This application is a National Stage entry of International Application Number PCT/IB2004/002503, filed Jul. 23, 2004. The disclosure of the prior application is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
The present invention relates to a device for dosing and forming disks for pods for products for infusion.
In the current market of products for infusion, such as coffee, barley coffee, tea and camomile, the use of single-dose “pods” has increased considerably and a very popular way of making American-style coffee is now to use such pods in specially designed machines, even for household or office use (that is, for small to medium quantities).
This specification does not concern other forms of filter bags normally used to make American-style coffee and consisting of a “maxi dose” bag designed to be placed in a funnel-like container at the top of a machine that supplies boiling hot water. The hot water comes into contact with the coffee filter bag producing a brew of coffee which is simply allowed to drip into a cup below.
Unlike this type of solution—which is widely used and extremely popular—pods used to brew a single serving of beverage usually consist of two portions of filter paper placed one over the other and sealed to enclose a single product dose of circular shape.
In the specific case of pods for American-style coffee, the product is not (and must not be) excessively compressed, which means that it remains relatively loose inside the pod.
For technical reasons linked to the type of machines used to make them, the pods have an asymmetrical profile, that is to say, with one flat surface (defined by one of the portions of filter paper) and one cupped surface (defined by the other portion of filter paper) containing the dose of infusion product.
One prior art method and related apparatus for making this type of pod is described in patent EP-432.126. The method disclosed therein comprises the following sequence of steps:
The structure of the dosing and forming unit of the apparatus has several disadvantages due to:
The aim of the present invention is to overcome the above mentioned drawbacks by providing a device with a simple structure for dosing and forming disks for pods containing products for infusion and that allows the disk of infusion product to be formed in a manner that is at once practical, fast and reliable in dosing the product, and enables the product disk to be placed on a web of filter paper at high operating speeds.
According to the invention, this aim is achieved through a device for dosing and forming disks for pods containing a product for infusion and comprising a piece of filter material containing a dose of the product for infusion. The device comprises: a station for feeding the product into at least one forming impression defining a single dose of the product and made in means for forming a respective compressed disk of the infusion product and releasing the compressed disk from the impression in the filter material to form the pod.
The technical characteristics of the invention, with reference to the above aims, are clearly described in the claims below and its advantages are apparent from the detailed description which follows, with reference to the accompanying drawings which illustrate preferred embodiments of the invention provided merely by way of example without restricting the scope of the inventive concept, and in which:
With reference to the accompanying drawings, in particular
The present specification describes only the station for feeding the infusion product and forming a product disk 5, without regard to other stations upstream or downstream of the device according to the invention in a generic apparatus for making the pod as a whole.
The pod 1 illustrated in
The device according to the invention (see
The impression 3 performs these operations as it travels round a circular path P around which the means 4 move.
The dosing station 2 comprises a fixed hopper 7 mounted to face a revolving drum 8 (see arrow F8) forming part of the forming means 4.
The hopper 7 has an arc-shaped discharge portion to peripherally follow a passing surface of the drum 8 in such manner that the product is dosed in a predetermined area.
As described in more detail below, each of the pistons 9 can perform a series of synchronised movements in a radial direction, thanks to drive means 11, while also rotating continuously about its axis in such a way as to allow the disk 5 to be properly formed as described above and at the same time keeping the disk 5 compressed and detached from the walls of the hollow head 10 defining the impression 3.
To do this, the aforementioned radial drive means 11 are fitted between each piston 9 and the drum 8 to act upon the pistons 9 in such manner as to impart the plurality of synchronised movements to the pistons 9 according to their angular positions on a circular path, labelled P, and so as to:
Looking in more detail, the radial drive means comprise cam means 11 consisting of at least one guide cam profile 12 stably associated with the interior of the drum 8 and engaged by a cam follower roller 13 for each piston 9.
Each cam follower roller 13 is rigidly attached to the end of a respective connecting rod 14 whose other end is associated with a control pin 15 rotatably connected to the inside end of the cylinder 16 of the piston 9 so as to drive the piston 9 radially in both directions according to the angular position of the piston 9 on the circular path P.
In other terms, the control pin 15 is in rotatable contact, through a bearing 16c, with the base of the cylinder 16 so as to drive the piston 9 backwards and forwards (see arrows F9) according to the movements of the cam follower roller 13.
The movements of the pistons 9 are indicated in the diagram of
To enable these movements to be performed precisely, the cam profile 12 is divided into two arc-shaped sections 12a, 12b, a fixed lower section 12a and an adjustable upper section 12b corresponding to the part of the path P of the pistons 9 comprising at least the dosing path P1: this makes it possible to accurately gauge the positions between the impression 3 and the hopper 7 so as to control the volume of product that goes into the impression 3.
More specifically, the half arc defining the section 12b can be adjusted, in both directions, as indicated by the arrow F12b, so as to increase or decrease the distance between the piston 9 head 10 and the levelling off point P3 corresponding to the volume of product inside the head 10 but without changing the endpoints of the half arc 12b.
As mentioned above, the pistons 9 can rotate continuously about their axes (see arrow F32 in
The rotational drive means 17 may comprise a fixed ring gear 18 mounted inside the drum 8 and meshed with corresponding gear wheels 19 keyed to the respective cylinder 16 of each piston 9 so that the pistons 9 revolve continuously as they move round the circular path P.
This rotation has the effect of tamping the disk 5 but without allowing the surface of the product to adhere to the surface of the head 10 of the piston 25 within the impression 3: this means that when the disk 5 is subsequently released onto the filter material, the disk 5 is detached fully and cleanly.
As mentioned above, there are arc-shaped walls 20 and 21 round the outer surface of the drum B designed to permit the pistons 25 to be pushed against the impressions 3 of the pistons 9 in a part of the circular path P and in such a way as to co-operate with the pistons 9 at least when the disk 5 is formed and compressed.
As illustrated in
This feed station 6 may comprise an endless belt 22, trained around a pair of power driven sheaves 23 and 24.
The surface of the belt 22 is preferably perforated or porous so as to enable means 25 for creating a vacuum to interact with the working section of the belt 22: this is the belt section that feeds the web of filter material 1a and is where the product disk 5 is deposited and held by suction correctly in place on the web of filter material web 1a (the means 25 are illustrated schematically since they are of known type).
This specification refers, purely by of non-restricting example, to the placing of the disk 5 on a web 1a of filter material, assuming that downstream of the device according to the invention there are further stations for completing the pod 1 in its final form as illustrated in
The device as described above permits single-dose disks 5 for pods containing an infusion product to be formed cleanly and extremely rapidly with precisely measured doses of product.
The special structure of this dosing and forming unit makes it possible to achieve high production speeds even using single rows of filter material, thus making the design of the remaining apparatus simpler and more flexible.
The device creates an extremely compact and clean disk of precisely dosed product thanks to the simultaneous translational and rotational movements of the forming pistons: the translational movement controls the steps of dosing, forming and releasing the product disk, whilst the rotational movement enables the disk to be tamped quickly and in a short path length and without allowing it to adhere to the surface of the impression.
The invention described has evident industrial applications and may be subject to modifications and variations without thereby departing from the scope of the inventive concept. Moreover, all the details of the invention may be substituted by technically equivalent elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2003A0475 | Aug 2003 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2004/002503 | 7/23/2004 | WO | 00 | 1/31/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/012100 | 2/10/2005 | WO | A |
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1524915 | Debay | Feb 1925 | A |
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3578217 | Miller | May 1971 | A |
4437294 | Romagnoli | Mar 1984 | A |
4747250 | Rossi | May 1988 | A |
4870808 | Romagnoli | Oct 1989 | A |
6135120 | Löfman et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6799409 | Altvater et al. | Oct 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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199 20 835 | Nov 2000 | DE |
0 432 126 | Jun 1991 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060207619 A1 | Sep 2006 | US |