ethylene vinyl alcohol (EVOH) copolymers. However, EVOH copolymers lack the moisture resistance properties associated with vinylidene chloride based polymers, and therefore, EVOH copolymers may be combined with additional moisture barrier polymers for use in the present invention. Packaging comprising high gas barrier polymers, such as PVDC and EVOH, may be inadequate to protect certain packaged oxygen sensitive products, such as beer and juice, from environmental oxygen. Modified organic polymers may be used in the present invention to enhance oxygen barrier properties. Modifications may include chemical modification of organic polymers, such as fluoridation or sulfonation of organic polymers.
The film used in the present invention may be a laminate of several component films selected to provide a combination of desirable properties. For example, as shown in
The body of the container 100 is formed from a plurality of panels of plastic film, four panels 110, 112, 114, 116 for the embodiment shown in
A first portion 120 of each of the panels 110 adjacent the second end of the tube-like structure is expanded, such as by thermoforming. The thermoforming may be carried out by placing the container in a mold and filling the container with a heated fluid, such as heated air, to selectively expand the panels to fill the mold. Where the container is to be filled with a suitable fluid product, heated product may be used to accomplish the thermoforming.
As a result of the expansion, the first portion 120b of each of the panels 110b is not flat. However, a second portion 122 of each of the panels 110b between the first end and the second end is left substantially unexpanded such that the second portion of each of the panels remains substantially flat as it was prior to the expansion process. Phantom line 126 shows the general boundary between the first portion 120 below and the second portion 122 above. It will be observed that the phantom line 126 is essentially unchanged by the expansion process. The term “substantially unexpanded” is used to mean that the plastic film is not intentionally expanded although the film may be slightly expanded due to normal tolerances of the mold and the assembly of the unexpanded bottle, such as the mold being slightly oversize or the plastic film assembly being slightly undersized.
Prior to expansion the fold 124a that forms the periphery of the bottom of the container 100a, may be generally rectangular. Following expansion the fold 124b forming the periphery, may be elliptical or some other rounded shape. The expansion may provide a bottom for the container that is less susceptible to buckling. The expansion may tend to minimize the outwardly extending seams 104 and thereby provide a container bottom that is better suited for standing on a flat surface.
In another embodiment as illustrated by
The fitment 302 may include a cylindrical base 304 that is sealed to the first end of the tube-like structure with the remainder 306 of the fitment extending away from the tube-like structure. The term “cylindrical base” as applied to fitments is used to mean that the sealing surface (or “base”) of a cylindrical base style fitment is preferably (but not necessarily) substantially parallel to the axis of the fitment but does not include external corners at sharply acute angles around its circumference. Rather, the circumference is preferably comprised of smooth and preferably convex curves. Having the circumference comprised of smooth curves is intended to facilitate the sealing of web material to the base of the fitment. The cross sectional shape of the sealing area of a cylindrical base fitment is preferably circular, but may be oval, or have some other curved shape. It should be understood that the fitment may be tapered somewhat (axially) to facilitate insertion or for other reasons. Alternatively, instead of the sealing surface area of a cylindrical base fitment being comprised of smooth curves, the sealing surface of a cylindrical base fitment may include intersections at an angle. Intersection angles that are greater than about 60 degrees, as might be used with a three-sided container, are generally satisfactory. The base of a cylindrical base style of fitment could, for example, have a triangular shape (in cross section).
The expansion may tend to thin the film of the panels 110 in the areas that are expanded. This thinning may lessen the effectiveness of an oxygen barrier material within the laminations of a laminated sheet of plastic film used to form some or all of the panels. Selectively expanding the panels may control the loss of effectiveness of the oxygen barrier material to acceptable levels.
As illustrated by
A container that embodies the present invention may be made by providing a fitment that may include a resealable closure. A tube-like structure may be formed by joining a plurality of panels of plastic film by joining longitudinal edges of each panel to longitudinal edges of adjacent panels to form outwardly extending seams. A first end of the tube-like structure may be sealed to the fitment. The fitment may include a cylindrical base and the first end of the tube-like structure may be sealed to the cylindrical base with the remainder of the fitment means extending away from the tube-like structure. A second end of the tube-like structure opposite the first end may be closed by forming seams joining adjacent panels.
A first portion of each of the panels adjacent the second end of the tube-like structure may be expanded by confining at least the panels of the container in a mold and introducing a heated fluid into the container to expand the plastic film of the panels to fill the mold. The mold is such that the first portion of each of the panels is not flat after expansion while a second portion of each of the panels between the first end and the second end is left substantially unexpanded such that the second portion of each of the panels is substantially flat. A third portion of each of the panels adjacent the first end of the tube-like structure may be expanded such that the third portion of each of the panels is not flat.
A plurality of layers including an oxygen barrier material may be laminated to form the plastic film used to form the container. Printer matter may be applied within the laminations on at least one of the plurality of panels of plastic film. The printed matter may include dimensionally critical printed matter that is applied within the second portion of the panel. The printed matter may be applied as a mirror image on an inner surface of a transparent layer of the laminated sheet.
While certain exemplary embodiments have been described and shown in the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that such embodiments are merely illustrative of and not restrictive on the broad invention, and that this invention not be limited to the specific constructions and arrangements shown and described, since various other modifications may occur to those ordinarily skilled in the art.
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