The present patent document claims the benefit of priority to European Patent Application No. EP 11156883.8, filed Mar. 3, 2011, and entitled “DEVICE FOR SEALING CONTAINERS” the entire contents of each of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a device for sealing upright containers.
Devices of this type are used as part of filling and packaging systems in the cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries, for example, and often work intermittently, wherein a certain number of containers, which are delivered containing products, are sealed simultaneously from above by several capping units while the containers are stopped for a brief time. The caps are usually supplied separately from the side and in such a way that the capping units, in a process which includes several movements, pick up the supplied caps and then apply them to the containers by screwing them on, for example.
Only a short amount of time is available for this process, during which the supplied caps must be picked up and moved down into a lowered position so that they can be applied to the containers. Relatively heavy weights must be moved in this short time.
An improved design of a capping unit is described in DE 199 46 374 A1. Here the delivered caps are drawn up by a vacuum present inside the cap-screwing mechanism. This vacuum is then turned off shortly before the cap is screwed on.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a device for sealing containers which offers faster throughputs and at the same time leads to only modest maintenance costs because of its sturdy construction and simple design.
According to an aspect of the invention, the device for sealing containers comprises a container feeding device for an intermittent feed of containers in a transport direction, a cap feeding device having a plurality of cap gripper units; and a capping device movable in and opposite to a lowering direction. The capping device has a plurality of capping units corresponding to the plurality of cap gripper units in the cap feeding device. Each capping unit has a screwing-on mechanism at one end. Each screwing-on mechanism is adapted to pick up a cap and to seal the container with the cap in a lowered position of the capping device. The capping device and the plurality of cap gripper units of the cap feeding device are configured and arranged such that the plurality of cap gripper units of the cap feeding device are positively guided in the lowering direction by the capping device when the capping device is moved in the lowering direction.
As a result of this positive guidance, the capping device carrying the capping units can move in the lowering direction without an intermediate stop. This offers considerable design advantages, because it is necessary to actuate and control the movement in only one direction.
The lowering direction is preferably substantially perpendicular to the transport direction of the container feeding device. This makes it possible to seal several containers with caps simultaneously. It is also possible for the containers to be delivered on a circular path.
The capping device advantageously comprises a driver element, which cooperates with a stop on the cap feeding device, so that the movement of the capping device in the lowering direction brings about the positive guidance of the number of cap gripper units. This makes it possible, during the time in which new containers are being brought up in the transport direction by the container feeding device and in which the capping device with its capping units is located in the starting positions, the cap feeding device with the cap gripper units can be moved back perpendicular to the transport direction of the containers and perpendicular to the lowering direction, and the cap gripper units can pick up new caps. When the cap feeding device with the new caps then reaches the capping position in the horizontal plane and simultaneously the capping units of the capping device start to move in the lowering direction, the driver element of the capping device makes contact with the stop on the lowering plate of the cap feeding device and thus produces the positive guidance, wherein the capping units grip the caps now positioned above the containers and are able by themselves to hold them there. After the cap gripper units have released the caps, the cap feeding device can be moved back again perpendicular to the transport direction and perpendicular to the lowering direction.
The stop on the cap feeding device is preferably arranged on a lowering plate, wherein the lowering plate, when moving in the lowering direction, acts against the elastic force of one or more spring elements. The one or more spring elements are advantageously arranged between the lowering plate and a horizontally movable slide of the cap feeding device.
The overall design of the lowering plate, the spring elements, and the horizontally movable slide, all of which are components of the cap feeding device, makes it possible in a simple manner to bring the cap feeding device back to its starting position. When the slide is moved horizontally toward the rear, the cap gripper units fastened to the lowering plate move away from the containers and the capping units again, and the stop on the lowering plate moves under and past the drive element of the capping device in such a way that the cooperation between the components is interrupted again. As a result, the force of the spring elements acts on the lowering plate opposite the lowering direction and moves the lowering plate upward. After the horizontally movable slide has traveled back all the way, the starting position of the cap feeding device has been reached again, so that the next capping cycle can begin.
The horizontally movable slide is preferably driven by a spindle drive.
It is especially advantageous for each cap gripper unit to comprise a pneumatic drive for gripping and releasing the caps. These pneumatic drives are reliable and simple in design. Alternatively, however, it would also be possible to use other suitable drives for the cap gripper units.
It is advantageous for each capping unit to comprise a spindle drive for screwing the caps onto the containers in the lowering direction. The caps preferably comprise an internal thread, the containers an external thread.
The present invention is explained in greater detail below on the basis of exemplary embodiments, which are illustrated schematically in the drawings:
The device 1, furthermore, comprises a cap feeding device 7, which comprises a horizontally movable slide 8, which is mounted movably on the frame 2. The cap feeding device 7 comprises three cap gripper units 9 arranged along the container feeding device 3. A cap 10 for sealing a container 5 is clamped in each cap gripper unit 9. The caps 10 are delivered from the rear by the cap feeding device 7 in a direction perpendicular to the transport direction of the container feeding device 3.
The device 1 also comprises a capping device 20, which is arranged in the upper area of the frame 2 with the freedom to move in such a way that, for example, it can be moved downward by means of a servomotor in a lowering direction and upward, opposite the lowering direction. In the embodiment shown here, the servomotor drives the capping device 20 in linear fashion.
The capping device 20 comprises three capping units 22, at the end of each of which a screwing-on mechanism 24 is arranged. The screwing-on mechanisms 24 are actuated by spindle drives, which are driven by servo motors (not shown). The screwing-on mechanisms 24 are set up in such a way that a screwing head can pick up a cap 10 as the screwing head travels down in the lowering direction, set the cap 10 down onto the container 5 and screw it on.
The position of the components of the device 1 for sealing containers shown in
In
In the position shown in
When the driver element 26 makes contact with the stop 28, the screwing-on mechanisms 24 grip the caps 10 from above, so that they can be screwed onto the containers 5. The caps 10 are then preferably held mechanically by the screwing-on mechanisms 24, although vacuum suction can also be used supplementally.
During the following, joint lowering movement of the capping device 20 and the cap gripper units 9, the jaws 15 driven by the pneumatic drive 11 release the caps 10, which are now held solely by the screwing-on mechanisms 24.
This position is achieved because the driver element 26 of the capping device 20 had come into contact with the stop 28 and had pushed the cap gripper units 9 a substantial length in the lowering direction. In the example shown, this positive guidance acts on the lowering plate 13, on which the cap gripper units 9, including the pneumatic drives 11, are mounted. Other arrangements are conceivable.
When the cap feeding device 7 now travels back from the position shown in
The interruption of the positive guidance of the lowering plate 13 with its cap gripper units 9 as a result of the horizontal displacement of the slide 8 toward the rear thus has the effect that the elastic force of the spring elements 17 can move the lowering plate 13 back upward again, namely, to its starting position relative to the holding frame 19. Other return mechanisms are also conceivable, such as one operating with a counterweight (that is, by means of gravity) or by magnetic force.
The drives and connections in the embodiment described and illustrated in detail here can be replaced by elements of equivalent function. Thus the spindle drive 32 can be replaced by a drive with a linear motor, a drive with toothed belts, or by a pneumatic drive. The pneumatic drive 11 could also be replaced by an electric drive, an electromagnetic drive, or a drive using the force of springs. In the embodiment used here, special value has been placed on a mechanically reliable and sturdy solution, which has the least complexity possible and requires the least possible amount of maintenance.
In the device for sealing containers only the lightest possible weights are accelerated, which offers improved wear performance and thus lower production costs. The device comprises sturdy construction and high degree of machine availability and requires only modest maintenance costs because of its simple design.
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11156883 | Mar 2011 | EP | regional |
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Entry |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120222388 A1 | Sep 2012 | US |