The present invention concerns a container, particularly but not exclusively a container for edible products, which comprises a system to guarantee that it is correctly closed for storage and transportation.
When edible products are packed in containers for storage and dispensing it is essential to guarantee that the container is correctly re-closed after the first opening so that the product freshness over time is also guaranteed.
Various packaging closing systems were developed, in order to warn the consumer when the container is correctly—i.e. fully—closed. Such systems include sensitive systems whereby the closure produces a resistance point when the said closure is sufficiently screwed onto the container neck. This resistance point during the screwing operation gives a warning to the consumer that the closure is in the “locked” position.
Such closing systems comprise corresponding protrusions or embossing of the closure and container neck that contact each other when the closure is sufficiently screwed onto the neck, so that the contact between the two makes it temporarily more difficult to screw or unscrew the closure.
However, such systems are not found sufficiently efficient to the consumers who are asking for more obvious signals on packaging containers, to give them reassurance that the product freshness will be guaranteed. More than that, some consumers stop screwing the closure even before the latter is correctly screwed because they—wrongly—believe that the resistance point they feel is an indication that the closure is completely screwed. Such a misbelieve is really a threat to the product freshness because in such a case, the container is, of course, not correctly closed.
In order to correct the above described disadvantages of the known containers, the present invention provides a container neck defining an opening, and a container closure, said neck and closure comprising corresponding screw threads to allow releasable attachment of the closure onto the neck in order to open/close the container opening, characterized in that:
Preferably, the cam-like means is located less than 10 mm from the top edge of the container body.
Alternatively, the cam-like means is located adjacent, or even can be directly part of, the screw threads of the container neck.
In a highly preferred embodiment of the present invention, said at least one engagement means of the closure is at least one flexible tongue.
In that case, the said at least one flexible tongue is advantageously located adjacent the edge between the internal top wall and the internal side wall of the closure.
Furthermore, the said flexible tongue can comprise an indented portion to increase the tongue's flexibility.
Finally, the cam-like means preferably comprises a soft slope portion and a steep slope portion to facilitate the relative movement of said cam-like means and engagement means of the closure. However, both slopes of the cam-like element can be steep to adapt to the limits of the manufacturing process, especially if the container neck is to be made of glass.
Additional features and advantages of the present invention are described in, and will be apparent from, the description of the presently preferred embodiments which are set out below with reference to the drawings in which:
The present invention, as shown in the drawing, concerns a container (not fully represented in the drawing) comprising a container body and a container closure 1. As can be seen in the figures, the drawing represents essentially partial views of the container.
The container body comprises bottom and side walls and a container neck 2 defining an opening. The container neck 2 and the closure 1 also comprise corresponding screw threads 3 to allow releasable attachment of the closure 1 onto the body in order to open/close the container opening.
According to the present invention, the container body comprises at least one cam-like means 4 located on the external surface of the container body walls, and the closure 1 comprises at least one engagement means 5 corresponding to the cam-like means 4 of the container body.
As shown in
As can be seen in
Furthermore, as can be seen from
The four flexible tongues 5 are located adjacent the edge 8 between the internal top wall 9 and the internal side wall 10 of the closure 1, spaced apart at an angle of 45° from one another.
Furthermore, each said flexible tongue 5 comprises an indented portion 11 to increase the tongue's flexibility, as shown for instance in
The efficiency of the present invention, and the good quality of the sound obtained is particularly due to the flexibility of each flexible tongue 5, that deflects when it passes onto the soft slope 6 of the cam-like means 4 during screwing of the closure 1 onto the neck 2. At this stage, due to the soft slope, the mechanical resistance to screw the closure onto the neck is low and therefore the risk is low that the consumer could be confused by the resistance to screwing, and wrongly think that the closure is completely screwed.
In engineering mechanics, deflection is a term that is used to describe the degree to which a structural element—here, each flexible tongue—is displaced under a load—here the load is applied directly by the consumer by the screwing force, via the cam-like means of the container neck—.
The deflection of each flexible tongue under the load applied by the consumer is directly related to the slope of the deflected shape of the tongue under that load and can be calculated by integrating the function that mathematically describes the slope of the tongue under that load that is applied.
The elastic deflection f and angle of deflection φ (in radians) compared to the position of the flexible tongue at rest can be calculated (at the free end of the flexible tongue) using:
f=F×L
3/(3×E×I)
φ=F×L2/(2×E×I)
where:
F=force acting on the tip of the beam
L=length of the beam (span)
E=modulus of elasticity
I=area moment of inertia
The deflection at any point along the span can be calculated using the above-mentioned methods.
From this formula it follows that the span L is the most determinating factor; if the span doubles, the deflection increases 8 folds.
When the free end of one flexible tongue 5 escapes the cam-like means 4, it is suddenly released due to the steep second slope portion of the cam-like means, and starts vibrating. The vibrations of the blade constituted by each flexible tongue of the closure, produces a vibration in the ambient air, which generates a sound. In the field of the present invention, due the length of each flexible tongue which is quite short, and also due to the nature of the thermoplastic that is used, the vibration frequency of each tongue is quite high, which produces a short sound like a “click”. This is enough to be audible and warn the consumer that the closure is correctly and fully screwed to protect the freshness of the container contents.
It should be understood that various changes and modifications to the presently preferred embodiments described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention and without diminishing its attendant advantages. It is therefore intended that such changes and modifications be covered by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07113772.3 | Aug 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/058789 | 7/7/2008 | WO | 00 | 6/4/2010 |