The invention relates to a device for opening and re-closing food-containing packages, in particular composite cardboard/plastic packages, having a pouring element with a circumferential flange for fastening to the package and a neck for pouring, as well as a cutting element, which is arranged inside the neck and has a plurality of teeth, which are arranged around the circumference and directed towards the package, and a screw cap, the cutting element cutting a pouring opening into the composite film material as a result of a rotational movement of the screw cap when the package is opened for the first time.
Opening and pouring devices for food packages, for example drinks packages, have been known for a long time in a variety of configurations. They are always based on an interaction with the package to be opened, and the packages provided with such opening and pouring elements to this end often have a prepared weak point to make the opening process easier. This can be a mechanical line of weakness in the composite material or else what is known as a prelaminated hole, with which a pouring opening is already punched into the cardboard carrier material and then laminated on both sides with corresponding plastic and where appropriate other layers.
The configuration of the geometry and the number of teeth of known devices differs as much as the respective cutting kinematics. For instance, it is known from JP 11-171 233 A to use teeth of different heights to push the tooth tips and bases to different depths into the packaging material during an axial cutting movement and in this manner reduce the opening forces.
EP 1 396 435 A1 discloses a re-closable opening device of the above-mentioned type, with which the opening movement takes place in a helical manner, a sharpened cutting edge and subsequent piercing teeth of different heights being provided.
EP 1 795 456 A1 discloses a similar pouring element, which has sharpened cutting edges with different cutting faces. Flat, toothless sections are situated between the cutting teeth.
It is also already known (DE 10 2004 040 928 A1) to select the tooth geometry to be such that the teeth have a pointed tip and the cutting edge between the individual teeth becomes increasingly flatter and the teeth merge horizontally into each other.
Finally, it is known from DE 10 2010 040 825 A1 to use a cutting tooth and following teeth of graduated height, shavings-holding spaces being present between the teeth in order to move the cut-away packaging material in the pouring opening region during the helical screw movement.
Proceeding from this, the present invention is based on the object of reducing further still the opening forces necessary for opening food packages for the first time and distributing them as uniformly as possible throughout the opening process.
Furthermore, a simple structure that is as flat as possible and a lightweight design of the pouring elements should be achieved in order to increase their cost-effectiveness further.
To achieve this object, it is provided in a device having the features of the preamble of claim 1 for the teeth of the cutting element to have a steep gradient at the tip thereof, a shallower gradient at the flanks thereof, and again a steep gradient at the base thereof.
The invention has recognised that the particular shaping of the tooth geometry in terms of its gradient, that is, the slope of its flanks, produces faster, more uniform piercing of the film material and likewise faster and safer cutting through with a relatively small advance movement.
In particular, the force to be applied during piercing, cutting and cutting through plays a particular role for the cutting. The opening process can be divided into three phases. These are shown graphically in
The solid line shows the “conventional” force profile of a cutting element formed as a cutting ring during the opening process, the cutting ring being provided with uniform (triangular) teeth. The dashed curve shows the force profile during the opening process with a device according to the invention.
In Phase I, the “piercing force” is considerably reduced by the tooth shape according to the invention. In Phase II, the cutting drag decreases; in this range the force is slightly more than that of an opening device with conventional tooth shapes (triangles). “Cutting drag” means the ratio of tangential to normal relative speed of material being processed and the working member. The new configuration of the cutting element with the particular tooth shape considerably reduces the “through-cut force” too, as can be seen in Phase III. It can clearly be seen that in all three phases virtually the same amount of force has to be applied to carry out the opening process. This means that the consumer, when uniformly unscrewing the screw cap, requires a very uniform application of force after a short time in order to expose the pouring opening in the packaging material.
The three phases correspond to the different gradients of the teeth: the almost needle-like tooth tips produce point-like piercing with reduced force for each tooth (Phase I). On further movement, the gradient (slope) of the tooth flank decreases (Phase II), and finally the again steep gradient ensures clean cutting through of the cut opening path for cutting through (Phase III). The contour of each individual tooth (steep gradient for piercing; reduced gradient for cutting; steep gradient for cutting through) results in a particularly clean cut, even with particularly elastic composite film.
According to a further configuration of the invention, the teeth of the cutting element are arranged directly adjacently to each other, so that their cutting edges touch. This configuration is particularly expedient, since it results in particularly fast cutting through of the films. The sharpened tooth flanks can in this case extend as far as the tooth base, where the adjacent teeth already touch.
According to a further teaching of the invention, the number of teeth of a cutting element is between 10 and 20 and preferably between 15 and 20. The relatively high number of teeth means that the piercing force is distributed uniformly over the circumference, since perforations are first produced along the opening line.
In a further configuration of the invention, it is provided for the tooth flanks to be formed sharpened. In this case, both tooth flanks can be compared to a knife blade, which can be sharpened on either one or both sides.
According to a further configuration of the invention, the contour of the tooth flanks has arcs in the region of the shallower gradient. These arcs in the region of shallower gradient also reduce the cutting forces by temporarily increasing the cutting drag owing to the “sawtooth shape”.
According to a further configuration of the invention, it is provided for the cutting element to have a region without teeth. This reliably ensures that the cut-away packaging material of the pouring opening remains connected to the rest of the packaging composite and thus cannot fall into the product.
According to a further teaching of the invention, the tooth flanks of each tooth are particularly preferably formed symmetrically. This applies to the geometry both of the tooth flanks and of the front and rear of the tooth.
A further configuration of the invention provides for the tooth flanks of each tooth to be formed inclined in the cutting direction. In this manner, the cutting process can be adapted optimally to the respective opening situation.
So that the membrane consisting of composite film to be detached presents as little resistance as possible to the teeth when a prelaminated hole is present, a further configuration of the invention provides for the teeth to have a low thickness. This means that only a small cutting width is required. With such a configuration, it can be advantageous for the teeth to be provided with longitudinal ribs to reinforce them.
According to a further teaching of the invention, all the teeth have the same height. This is particularly expedient, since the penetration of the plastic material takes place simultaneously during the piercing process and the distances between the perforations are of equal size.
A further configuration of the invention provides for all the teeth to have the same geometry. This is of particular advantage not only in terms of a favourable configuration of the injection-moulding die used, but also in terms of a lower installation height of the device.
In a further teaching of the invention, it is provided for guiding means between the neck and the cutting element to guide the movement of the cutting element. These guiding means can be webs, cams and/or threads or threaded sections. Corresponding arrangements or sequences of webs, cams or threaded sections define the opening movement, which can be composed of a purely axial (piercing) movement, of a rotational (cutting) movements and of the superimposition thereof.
A further configuration of the invention provides for a functional connection to be achieved between the cutting element and the screw cap by means of corresponding actuation elements. Such a configuration is particularly expedient, since a single movement of the user, namely the unscrewing of the lid, is sufficient also to move the cutting element inside the device in a translational and/or rotational manner in order to carry out the opening process.
The invention is explained in more detail below with the aid of a drawing showing only one preferred exemplary embodiment. In the drawing,
For a better overview, the cutting ring of the cutting element 4 is shown by itself in
It is further apparent from
The entire opening process is then shown schematically in
In the applied position (
Unscrewing of the screw cap causes the teeth 6 to pierce into the film membrane M in a defined manner, as shown in
After the first piercing movement, a cutting-open takes place, as shown in
Finally, it can be seen in
The invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiment shown, but can be extended to various configurations without departing from the fundamental concept of the invention. To this end, further preferred configurations are provided in the subclaims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/051441 | 1/24/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150375911 A1 | Dec 2015 | US |