1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a deaerating method and deaerating apparatus for removing air from the inside of a bag that is filled with contents which is a liquid matter or with contents that contain a liquid matter.
2. Prior Art
Japanese Patent Nos. 3016052 (corresponding to Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 7-2233) and 3138916 (corresponding to Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 10-181713) disclose a deaerating method and apparatus for removing air from the insides of bags that are filled with a liquid matter or with contents that contain a liquid matter.
In the methods and apparatuses of these prior art patents, a suction nozzle that communicates with a vacuum source is inserted into a bag though its mouth, and air and excess liquid matter inside the bag are sucked out by the suction nozzle. In other words, in these prior art, the suction nozzle is inserted into the interior of the bag. Accordingly, there is a danger that contents adhering to the inside of the suction nozzle and coating material peeling from the surface of the suction nozzle (ordinarily, the surface of the suction nozzle is coated with Teflon (trademark) for the purpose of preventing the adhesion of contents) would be admixed with the contents inside the bag. This is an extremely important problem from the standpoint of hygiene in cases where the contents are foodstuffs.
Japanese Patent No. 2805378 (corresponding to Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 4-44927) discloses an apparatus that fills packages under deaerated conditions.
In this apparatus, an area below the intended sealing position of the mouth of a bag is held by a chamber that has a pair of jaw-shaped members formed with air passage grooves. A vacuum is applied to the interior of the chamber so that the air inside the bag is sucked out through the air passage grooves, and then a sealing bar disposed inside the chamber is then actuated so as to seal the intended sealing position. However, if excess liquid matter inside the bag is sucked out together with the air from the locations of the air passage grooves, this liquid matter escapes through the locations of the air passage grooves inside the chamber and spreads throughout the entire intended sealing position, and it further overflows from the mouth of the bag and enters the interior of the chamber. The cleaning away of liquid matter that has overflowed into the interior of the chamber is cumbersome and time-consuming due to the complexity of the structure involved.
In any of the above-described systems, the adhesion and retention of liquid matter in the intended sealing position of the mouth of a bag is unavoidable, and this liquid matter enters the seal, leading to defective sealing. More specifically, in the case of the system that uses a suction nozzle described above, the liquid matter sucked out by the suction nozzle would remain in the location in the mouth of the bag where the suction nozzle was present, so that this liquid matter enters the seal when sealing is performed. In the case of the system that uses a chamber comprising jaw-shaped members described above, liquid matter adhering to the entire sealing position and liquid matter in the locations of the air passage grooves remains in the seal of the mouth during sealing.
In view of the above, the object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus that prevents admixture of adhering matter and foreign matter, etc. with the contents inside a bag by way of not using a suction nozzle in a case where air removal (deaeration) is performed inside the bag that are filled with contents of a liquid matter or contents that contain a liquid matter.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus that prevents the liquid matter sucked out together with air from spreading throughout the entire mouth portion of a bag and ensures no great cleaning effort.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus that prevents the entry of a liquid matter into the seal.
The above objects are accomplished by a unique deaerating method of the present invention that includes the steps of:
In this deaerating method, it is preferable to use a known mechanical deaerating means such as press deaerating (also described in the above listed prior art Japanese patents) in order to remove air from the inside of the bag and discharge excess liquid matter.
In the above deaerating method, the mouth of a bag is in a closed state when the mouth is press-held by the press-holding members; however, the portion that constitutes the passage is not press-held. Accordingly, deaerating and the discharge of excess liquid matter can be accomplished through this portion. Furthermore, since the mouth of the bag is closed off by being press-held up to its upper-end edge except for the portion that corresponds to the passage, a liquid matter that leaves the bag through the passage does not spread in the direction of width of the mouth and does not broadly wet the intended sealing location; instead, the liquid matter is discharged “as is” through vacuum passage that opens in the press-holding surfaces.
In the deaerating method of the present invention, it is preferable that a portion of the passage in the mouth of the bag be further press-held up to the upper-end edge of the mouth, thus pushing the liquid matter present in the passage out of the passage and removing the liquid matter that has been pushed out to the outside of the bag through the vacuum passage. Accordingly, the liquid matter that remains in the passage is pushed out and discharged, and the entry of liquid matter into the seal is securely prevented.
Furthermore, in the deaerating method of the present invention, it is preferable to form the passage so as to gradually become wider in downward direction. With this structure, suction is broadly applied in the direction of the width of the inside of the bag, and deaerating is performed in a secure and stable fashion.
The above objects are further accomplished by a unique structure of the present invention for a deaerating apparatus, and such a unique structure includes:
In this apparatus of the present invention, the mouth of a bag is press-held up to its upper-end edge by the press-holding surfaces of the pair of press-holding members. However, since the mouth is not press-held at its portion where the groove is present, a passage that leads from the inside of the bag to the outside of the bag is formed in the portion that corresponds to this groove. Accordingly, deaeration and discharge of excess liquid matter are accomplished by this passage. The deaerating method described above is performed by this deaerating apparatus.
Furthermore, the above described objects are accomplished by a still another unique structure of the present invention for a deaerating apparatus that includes a pair of press-holding members that press-hold a mouth of a bag from both sides of the bag by means of flat press-holding surfaces of the press-holding members, the flat press-holding surfaces having a predetermined length in a vertical direction; and in this structure,
In this apparatus, the groove is formed along the press-holding surface of one of the press-holding members when the slide element is caused to retract perpendicularly to the press-holding surface of the press-holding member. The deaerating method described above is performed also by this deaerating apparatus.
In the deaerating apparatuses of the present invention described above, it is preferable that the groove be formed in an inverted V shape and thus become wider in the downward direction.
a) through 3(d) show, partially in cross-section, the deaerating method of the present invention in the order of the processes involved;
The deaerating method and deaerating apparatus of the present invention will be described in detail below with reference to
The press-holding member 1 has a press-holding surface 1a which is completely perpendicular and flat, and it is moved between the solid line position and imaginary line position shown in
The press-holding member 2 is comprised of a main body 3 and a slide element 4. The press-holding member 2 is moved between the solid line position and the imaginary line position shown in
The main body 3 is provided with a cut-out 5 that is formed at an intermediate position with respect to the direction of width (see
The slide element 4 is fitted in the cut-out 5 with a space (that makes a vacuum passage 6) left in the upper portion. The slide element 4 is movable (or it is caused to advance and retract) in the direction perpendicular to the press-holding surface 3a.
The vacuum passage 6 is horizontally oriented; and a piping member 7, which communicates with a vacuum source (not shown) via filters, switching valves, etc. (not shown), is connected to the upper portion of the vacuum passage 6. Furthermore, a piping member 8, which communicates with a cleaning water supply source (not shown) via filters, switching valves, etc. (not shown), is connected to the rear portion of the vacuum passage 6.
The main body 3 is comprised of a block section 3b and an attachment section 3c (which is for attaching the piping members 7 and 8) that are formed into an integral unit; and the front surfaces of these sections are set to be flush (on the same plane), thus forming the above-described press-holding surface 3a.
The slide element 4 is caused to advance and retract in relative terms with respect to the main body 3. The front surface 4a of the slide element 4 is completely vertical and flat. When the slide element 4 advances, the front surface 4a arrives at a position that is flush with the press-holding surface 3a of the main body 3 and forms a part of the press-holding surface that faces the mouth of a bag together with the press-holding surface 3a. When the slide element 4 retracts, it is in the position shown in
The deaerating method that uses these press-holding members 1 and 2 will be described below with reference to
(a) When a bag W which is held at both side edges thereof by grippers 11 is stopped between the press-holding members 1 and 2 as shown in
(b) The main body 3 and the slide element 4 of the press-holding member 2 are moved together up to a point immediately prior to the complete closing of the press-holding members 1 and 2 as these elements approach each other as shown in
(c) The press-holding member 1 and the main body 3 of the press-holding member 2 come into contact with each other as shown in
(d) Next, the slide element 4 is moved to the advanced position as shown in
Then, the press-holding members 1 and 2 are separated, the vacuum suction is stopped, and the bag W is moved toward the position of the subsequent sealing process.
The mixture of air and liquid matter that is discharged to the outside of the bag can be separated into air and liquid matter by a filter as described, for example, in the Japanese Patent No. 3016052, and the liquid matter is either discarded or if necessary re-utilized.
The press-holding members 1 and 2 are cleaned upon necessity. The press-holding surfaces 1a and 3a of the press-holding members 1 and 2 and the front surface 4a of the slide element 4 that are exposed to the outside can easily be cleaned. The vacuum passage 6, the piping member 7, etc. that are not exposed to the outside can be subjected to fixed-position cleaning (cleaning without disassembly) by supplying cleaning water through the piping members from the cleaning water supply source in the state shown in
Next, the driving mechanism of the press-holding members 1 and 2 (and of the slide element 4) will be described with reference to
As shown mainly in
A supporting shaft 23, which is rotatable, is supported perpendicular to the upper-side sliding shaft 16 and lower-side sliding shaft 17 via bushes 21 and a bush 22 inside the supporting box 14, and a swing lever 24 is fastened to the circumference of this supporting shaft 23. The bush 22 is held inside a supporting shaft supporting block 25 that is fastened inside the supporting box 14. The swing lever 24 has a first arm 26, second arm 27 and third arm 28. The tip end of the first arm 26 is connected to an air cylinder 31 via a connecting rod 29, the tip end of the second arm 27 is connected to a rear-side advancing and retracting block 33 via a connecting member 32, and the tip end of the third arm 28 is connected to a front-side advancing and retracting block 35 via a connecting rod 34.
The rear-side advancing and retracting block 33 is fastened to the lower-side sliding shaft 17 and supports the upper-side sliding shaft 16 via a rotation-stopping bush 36 (so that rotation of the upper-side sliding shaft 16 is prevented), while the front-side advancing and retracting block 35 is fastened to the upper-side sliding shaft 16 and supports the lower-side sliding shaft 17 via a rotation-stopping bush 37 (so that rotation of the lower-side sliding shaft 17 is prevented).
When the air cylinder 31 is actuated, and the piston rod of this cylinder is extended, the swing lever 24 rotates leftward in
As shown in
As seen from
The tip end of the sliding shaft 41 is fastened to the rear portion of the slide element 4 of the press-holding member 2. When the sliding shaft 41 is driven forward by the compression spring 46 so that the stopper 42 contacts the holder 39, the slide element 4 of the press-holding member 2 is in the advanced position relative to the main body 3, and the front surface 4a of the slide element 4 is in a position that is flush with the press-holding surface 3a of the main body 3(see
When the air cylinder 31 is actuated, and the upper-side sliding shaft 16 retracts and the lower-side sliding shaft 17 advances, thus causing the press-holding members 1 and 2 to close or come into contact with each other, each sliding shaft 41 advances together with the lower-side sliding shaft 17. In this case, each air cylinder 47 is actuated and the corresponding piston rod 48 is protruded, and the corresponding contact member 44 contacts the piston rod 48 immediately prior to the complete closure of the press-holding members 1 and 2, so that the advance of the sliding shaft 41 is stopped against the driving force of the compression spring 46 (see
In the above structure, the slide element 4 of the press-holding member 2 is provided so as to be movable in the main body 3 toward and away from the press-holding member 1. However, the main body 3 and the slide element 4 of the press-holding member 2 can be formed integral at positions shown in
As seen from the above, according to the present invention, during the process of deaerating the interior of a bag filled with contents of liquid matter or contents that contain liquid matter, the admixture of adhering matter, foreign matter, etc. with the contents inside the bag is prevented. At the same time, it is possible to ensure that the liquid matter which is sucked out together with the air will not spread throughout the entire mouth of the bag, and no great cleaning effort will be required.
Furthermore, the liquid matter can be driven out of the intended sealing position of the mouth of a bag by way of pressing the passage that leads from the inside of the bag to the outside of the bag at the end of the deaerating process, so that the liquid matter remaining in this passage is pushed out and this liquid matter is removed by suction. Accordingly, the entry of liquid matter into the seal can be more assuredly prevented.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2002-174996 | Jun 2002 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2634562 | Mueller et al. | Apr 1953 | A |
4926613 | Hansen | May 1990 | A |
5097648 | Berner et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
5144788 | Varlet | Sep 1992 | A |
5551213 | Koelsch et al. | Sep 1996 | A |
5711136 | Carcano | Jan 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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18 00 525 | May 1970 | DE |
197 05 743 | Aug 1998 | DE |
2 067 500 | Aug 1971 | FR |
4-44927 | Feb 1992 | JP |
7-2233 | Jan 1995 | JP |
10-181713 | Jul 1998 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030230055 A1 | Dec 2003 | US |