The present invention concerns a device for capping a container neck.
The invention relates generally to caps comprising two main components, namely an external outer cap, which is designed to be fixed removably around the neck of a container, notably by screwing-unscrewing, and an internal insert, which is designed to block the neck in sealed manner and which, during assembly of the cap, is permanently fastened inside the outer cap.
In a field that the invention does not concern capping devices of this type are known in which the insert is first added to and permanently fixed inside the outer cap, before thereafter placing on a container neck to be capped the combination consisting of the assembly of this insert and this outer cap. U.S. Pat. No. 6,044,995, GB-A-1 316 162 and FR-A-2 219 081 provide examples of this: in all cases, the proposed inserts are a priori incapable of being added to the free end of a container neck and retained in sealed manner if the outer cap of the device is not conjointly present with the insert.
In contrast to what has just been described, the invention specifically concerns caps for which the insert is designed to be fitted to the neck independently of the outer cap so that this insert is advantageously placed on the neck before the outer cap is fitted afterwards. EP-A-1 254 848 provides one example of such a cap. The preamble of the appended claim 1 is based on EP-A-1 254 848.
The benefit of such a cap structure is linked to sanitary considerations: accordingly, in EP-A-1 254 848, after a container is filled in an aseptic filling enclosure, the insert alone can be easily fitted, also in this aseptic enclosure, so as to hermetically seal the neck without biological contamination of the content of the container, before the container is transferred into a non-aseptic bottling area, in which the outer cap is fitted to the neck already plugged by the insert.
This being so, current capping devices, including that proposed by EP-A-1 254 848, do not provide a satisfactory solution for situations where, when filling the container, the exterior face of the neck thereof is soiled by the product with which the container is filled. Indeed, in the event of overfilling, product overflows the neck and runs down its exterior face. Runs can also be produced in the event of leaks or splashes originating from the filling system. The situation is the same for all products tending to foam up, such as beer. Moreover, for beer in particular, the formation of foam is even intended so that this foam occupies all of the free volume of the neck, above the surface of the beer, and thus expels the air initially present. In this case, considerable runs of foam systematically occur and therefore significantly soil the exterior face of the neck. The residues of the liquid, left by these runs, often lead to biological contamination of the neck of the container by yeasts or the like.
The object of the present invention is to propose a capping device of the type referred to above that makes it possible to limit the risk of biological contamination of a container neck to be closed by this capping device.
To this end, the invention consists in a device for capping a container neck as defined in the appended claim 1.
One of the ideas on which the invention is based is to seek to clean the neck with an ad hoc cleaning liquid after the neck has been plugged by the insert but before fitting the outer cap around the neck. In practice, to do this, the insert is, in accordance with the invention, designed, during its fitting, to be mechanically connected to the neck, in particular sufficiently so to remain in place during application of the cleaning liquid, typically effected by spraying, and thus at a certain pressure, as well as during subsequent drying, typically effected by blowing air, and thus also at a certain pressure. If an overpressure exists inside the neck of the container, linked notably to the presence of a gassy product, such as beer, in the container, the aforementioned mechanical connection is made sufficient to resist this overpressure, at least for the time taken to clean the neck of the container. Moreover, the insert of the device of the invention effectively seals the free end of the neck from the outside: in this way, the cleaning liquid does not insinuate itself between the insert and the free end of the neck, notably on the edge of the neck, to prevent traces of this cleaning liquid thereafter remaining on the edge and then being ingested by the user, notably through mixing with the product poured via the neck of the container. Thus after filling a container and capping the neck with the insert of the device of the invention, most of the exterior face of the neck, in particular the main part of the neck where the outer cap will be removably fixed, typically by screwing-unscrewing, may be cleaned effectively and rapidly, without running the risk that, during the cleaning operations as such, the insert is moved or raised relative to the neck, then allowing the cleaning liquid to pass toward the interior of the container.
Advantageous additional features of the capping device of the invention, taken separately or in all technically possible combinations, are specified in the dependent claims 2 to 14.
The invention will be better understood on reading the following description given by way of example only and with reference to the drawings, in which:
In
In practice, the neck 2 is either made in one piece with the rest of the container, notably when the latter is a glass or plastic material bottle, or adapted to be permanently fastened to a wall of the container, in an opening passing through that wall.
The neck 2 has a globally tubular shape, with a central longitudinal axis X-X. For convenience, the remainder of the description is oriented taking the terms “upper” and “top” as corresponding to a direction globally parallel to the axis X-X and extending from the body of the container toward the free end of its neck 2, i.e. an upward direction in the figures, while the terms “lower” and “bottom” correspond to an opposite direction.
The neck 2 includes a globally cylindrical body 3 with a circular base and axis X-X. At its top end 4, this body 3 delimits an edge 4A at the level of which the product contained in the container is intended to be poured out. The exterior face 3A of the body 3 includes, successively from top to bottom, the exterior surface 3A1 of the end 4 and the exterior surface 3A2 of the main part of the body 3, which is provided with a helical thread 5 projecting radially outward.
The device 1 primarily comprises two components, namely an external outer cap 10 and an internal insert 20.
As can be seen clearly in
In its upper end part, the skirt 12 is internally provided with a plurality of tabs 15 all of which are globally situated in the same plane perpendicular to the axis X-X, being distributed in a substantially regular manner along the interior periphery of the skirt. In practice, and as in the embodiment shown in the figures, the aforementioned plane is situated, along the axis X-X, more or less half way between the end wall 11 and the axial level of the upper end of the thread 13. Each tab 15 projects radially inward from the interior face of the skirt 12. Thus each tab 15 delimits, facing the end wall 11, a substantially plane upper surface 15A, the surfaces 15A of the various tabs 15 all lying in a plane perpendicular to the axis X-X.
Also in its upper end part, the skirt 12 delimits a plurality of openings 16 all of which are globally situated in the same plane perpendicular to the axis X-X, being distributed in a substantially regular manner Around the periphery of the skirt. The openings 16 occupy the same peripheral portions of the skirt 12 as the tabs 15, being situated, along the axis X-X, between the plane containing the tabs 15 and the end wall 11. In other words, each of the openings 16 thus passes completely through the wall of the skirt 12, opening onto one of the tabs 15 inside the outer cap 10. Around the periphery of the skirt 12, the wall of the latter between two successive openings 16 is solid, having internally no tabs similar to the tabs 15, more generally being free of any raised pattern projecting radially inward. The benefit of the tabs 15 and the openings 16 will become apparent later.
The upper end part of the skirt 12 is advantageously provided externally with projecting ribs 17 that extend lengthwise between the upper end of the exterior face of the skirt 12, in other words the axial level of the end wall 11, and the axial level at which are situated the upper ends of the ribs 14 present in the main part of the exterior face of the skirt. Around the periphery of the skirt, these ribs 17 can obviously not be present in the portions occupied by the openings 16: in fact, each of the ribs 17 is systematically provided between two successive openings 16, as can be seen clearly in
Considering the insert 20 in more detail now, it is seen that the latter comprises a main body 21 having a globally disc-like shape, centred on an axis which, when the device 1 is assembled and fitted to the neck 2, substantially coincides with the axis X-X. As can be seen clearly in
The benefit of the technical aspects of the insert 20 that have just been described will become clear shortly, on describing an example of the installation of the device 1 on the container neck 2.
Accordingly, initially, it is considered that the container, the neck 2 of which is represented in the figures, has just been filled with a product, where appropriate a foaming product, such as beer. For diverse reasons it is found that this filling operation, where applicable with the formation of foam, very often leads to soiling of the exterior face 3A of the neck 2, in particular to soiling of the threaded surface 3A2 of this face 3A.
Independently of the outer cap 10, the insert 20 is then placed on the neck 2, being both aligned on the axis X-X and placed across the top end 4 of the neck 2 in order to block the central opening of the body 3 of the neck: the insert 20 is then in the configuration represented in
By virtue of their flexible deformation, resulting from their interference with the body 3 of the neck 2, the lips 22 and 23, in addition to their sealing action described above, provide a mechanical action of retention of the insert 20 relative to the neck 2 once this insert is fitted to the neck in this way. Indeed, in that, given their dimensions relative to the body 3 of the neck 2, each of these lips 22 and 23 is partially deformed relative to the body 21, tending to revert elastically to their initial configuration, typically their configuration on removal from the mould, thus procuring an effect of mechanical connection with the body 3 of the neck 2, notably by friction, wedging, adhesion, etc. In practice, given their respective dimensions, it is the interior lip 23 that produces the greater part of the aforementioned mechanical connection effect, by virtue of friction of its boss 23A1 against the interior face 3B of the body 3 of the neck 2, this friction producing a radial loading of the lip 23 against the interior of the neck 2, the intensity of which is directly dependent on the designed interference between the maximum outside diameter of the lip 23, i.e. its diameter at the axial level of the boss 23A1, and the inside diameter of the body 3 of the neck 2. Moreover, it is clear that one of the benefits of the free space 25 is to allow the lip 23 to retain its elasticity over time, i.e. following repeated opening and closing of the device 1, and thus to retain its sealing performance in the long term.
The benefit of the mechanical connection referred to above is that, in the next step of the capping process, a cleaning liquid is applied to the neck 2, in particular by being sprayed onto this neck as indicated by the arrows F in
It will be noted that, in the situation where an overpressure exists inside the neck 2, as is the case when the container is filled with beer or, more generally, a gassy product, the mechanical retention effect and the sealing effect that are produced by the sealing lip 23 can easily be such that the insert 20 resists the overpressure, without moving, at least for a sufficient time for carrying out the cleaning steps. As for the mechanical retention effect and the sealing effect, which are produced by the lip 22, they are advantageously strengthened by this overpressure because it tends to cause the body 21 to bow slightly toward the outside, which, through a lever effect, presses the internal face 22A of the lip 22 more strongly against the surface 3A1 of the end 4 of the neck 2.
The capping of the neck 2 thereafter continues with fitting the outer cap 10. As represented in
As explained in detail hereinafter, this fitting of the outer cap 10 causes the outer cap and the insert 20 to be fastened together. The body 21 of the insert is designed with dimensions such that its exterior periphery cooperates through complementary shapes and interference with the tabs 15 and the openings 16 of the outer cap 10. To be more precise, on the one hand, the body 21 has, at least at its exterior periphery, a thickness, i.e. a dimension along the axis X-X, substantially equal to or slightly less than the axial separation between the plane containing the upper surfaces 15A of the tabs 15 and the lower face of the end wall 11. On the other hand, the lower face 21A of the body 21 includes a substantially plane exterior peripheral surface 21A1 that connects the external face of the lip 22 and the peripheral edge surface at the end of the body 21, and that is situated relative to the axis X-X at a distance substantially identical to that between that axis and the surfaces 15A of the tabs 15. In other words, the exterior peripheral surface 21A1 of the lower face 21A of the body 21 forms a shoulder that is complementary to the tabs 15, thereby enabling the latter to retain the insert 20 in the axially downward direction once the end wall 11 of the outer cap 10 has been brought to bear against the upper face 21B of the body 21, as can be seen clearly in
Once the outer cap 10 has been fitted in this way, the insert 20 is permanently fastened to the outer cap, in the sense that, on subsequent opening of the device 1, i.e. when the user unscrews the outer cap 10, the latter entrains the insert 20 with it, at least in translation in the direction of the axis X-X. In other words, the insert 20 is trapped inside the outer cap 10, through the exterior periphery of its body 21 bearing axially downwards on the tabs 15.
The skirt 12 is advantageously sized so that, when the insert 20 is fitted inside the outer cap 10 in this way, in its axial part situated below the tabs 15 and above the thread 13, its internal face bears radially against the external face 22B of the lip 22. In other words, axially between the plane in which the tabs 15 are situated and the upper end of the thread 13, the skirt has internally a surface 18 the diameter of which interferes with the outside diameter of the lip 22. In this way, when the outer cap 10 is screwed all the way onto the neck 2, the surface 18 reinforces the bearing of the lip 22 against the external face 3A of the neck and thus enhances the sealing performance of this lip.
It will be noted that, on subsequently opening the device 1, the fastening together of the insert 20 and the outer cap 10 is, so to speak, stronger than the mechanical connection between the insert 20 and the neck 2, in the sense that the force retaining the insert 20 on the neck 2, which was exploited during the operations of cleaning the neck 2, described with reference to
In a variant of the insert 20, not shown, the exterior periphery of its body 21 may be crenelated, i.e., at its exterior periphery, the body 21 may be provided with a plurality of tongues projecting radially inward that are sized and angularly positioned so that each engages radially in one of the openings 16 of the skirt 12. Clearly this solution, more complicated in terms of the production of the insert 20, allows radial enlargement of the contact interface between the surfaces 15A of the tabs 15 and the lower face 21A of the insert 20, since the aforementioned projecting tongues can be designed to extend deeper in the openings 16, in the direction of the exterior face of the skirt 12, than can the circular transverse profile exterior periphery of the body 21 of the insert 20 considered in
By way of an optional advantageous feature, present in the embodiment of
In
Differing in this respect from the outer cap 10, the upper end part of the skirt 112 of the outer cap 110 is solid all around its periphery, has a substantially smooth exterior face and is provided internally with a groove 116 that runs around all of the interior periphery of the skirt, in the connecting area between this skirt and the end wall 111. This groove 116 is sized to receive the exterior periphery of the body 121 when fitting the outer cap 110 over the insert 120 previously fitted to the neck 2, as represented in
In a variant of the outer cap 110 that is not shown its groove 116 may be regularly interrupted Around the periphery of the skirt 112, which amounts to saying that the groove 116 from
Various adaptations and variants of the devices 1 and 100 described until now may be envisaged. For example:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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11 51920 | Mar 2011 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/053993 | 3/8/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/17/2013 |