The present invention relates to cooler containers, cold trays, and red wine servers for temperature management for food materials, beverages, and red wine.
Objects that need to be stored at a constant temperature, especially, from alcoholic drinks (e.g., wine, beer, and Japanese sake or rice wine) and non-alcoholic drinks (e.g., soft drinks and water) to food products to medications, have appropriate storage temperatures of their own. Hence, there is a demand for cooling and thermal insulation containers that are capable of quickly bringing these objects to their desirable storage temperatures and of maintaining them at the desirable temperatures for an extended period of time. For example, an uncooked food material, such as sashimi or raw fish, is preferably stored and eaten at 0 to 5° C. because the food may lose its freshness if it is put on a warm tray and may freeze and lose flavor if put on an excessively cold tray. Other foodstuffs similarly have their own temperature ranges in which they can be eaten without losing natural texture and flavor. These appropriate temperature ranges vary greatly from around 20° C. for chocolate, 15 to 16° C. for Camembert cheese, 0 to 5° C. for raw oyster, not lower than 18° C. for honey, 40 to 50° C. for Gyokuro or high quality Japanese green tea, to around 60° C. for typical Western tea.
A container is therefore needed that can keep the food materials and beverages at an appropriate temperature when they are put on, or temporarily stored in, a cooler container, thermal insulation container, or like plate or tray. From this point of view, Patent Literature 1 discloses technology for maintaining the temperature of food materials placed on a plate or tray by providing an insulating or cold insulation material on the bottom of the plate and tray.
Wine gives very different flavors and aromas depending on temperature and should be kept more precisely at an optimum drinking temperature. Wine cooling buckets containing ice water are popularly used to satisfy such needs.
The use of such a bucket cooler, however, requires water on the wine bottle to be wiped off every time the bottle is taken out of the bucket. To remedy this nuisance, wine cooler sleeves in which one can put a wine bottle are being proposed that include a means of fixing a cold insulator therein (in a position close to the bottle). The use of the wine cooler sleeve eliminates the need to remove water off the bottle. In this design, however, temperature drops too low to keep the red wine at an optimum drinking temperature (14 to 18° C.) because the cold insulator (cold storage material) is water-based (0° C. or below). Meanwhile, without the cold storage material, the wine cooler sleeve can maintain the red wine at an optimum drinking temperature (14 to 18° C.) for less than 30 minutes. One would be forced to use, for example, an electrically powered, constant-temperature wine cooler to keep red wine at an optimum drinking temperature, which may be problematic.
Patent Literature 2 discloses insulating/cold insulation materials and related technology for use in plates, trays, wine cooler sleeves, and like cooling/thermal insulation tools. These cold storage materials are highly flexible and suited for cooling at or around normal temperature and have a low polymer content that should be mixed with, for example, hexadecane and tetradecane.
Patent Literature 3 proposes a wine cooler sleeve with a fixing means that enables a cold insulator to be removably attached to the inner wall of a cooler container. The cooler container is provided therein with a rib for holding the cold insulator. In this structure, which is simpler than conventional wine cooler sleeves, the wine bottle collects fewer water droplets thereon and more easily slips into the wine cooler sleeve.
The cold tray of Patent Literature 1 has a top surface temperature that is dictated by the phase transition temperature of the insulating material/cold insulator. Therefore, it is difficult to adjust the tray temperature to match the suitable temperatures of various food materials, and it is necessary to prepare different insulating materials/cold insulators for different suitable temperatures, which is a complex procedure.
Patent Literature 2 provides a possibility that the optimum drinking temperature of red wine (14 to 18° C.) may match the phase transition temperature of a cold storage material (at which the material produces latent heat). It is however difficult to maintain a temperature that differs from the phase transition temperature of the cold storage material, for example, to maintain the optimum drinking temperature of white wine (5 to 10° C.), by simply attaching the cold storage material around the wine bottle. Patent Literature 2 fails, for example, to cool the red wine quickly from normal temperature (around 25° C.) to the optimum drinking temperature (14 to 18° C.) and to adequately maintain the red wine at the optimum drinking temperature (14 to 18° C.). Patent Literature 2 also fails to disclose a specific structure for a wine cooler sleeve. Furthermore, the cold storage material used in Patent Literature 2 is prepared from an organic material (e.g., petroleum) and hence flammable and ill-suited for use with foods and beverages.
Patent Literature 3 does not disclose any specific temperatures related to the cold insulator and therefore falls short of enabling one to adequately maintain red wine at the optimum drinking temperature (14 to 18° C.).
An embodiment of the present invention, made in view of these issues, has an object to provide a cooler container in which it is possible to adjust the temperature of an outer surface on the buffer layer side of the container to a temperature that differs from the melting point of a freezing material.
To achieve the object, the present invention, in an embodiment thereof is directed to a cooler container that adjusts temperature of an object to be cooled that includes a beverage or food product, the cooler container having at least a region with a hollow structure, the cooler container including: a thermal storage layer in the region, the thermal storage layer containing a freezing material that changes phase at a specific temperature; and at least one buffer layer in the region, the at least one buffer layer being separated from the thermal storage layer in the region and containing an antifreeze material that is a fluid at a phase transition temperature of the freezing material, wherein the at least one buffer layer transfers heat from the object to be cooled to the thermal storage layer and vice versa.
The present invention, in an embodiment thereof, provides an intervening buffer layer, which regulates in accordance with ambient temperature the amount of heat either absorbed or released by a thermal storage layer. That can in turn render the temperature of an outer surface on the buffer layer side of a container differ from the melting point of a freezing material. In addition, the temperature of the outer surface on the buffer layer side of the container can be adjusted appropriately by adjusting the thickness of the buffer layer. Therefore, according to the embodiment, it is possible to deliver and maintain a suitable temperature for various beverages and food products by simply changing either the amount of the freezing material or the thickness of the buffer layer, without having to replace the freezing material with a freezing material of another type.
The inventors of the present invention have found that an intervening buffer layer, when provided in a cooler container that comes with a thermal storage layer to maintain the temperature of a beverage, food material, or food product, regulates in accordance with ambient temperature the amount of heat either absorbed or released by the thermal storage layer and can hence render the temperature of an outer surface on the buffer layer side of the container differ from the melting point of a freezing material. The inventors have also found that the temperature of the outer surface on the buffer layer side of the container can be adjusted appropriately by adjusting the thickness of the buffer layer. These findings have led to the completion of the present invention.
The inventors have thus made it possible to deliver and maintain a suitable temperature for various food materials by simply changing either the amount of the freezing material or the thickness of the buffer layer, without having to replace the freezing material with a freezing material of another type. The following will describe embodiments of the present invention in more specific terms in reference to drawings.
A cooler container of an embodiment of the present invention has at least a region with a hollow structure and includes a thermal storage layer and a buffer layer both in the hollow region. The thermal storage layer contains a freezing material that changes phase at a specific temperature. The buffer layer is separated from the thermal storage layer in the hollow region and contains an antifreeze material that is a fluid at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material.
The container body 110 has a hollow structure to encase, for example, the thermal storage layer 120 and the buffer layer 130. The container body 110 may be made of a resin material such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polyester, polyurethane, polycarbonate, polyvinyl chloride, or polyamide, a metal such as aluminum, stainless steel, copper, or silver, or an inorganic material such as glass, chinaware, or ceramic. The container body 110 is preferably made of a resin material in view of ease of manufacture and durability of the hollow structure and also because a thermochromic substance, which indicates that a suitable temperature has been reached, can be attached to the container body 110 in the form of a sticker or kneaded into the resin in order to enable a person to determine that a suitable temperature has been reached. The container body 110 may be provided, on an outer surface on the thermal storage layer 120 side thereof, with a thermal insulation layer of a thermal insulator. The provision of the thermal insulation layer does not affect heat exchange between the thermal storage layer 120, the buffer layer 130, and the object to be cooled and still reduces other heat transfer, which in turn increases the holding time.
The thermal storage layer 120 contains the freezing material 150, which changes phase at a specific temperature. The freezing material 150, intended for use with at least food and food materials, is preferably made of a substance that changes phase at a temperature in a range of from −20° C. to 80° C. like those listed in the table in
The buffer layer 130 contains the antifreeze material 160, which is a fluid at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material 150, and is separated from the thermal storage layer 120 in the hollow region of the container body 110. Materials for the antifreeze material 160 should have a smaller specific gravity than the freezing material 150, be fluidic (either liquid or gaseous) at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material 150, and not mingle with the freezing material 150. As an example, when the freezing material 150 is water, the antifreeze material 160 may be air. If there is provided a partition or like structure inside the hollow region of the container body 110 to form separate regions for the thermal storage layer 120 and the buffer layer 130, the antifreeze material 160 only needs to be fluidic at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material 150.
Next will be described a method of manufacturing the cooler container 100 in accordance with the present embodiment.
Referring to
If the buffer layer 130 is to be formed of air, the amount of the freezing material 150 injected is adjusted to less than the volume of the hollow of the container, and the container is sealed as will be detailed later, so that some air can remain in the hollow to form the buffer layer 130. If the buffer layer 130 is to be formed of a non-air substance, the amount of the freezing material 150 injected is adjusted, the antifreeze material 160 is injected into the remaining volume, and the container is sealed. Materials for the antifreeze material 160 should have a smaller specific gravity than the freezing material 150, be fluid at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material 150, and not mingle with the freezing material 150. Using such a material that does not mingle with the freezing material 150 and has a smaller specific gravity than the freezing material 150, the antifreeze material 160 and the freezing material 150 form separate phases even when there is no partition or like structure provided in hollow region of the container body 110 as in the present embodiment. This arrangement facilitates the formation of the thermal storage layer 120 and the buffer layer 130.
The injection hole 170 of the container body 110 is then closed with a plug 190 as shown in
Finally, in an environment where temperature is less than or equal to the phase transition temperature of the freezing material 150, the cooler container 110 is placed still in such a manner that its bottom face becomes horizontal. The freezing material 150 thus solidifies so that at least the bottom face of the cooler container 110 and the top face of the thermal storage layer 120 become parallel to each other. The cooler container 100 of the present embodiment is manufactured by these manufacturing steps.
Example 1-1 is a cold tray example in accordance with the first embodiment. A blow-molded container (container body) shown in
In an environment where temperature was less than or equal to the phase transition temperature of water, the obtained cold tray was placed still in such a manner that the bottom face of the tray became horizontal. Water thus solidified so that at least the bottom face of the tray and the top face of the thermal storage layer became parallel to each other. Specifically, the tray was placed still and horizontally in a freezer of a common, household refrigerator in such a manner that the bottom face of the tray came into contact with the internal bottom of the refrigerator. Twelve hours later when the cold tray was taken out, it was observed that the thermal storage layer had solidified. The cold tray had a height of 20 mm (the container material had a thickness of 0.8 mm), whereas the thermal storage layer had a thickness of approximately 7 mm, and the buffer layer had a thickness of approximately 11 mm.
Thermocouple wires were attached to the top and bottom faces of the cold tray in which the freezing material had solidified, to observe temperature changes over time at room temperature (25° C.). Results are shown in
Example 1-2 is another cold tray example in accordance with the first embodiment. Example 1-2 is a cold tray of the same structure as Example 1-1, except that the former contains 350 grams of liquid as opposed to 200 grams of liquid in the latter. Example 1-2 was manufactured by the same method as Example 1, except for the change in the amount of liquid.
Comparative Example 1-1 is a cold tray of the same structure as Example 1-1, except for a change in the amount of liquid contained in the cold tray from 200 grams to 450 grams (this amount of water substantially filled the container). Comparative Example 1-1 was manufactured by the same method as Example 1-1, except for the change in the amount of liquid.
The cooler container 100 in accordance with the present embodiment is manufactured by the same method as the cooler container 100 in accordance with the first embodiment, except for the shape of the container body 110.
Example 2-1 is a cold tray example in accordance with the second embodiment. A blow-molded container was first prepared that had a cross-sectional shape shown in
The blow-molded container was frozen in the same manner as in Example 1-1, to evaluate the thicknesses of the thermal storage layer and the buffer layer. The thermal storage layer had a thickness of 20 mm. The buffer layer had a thickness of 11 mm, 5 mm, and 0 mm in the respective hollow regions where the thickness was 31 mm, 25 mm, and 20 mm. The top face of the tray had a temperature of 8° C., 4° C., and 0° C. in the respective hollow regions where the thickness was 31 mm, 25 mm, and 20 mm. These measurements demonstrate that this single cold tray can provide a plurality of regions of different temperatures. It is hence possible to maintain a plurality of food materials at different suitable temperatures by using the single tray. The tray is suitable to serve hors d'oeuvre.
A cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is applied to a cutting board in the present embodiment.
The cutting board 200 in accordance with the present embodiment is manufactured by the same method as the cooler container 100 in accordance with the first embodiment is manufactured.
Example 3-1 is a cutting board example in accordance with the third embodiment. A blow-molded container (substance: polyethylene: external dimensions: 230×400×t20 mm/t2 mm) was first prepared. Next, 600 grams of water was injected into this container, which was then closed using a screw plug. The container was then frozen in a freezer as in Example 1, after which the respective thicknesses of the buffer layer and the thermal storage layer were measured to be 11 mm and 5 mm. The temperature of the surface on which a food material was to be cut (top face) was measured. The measurement demonstrated that the temperature of the top face remained at 8° C.
Mozzarella cheese could be cut into desired shapes on this cutting board. For a comparison, two cutting boards were prepared, one of them being an ordinary wooden cutting board (top face temperature: 25° C.) as Comparative Example 3-1 and the other being a cutting board (top face temperature: 0° C.) as Comparative Example 3-2. The cutting board as Comparative Example 3-2 was built from the same container as in Example 3-1, albeit without a buffer layer, filled with water, and then frozen. Some of the cheese melted and stuck to the cutting board of Comparative Example 3-1 and could not be cut as desired. Some of the cheese froze on the cutting board of Comparative Example 3-2 where the cheese was in contact with the cutting board.
It is hence possible to cut, into desired shapes at suitable temperature on the cutting board of the present example, those food materials which are so rich in fat like cheese that they can soften/harden or change shape with temperature. Additionally, since the temperature of the cutting board of the present example can be readily altered to match suitable temperature by simply changing the amount of liquid in the thermal storage layer before freezing, it is possible to cut various food materials, including tuna partially thawed at 0° C., on a single cutting board.
A cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is applied to a cold tray in the present embodiment.
Referring to
The external packaging section 220, housing the cooler container 100, is as a whole used as the cold tray 210. The external packaging section 220 may be formed of a resin material, metal, or inorganic material similarly to the container body 110. The cooler container fixing section 230 may be made of any material and disposed in any location so long as the cooler container fixing section 230 can fix the cooler container 100 and the external packaging section 220. The external packaging section 220 may have such a shape that it can fix the cooler container 100.
In this structure in which the cooler container 100, provided thereon with the placement surface 140, is fixed to the external packaging section 220 in a detachable manner, a suitable temperature for a food material can be achieved simply by replacing the cooler container 100 with another one designed for that suitable temperature. This saves trouble in altering the types and amounts of the freezing material 150 and the antifreeze material 160 in the cooler container 100. In addition, since the cold tray 210 includes the cooler container 100 and the external packaging section 220, and the cooler container 100 does not need to perform the function of the external packaging section 220, the cooler container 100 can be made relatively compact as compared with a cooler container 100 that is itself used as a cold tray. The cooler container 100 may be structured to allow adjustment of the types and amounts of the freezing material 150 and the antifreeze material 160. Although
A cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is applied to a cold tray in the present embodiment.
Referring to
The upper tray 240 has the placement surface 140 on the top face thereof. The bottom face of the upper tray 240, when the upper tray 240 is combined with the lower tray 250, provides a top section of the hollow structure in the container body 110. The lower tray 250 has a portion that is to contain a freezing material 150 therein. The thermal storage layer 120 is formed by injecting the freezing material 150 into the lower tray 250 and solidifying the freezing material 150 therein. When the upper tray 240 and the lower tray 250 are combined, the layer of air from the top face of the thermal storage layer 120 to the bottom face of the upper tray 240 forms the buffer layer 130. The upper tray 240 and the lower tray 250 are preferably connectable in a hermetically sealed manner in order to prevent air from coming in and going out and hence stabilize temperature. Since the upper tray 240 and the lower tray 250 are separable, the inner surface of the container body 110 is readily washable. The cold tray 210 in accordance with the present embodiment can therefore be kept clean.
The container body 110 of the cold tray 210 in accordance with the present embodiment may include a spacer 260 as shown in
A red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention includes at least one cold storage pack.
The first deep-drawing container 3 contains a first cold storage material (freezing material) 3a, and the second deep-drawing container 5 contains a second cold storage material (antifreeze material) 5a. The second cold storage material (antifreeze material) 5a remains in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the first cold storage material (freezing material) 3a. The second cold storage material (antifreeze material) 5a is positioned in intimate contact with a wine bottle 10. A lid member 7 closes the first deep-drawing container 3.
As described here, the second cold storage material 5a remains in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the first cold storage material 3a, and the second deep-drawing container 5 is brought into contact with the wine bottle 10. Therefore, the second deep-drawing container 5 can be brought into intimate contact with the wine bottle 10. Meanwhile, Patent Literature 3 proposes a wine cooler sleeve with a fixing means that enables a cold insulator to be removably attached to the inner wall of a cooler container. This conventional wine cooler sleeve does not include a structure in which the cold insulator is brought into intimate contact with the wine bottle. The conventional wine cooler sleeve therefore fails to quickly bring wine to an optimum drinking temperature. In contrast, the present embodiment, according to which the second deep-drawing container 5 can be brought into intimate contact with the wine bottle 10, can quickly bring wine to an optimum drinking temperature.
In contrast, as shown in
The particular structure described here enables the sensible heat stored by the second cold storage material 5a to be reliably transmitted to the wine bottle 10. The wine bottle 10 is hence quickly brought to a desirable temperature. The structure also enables the sensible and latent heat stored by the first cold storage material 3a to be reliably transmitted to the wine bottle 10 via the second cold storage material 5a. The wine bottle 10 is hence helped to be quickly brought to a desirable temperature and can be maintained at the desirable temperature for an extended period of time.
Referring to
Accordingly, a viscous cold storage material is used as in
In order to impart a cold storage material with such a viscosity that the cold storage material receives little influence of gravity, a thickening agent needs to be added in a large quantity. However, if an excessively large amount of thickening agent is added to the cold storage material, the inherent capability of the cold storage material will be negatively affected. Accordingly, the first cold storage material and the second cold storage material in the cold storage pack in accordance with the present embodiment are given a low viscosity of approximately 1,000 cP (e.g., paint). This level of viscosity enables adequate temperature management of the object to be cooled even if the cold storage pack is disposed upright for the temperature management of the object to be cooled as shown in
Next will be described a method of manufacturing a cold storage pack used in the red wine server in accordance with the present embodiment. The cold storage pack is manufactured in a stirring and press-through-packing machine. A method of manufacturing the cold storage pack involves at least the steps of molding a concave, first deep-drawing container (first container section) in a first metal mold; molding a second deep-drawing container (second container section) in a second metal mold, the second deep-drawing container having a concave shape at least larger than the concave shape of the first deep-drawing container; pouring, into the first deep-drawing container, a first cold storage material (freezing material) that changes phase at a predetermined temperature: pouring, into the second deep-drawing container, a second cold storage material (antifreeze material) that remains in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material; and placing the second deep-drawing container containing the second cold storage material (freezing material) in the first deep-drawing container containing the first cold storage material (freezing material) and joining a lid member and flange sections of the first and second deep-drawing containers.
Alternatively, the cold storage pack may be manufactured by a method involving at least the steps of: molding a concave, first deep-drawing container (first container section) in a first metal mold; molding a second deep-drawing container (second container section) in a second metal mold, the second deep-drawing container having a concave shape at least larger than the concave shape of the first deep-drawing container, pouring, into the second deep-drawing container, a second cold storage material (antifreeze material) that remains in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the first cold storage material (freezing material); placing the second deep-drawing container containing the second cold storage material inside the first deep-drawing container containing the first cold storage material; pouring, into the first deep-drawing container, the first cold storage material that changes phase at a predetermined temperature; and joining a lid member and the flange sections of the first and second deep-drawing containers.
The first deep-drawing container, since being located between the lid member and the second deep-drawing container, is typically composed of, for example, a three-layer (e.g., PE//NY//PP) film. However, a three-layer film could lead to unstable sealing strength. Especially, in a general heat sealer, there is a heater only on one side of a sealer. Therefore, the film sealed on the no-heater side has a reduced sealing strength, which is undesirable. Three-layer films are also disadvantageous in that they are less available in the market, require more steps to manufacture, and are more costly than two-layer films. Therefore, the first deep-drawing container in accordance with the present embodiment is molded purposefully from a two-layer film and provided with a through hole in a part of the film.
The concave, first deep-drawing container (first container section) 3 is fabricated by the steps described here as shown in
There is preferably provided a through hole 8 in a part of the top face of the film from which the second deep-drawing container 5 is molded, so that the lid member 7 is, in this step, welded via the through hole 8 to the film from which the first deep-drawing container 3 is molded.
By joining the first deep-drawing container and the second deep-drawing container in this manner, the positional relationship of the first deep-drawing container and the second deep-drawing container is fixed, which can in turn improve performance and repeatability. The second deep-drawing container may have such a bottom face that the depth of the container can vary as shown in
The method described above can manufacture a cold storage pack in which: the second cold storage material remains in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the first cold storage material; and the second deep-drawing container is brought into contact with a food and beverage that is a heat-receiving body.
Here is a list of parameters that have a somewhat limited value/range of values in a red wine server in accordance with the present embodiment.
(1) Wine volume: 750 mL
(2) Bottle weight (including wine): 1,200 to 1,500 grams
(3) Bottle type: Bordeaux (external dimensions: 070 to 80 mm; height: 290 to 300 mm; height of non-narrow, flat section: 180 to 200 mm; surface area of bottle in contact with antifreeze material in red wine server: ≈45,000 mm2)
(4) Optimum drinking temperature: 14 to 18° C.
(1) Substance: ONY//LLDPE (typically, nylon and low-density polyethylene)
(2) Thickness: 50 to 60 um (these values are typical and highly available in the market)
(3) Thermal conductivity: 0.33 W/m·K
Next, an approximate maximum combined weight of the freezing and antifreeze materials used in the red wine server in accordance with the present embodiment is specified based on the weight perception given by Weber's law. According to Weber's law, the “just noticeable difference” (or differential threshold) between two stimuli for a human is proportional to the stimulus intensity. There are some documents and research papers that verify this law from the “weight perception” viewpoint. The just noticeable difference can vary depending on the shape of the object and how the object is held (see Tokyo Women's Medical University Journal: 876-880, 1976). The following findings are safely presumed to hold true.
Letting the weight of an object be an equivalent of the base weight (R), and the minimum weight difference from the base weight (R) that a human can perceive be an equivalent of the differential threshold (ΔR), it then follows From Weber's law that the Weber fraction (ΔR/R) is in the range of 0.05 to 0.2.
Next, using the parameter values given above, an approximate range of the tolerable combined weight of the freezing and antifreeze materials in the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is calculated against the weight of a wine bottle (with wine (liquid amount)).
Assume that a wine bottle (with wine (liquid amount)) weighs 1,500 grams and that the Weber fraction is equal to 0.2, which is a maximum. It then follows that the minimum weight that a human can perceive against the base weight (1,500 grams) is given by 1,500×0.2=300 grams. It is hence concluded that the combined weight of the freezing and antifreeze materials in the red wine server in accordance with embodiments is preferably less than or equal to 300 grams.
Next, comparative experiments were conducted by setting target specifications as follows for the red wine server in accordance with the present embodiment: the holding temperature was from 14 to 18° C., the time to target temperature (i.e., time to the holding temperature) was less than or equal to 20 minutes, and the holding time at the holding temperature was greater than or equal to 120 minutes. The following will describe two comparative experiments (Comparative Experiments I and II) that were conducted in order to investigate the effects of the red wine server in accordance with the present embodiment.
(1) A wine bottle (content: 750 mL of water) was prepared in which water was maintained at normal temperature (around 25° C.).
(2) Either a freezing or antifreeze material cooled (frozen) in a freezer (at approximately −18° C.) or both was/were attached around the wine bottle.
(3) A thermal insulator was attached around the cold storage material (i.e., either a cooled (frozen) freezing or antifreeze material or both) on the bottle. The thermal insulator was general-purpose “AL vapor deposition+foamed PE.”
(4) The wine bottle was put in a 25° C. thermal insulation chamber. Changes in water temperature in the middle portion of the bottle were measured.
(1) A wine bottle (content: 750 mL of water) was prepared in which water was maintained at an optimum drinking temperature (14 to 18° C.).
(2) Either a freezing or antifreeze material cooled (frozen) in a freezer (at approximately 3 to 5° C.) or both was/were attached around the wine bottle.
(3) A thermal insulator was attached around the cold storage material (i.e., either a cooled (frozen) freezing or antifreeze material or both) on the bottle. The thermal insulator was general-purpose “AL vapor deposition+foamed PE.”
(4) The wine bottle was put in a 25° C. thermal insulation chamber. Changes in water temperature in the middle portion of the bottle were measured.
(A) Put tap water and NaCl (sodium chloride) into a stirring chamber and stir the content at 150 rpm/10 min. to dissolve the sodium chloride and obtain a 23 wt % aqueous solution of NaCl.
(B) Turn on a pump. Pack, in a film, the aqueous solution prepared in (A) using a vertical form-fill seal machine, to fabricate an antifreeze member (thermal storage package, a total weight of 300 grams). A film of ONY_10 um/LLDPE_50 um was used as the film in the packing.
Results of evaluation in Comparative Example 1 are presented and discussed next.
A freezing material was prepared containing a 41 wt % aqueous solution of TBAB (tetrabutylammonium bromide) by the same procedures as in Comparative Example 1. A freezing member (thermal storage package, a total weight of 300 grams) was fabricated using a stirring chamber and a packaging machine.
Results of evaluation in Comparative Example 2 are presented and discussed next.
Results of evaluation in Comparative Example 3 are presented and discussed next.
A cold storage member (cold storage pack) was fabricated in a stirring and press-through-packing machine. The antifreeze material was a 23 wt % aqueous solution of NaCl (sodium chloride), and the freezing material was a 20 wt % aqueous solution of KCl (potassium chloride).
Results of evaluation in Comparative Example 4 are presented and discussed next.
A cold storage member (cold storage pack) was fabricated in a stirring and press-through-packing machine. The antifreeze material was a 23 wt % aqueous solution (150 grams) of NaCl, and the freezing material was a 41 wt % aqueous solution (150 grams) of TBAB.
Results of evaluation in Example 1 are presented and discussed next.
A cold storage member (cold storage pack) was fabricated in a stirring and press-through-packing machine. The antifreeze material was a 23 wt % aqueous solution (100 grams) of NaCl, and the freezing material was a 41 wt % aqueous solution (150 grams) of TBAB.
Results of evaluation in Example 2 are presented and discussed next.
A cold storage member (cold storage pack) was fabricated in a stirring and press-through-packing machine. The antifreeze material was a 23 wt % aqueous solution (300 grams) of NaCl, and the freezing material was a 41 wt % aqueous solution (150 grams) of TBAB.
Results of evaluation in Example 3 are presented and discussed next.
A cold storage member (cold storage pack) was fabricated in a stirring and press-through-packing machine. The antifreeze material was a 23 wt % aqueous solution (150 grams) of NaCl, and the freezing material was a cold storage pack containing 200 grams of a viscosity-increased material prepared by adding, to a 41 wt % aqueous solution of TBAB, CMC in 5 wt %. The increased viscosity improved the container filling rate by 20% from 60% to 80%.
Results of evaluation in Example 4 are presented and discussed next.
Now, fixing the amount of freezing material at 100 grams, optimization is discussed of the amount of antifreeze material in a system in which a bottle of red wine (750 mL) initially at normal temperature (around 25° C.) is cooled to an optimum drinking temperature of red wine (14 to 18° C.). With the amount of freezing material being fixed at 100 grams, changes in wine temperature were measured for different amounts of antifreeze material: (1) 50 grams. (2) 100 grams, (3) 150 grams, (4) 200 grams, and (5) 500 grams. The packaging member (thickness=50 um) for the antifreeze material had a thermal conductivity of 0.33 W/m·K.
As demonstrated in
A description will be given of results of experiments in which the packaging material for packaging the antifreeze material and the freezing material (especially, the antifreeze material) was changed in thermal conductivity under the optimal conditions (100 grams of freezing material and 200 grams of antifreeze material) that were discovered in the investigation of the amount of antifreeze material. In a system in which a bottle of red wine (750 mL) initially at normal temperature (around 25° C.) is cooled to an optimum drinking temperature of red wine (14 to 18° C.), changes in wine temperature were measured for different thermal conductivities of packaging member: (1) 0.1 W/m·K, (2) 0.25 W/m·K, (3) 1.0 W/m·K, (4) 5.0 W/m·K, (5) 50 W/m·K, and (6) 100 W/m·K.
As demonstrated in
Rapid cooling capability was also investigated in relation to the amount of antifreeze material and the thermal conductivity of packaging member.
The antifreeze material layer 83, weighing 100 to 200 grams and packaged in a film, had a thickness of 50 um and external dimensions of Ø200×234 mm. The freezing material layer 85, weighing 100 to 200 grams and packaged in a film, had a thickness of 50 um and external dimensions of Ø200×256 mm (indirect section had a width of 10 mm×6 sites).
Rapid cooling capability was investigated by the following procedures.
(A) Antifreeze and freezing materials packed in a film were frozen in a freezer (−18° C.).
(B) The antifreeze and freezing materials were attached to a bottle of red wine (500 mL) that was at normal temperature (around 25° C.). Changes in liquid wine temperature in the wine bottle were measured.
The temperature changes shown in
In an embodiment of the present invention, the cold storage material may be attached approximately half around the wine bottle, so that the label on the red wine bottle is visible while being cooled.
Structure of Red Wine Server in Accordance with Seventh Embodiment
The cool storage capability of a red wine server in accordance with the seventh embodiment was measured by the following procedures.
(A) A wine bottle (water: 750 mL) was maintained at 15° C.
(B) A red wine server of the second embodiment was preprocessed at 5° C. prior to freezing.
(C) Temperature inside the bottle was measured in a normal temperature environment (around 25° C.).
This structure is capable of maintaining red wine at an appropriate temperature (from 14 to 18° C.) and also rendering the wine bottle label visible.
An embodiment of the present invention may be used with ale beer having an optimum drinking temperature at around 13° C. and Japanese sake of those types that are enjoyable at cool temperature (around 15° C.), as well as with red wine.
The present invention, in an embodiment thereof, may be directed to (1) a cooler container that adjusts temperature of an object to be cooled that includes a beverage or food product, the cooler container having at least a region with a hollow structure, the cooler container including: a thermal storage layer in the region, the thermal storage layer containing a freezing material that changes phase at a specific temperature; and at least one buffer layer in the region, the at least one buffer layer being separated from the thermal storage layer in the region and containing an antifreeze material that is a fluid at a phase transition temperature of the freezing material, wherein the at least one buffer layer transfers heat from the object to be cooled to the thermal storage layer and vice versa.
This structure, including at least one intervening buffer layer, regulates in accordance with ambient temperature the amount of heat either absorbed or released by the thermal storage layer and can hence render the temperature of an outer surface on the buffer layer side of the container differ from the melting point of the freezing material. In addition, the temperature of the outer surface on the buffer layer side of the container can be adjusted appropriately by adjusting the thickness of the at least one buffer layer. Therefore, it is possible to deliver and maintain a suitable temperature for various food materials by simply changing either the amount of the freezing material or the thickness of the buffer layer, without having to replace the freezing material with a freezing material of another type.
(2) In the cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the antifreeze material has a lower specific gravity than does the freezing material.
In this structure, the thermal storage layer is formed in the lower layer of the hollow region of the container body, and the buffer layer is formed in the upper layer thereof, without having to divide the hollow region. The thermal storage layer and the buffer layer can be provided in a simple and convenient manner.
(3) In the cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the freezing material includes water.
In this structure, the thermal storage layer can be easily formed. The structure also achieves improved safety for use with food.
(4) In the cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the antifreeze material includes air.
This structure eliminates the need for the preparation and injection of an antifreeze material. Only a freezing material needs to be injected in a suitable amount in air during the manufacture of the cooler container. The structure also achieves improved safety for use with food.
(5) The cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention has at least one through hole extending through the region to an outside of the cooler container and further includes a plug configured to close the through hole.
This structure allows the freezing and antifreeze materials to be injected into the region through the through hole. If the plug configured to close the through hole can be opened and closed again, the user can adjust the amounts of the freezing and antifreeze materials.
(6) The cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention has a scale for a volume of the freezing material or of the antifreeze material or for a predicted temperature of a surface to be in contact with the object to be cooled, the predicted temperature corresponding to the volume.
This structure facilitates the adjustment of the amounts of the freezing and antifreeze materials.
(7) In the cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the at least one buffer layer includes a plurality of buffer layers each having a surface to be in contact with the object to be cooled, each surface being separated by a different distance from the cold storage layer.
This structure renders a plurality of surface temperatures available with a single cooler container, which can in turn maintain a plurality of food materials at different suitable temperatures.
(8) In the cooler container in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the region includes: a first container section forming the thermal storage layer containing the freezing material; and a second container section forming the at least one buffer layer containing the antifreeze material.
This structure prohibits the freezing and antifreeze materials to come into contact with each other, which in turn enables use of various combinations of freezing and antifreeze materials.
(9) The present invention, in an embodiment thereof, is directed to a cold tray to be used in the cooler container described in any one of (1) to (8) above, the cold tray including a food placement section on which the object to be cooled is to be placed with a surface of the at least one buffer layer intervening therebetween, the food placement section including a part of a surface of the cooler container.
This structure enables use of the cooler container as it is as a cold tray. The object to be cooled can hence be maintained at an adjusted temperature of the surface of the at least one buffer layer.
(10) The cold tray in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention further includes: a cooler container; an external packaging section configured to house the cooler container: and a fixing section configured to fix the cooler container and the external packaging section.
This structure enables the cooler container to be detached and attached again. The temperature of the cold tray can be adjusted by replacing the cooler container with another one.
(11) The present invention, in an embodiment thereof, is directed to a red wine server including at least one cold storage pack for red wine temperature management, the at least one cold storage pack including: a first container section containing a freezing material that changes phase at a specific temperature that falls in a range of temperature suitable for cooling of red wine; a second container section enclosed by the first container section, the second container section containing an antifreeze material that remains in liquid phase at a phase transition temperature of the freezing material; and a lid member configured to close the first container section, wherein the second container section, when used, is in contact with a wine bottle.
This structure enables the antifreeze material to remain in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material and the second container section to come into contact with the wine bottle. The second container section can thereby be brought into intimate contact with the wine bottle. As a result, the structure reliably transmits the sensible heat stored by the antifreeze material to the red wine. Red wine initially at normal temperature (around 25° C.) can be hence quickly brought to a desirable temperature. The structure also reliably transmits the sensible and latent heat stored by the freezing material to the red wine via the antifreeze material. Red wine can be hence helped to be quickly brought to a desirable temperature. The reliable transmission of the latent heat stored by the freezing material to red wine enables the red wine to be maintained at the desirable temperature for an extended period of time.
(12) In the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the freezing material and the antifreeze material, when combined, weigh not more than 300 grams, and the antifreeze material weighs not less than 100 grams and not more than 200 grams.
This structure can bring 500 to 750 mL of red wine to an optimum drinking temperature (from 14 to 18° C.) within 20 minutes.
(13) In the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, each of the first and second container sections is made of a material having a thermal conductivity of not less than 1.0 W/m·K and not more than 250.0 W/m·K.
This structure enables efficient heat exchange between the wine bottle and the antifreeze material, which in turn increases a rapid cooling rate and improves cooling effects in a desirable temperature range.
(14) In the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, each of the first and second container sections is a deep-drawing container with a flange section, and the first container section has the flange section thereof joined to the lid member.
This structure fixes the positional relationship of the first and second container sections, which can in turn improve cooling capability and temperature maintaining capability.
(15) In the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the flange section of the first container section has in a part thereof a through hole in which the second container section has the flange section thereof directly joined to the lid member.
This structure, in which the second container section has the flange section thereof directly joined to the lid member, can improve package strength and prevent the freezing and antifreeze materials from leaking out of the respective container sections.
(16) In the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the freezing material contains an aqueous solution of tetrabutylammonium bromide that has a concentration of not less than 20 wt % and not more than 41 wt %.
This structure enables exploitation of latent heat in maintaining red wine at an optimum drinking temperature (from 14 to 18° C.) if the cold storage pack is cooled in a refrigerator (approximately 3 to 5° C.) before use and enables exploitation of sensible heat in rapidly cooling red wine to an optimum drinking temperature (from 14 to 18° C.) if the cold storage pack is cooled in a freezer (approximately −18° C.) before use. Additionally, tetrabutylammonium bromide is non-flammable and therefore highly safe.
(17) In the red wine server in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the freezing material additionally contains 2.0 wt % to 5.0 wt % sodium carbonate and either 1.5 wt % to 5.0 wt % sodium tetraborate or 3.0 wt % to 10.0 wt % disodium hydrogen phosphate.
This structure can prevent supercooling of the freezing material. The addition of a supercooling inhibitor to the freezing material composed of an aqueous solution of tetrabutylammonium bromide also enables the freezing material to be frozen at or above 0° C.
In the present embodiment, as described so far, the antifreeze material remains in liquid phase at the phase transition temperature of the freezing material, and the second container section is brought into contact with the wine bottle. The second container section can thereby be brought into intimate contact with the wine bottle. As a result, the sensible heat stored by the antifreeze material is reliably transmitted to red wine, so that the red wine initially at normal temperature (around 25° C.) can be quickly brought to a desirable temperature. Furthermore, the sensible and latent heat stored by the freezing material is reliably transmitted to the red wine via the antifreeze material, so that the red wine can be helped to be quickly brought to a desirable temperature. The latent heat stored by the freezing material is reliably transmitted to the red wine, so that the red wine can be maintained at a desirable temperature for an extended period of time. In addition, since the positional relationship of the first and second container sections is fixed, cooling capability and temperature maintaining capability for red wine can be improved.
The use as a freezing material of a cold storage material that melts at or below the optimum drinking temperature (from 14 to 18° C.) of red wine and the use as an antifreeze material of a cold storage material that solidifies in a temperature range below a temperature range (−18 to −20° C.) of a freezer enable temperature management suited for red wine.
The description so far has focused on cooling of food and like materials. If the freezing material is made of such a suitable alternative material as to provide a higher temperature than the phase transition temperature of the freezing material, the food and like materials can be kept warm.
This international application claims priority to Japanese patent application. Tokugan, No. 2016-128151 filed Jun. 28, 2016 and Japanese patent application, Tokugan, No. 2017-009741 filed Jan. 23, 2017, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-128151 | Jun 2016 | JP | national |
2017-009741 | Jan 2017 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2017/023488 | 6/27/2017 | WO | 00 |