Not applicable.
Not applicable.
Not applicable.
This invention relates to a valve for dispensing a product (e.g., a fluent material or other substance) from a container or other source of the product. The valve is particularly suitable for incorporation in a dispensing closure for use with a squeezable container.
There are a wide variety of packages which include (1) a container, (2) a dispensing system extending as a unitary part of, or as an attachment to, the container, and (3) a fluent substance product contained within the container. One type of such a package employs one or more dispensing valves for discharging one or more streams of product (which may be a gas, liquid, cream, powder, or particulate product). See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,271,531, U.S. Pat. No. 6,112,951, U.S. Pat. No. 6,230,940 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,086,575. Such valves are flexible and resilient, and have one or more self-sealing slits. Such valves can be mounted at one end of a bottle or container which typically has resiliently flexible side walls that can be squeezed to pressurize the container interior. The valve is normally closed and can withstand the weight of the product when the container is completely inverted, so that the product will not leak out unless the container is squeezed. When the container is squeezed and the interior is subjected to a sufficient increased pressure so that there is a predetermined minimum pressure differential across the valve, the valve opens. Such a valve can be designed so that it can also be opened merely by subjecting the exterior side of the valve to a sufficiently reduced pressure (e.g., as by sucking on the valve).
Such a type of valve can also be designed to stay open, at least until the pressure differential across the valve drops below a predetermined value. Such a valve can be designed to snap closed if the pressure differential across the open valve drops below a predetermined amount. The valve can also be designed to open inwardly to vent air into the container when the pressure within the container is less than the ambient external pressure, and this accommodates the return of the resilient container wall from an inwardly squeezed condition to the normal, unstressed condition.
Some other types of resilient, flexible, dispensing structures may instead have a small aperture that is always open at least a small amount (see, for example, the U.S. Pat. No. 6,547,808, column 4, lines 34-51 which describe a normally open orifice 24 with reference to FIG. 3 of the U.S. Pat. No. 6,547,808).
The inventor of the present invention has discovered a new valve structure not taught or suggested by the prior art and which works especially well for dispensing substances such as, but not limited to, denture adhesive, toothpaste, cuticle cream, under eye cosmetic cream, etc. The inventor has found that the new valve aids the user in applying the substance to a surface as the substance is dispensed, and the valve can advantageously be used to dispense, wipe, spread, and smooth the dispensed substance as well as to scrape away excess amounts of the substance.
The valve has a configuration that also accommodates single handed dispensing without requiring excessive force to be applied by the user.
The valve shape makes it easy for the user to scrape excess product off of the valve exterior after the user has finished dispensing the desired amount of substance out of the valve.
The valve configuration also can facilitate the application of the dispensed substance in crevices and other narrow, or difficult to reach, regions, and the valve can flex in response to contours of the target region surface against which the substance is being dispensed.
The valve of the invention can be employed in a dispensing system that can accommodate bottles, containers, or packages which have a variety of shapes and which are constructed from a variety of materials.
Further, the valve can accommodate efficient, high-quality, manufacturing techniques with a reduced product reject rate to produce products having consistent operating characteristics unit-to-unit with high reliability.
The present invention provides an improved dispensing valve for a fluent substance dispensing system. Such a system could include, for example, a container that has an opening to the container interior, and the valve could be mounted at the opening. The valve can be easily operated by the user to dispense a fluent substance in a desired direction to a target region.
The dispensing valve comprises (1) a mounting base, and (2) a flexible, resilient material defining a dispensing a head extending outwardly from the base. The dispensing head includes at least three peripheral walls that each projects outwardly from the base and that each defines an outer margin. The dispensing head also includes an end wall that (1) defines a dispensing orifice, (2) defines a spreading surface around the orifice, (3) extends between, and connects, the outer margins of the peripheral walls, and (4) is oriented to present the spreading surface extending from a first location to a second location that is further outwardly from the base than is the first location. In one preferred embodiment, the dispensing orifice is a normally closed dispensing orifice which opens to permit flow therethrough in response to a pressure differential across the valve.
Numerous other advantages and features of the present invention will become readily apparent from the following detailed description of the invention, from the claims, and from the accompanying drawings.
In the accompanying drawings that form part of the specification, and in which like numerals are employed to designate like parts throughout the same,
While this invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms, this specification and the accompanying drawings disclose only some specific forms as examples of the invention. The invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments so described, however. The scope of the invention is pointed out in the appended claims.
For ease of description, many of the figures illustrating the invention show a dispensing valve in a typical “upright” orientation that the valve may have when installed in a closure at the top of an upright container when the container is stored upright on its base, and terms such as upper, lower, horizontal, etc., are used with reference to this orientation. It will be understood, however, that the valve of this invention may be manufactured, stored, transported, used, and sold in an orientation other than the position described.
The valve of this invention is suitable for use with a variety of conventional or special dispensing systems, including containers having various designs, the details of which, although not illustrated or described, would be apparent to those having skill in the art and an understanding of such containers. The container and closure, per se, as referred to herein form no part of, and therefore are not intended to limit, the valve of the present invention. It will also be understood by those of ordinary skill that novel and non-obvious inventive aspects are embodied in the described valve alone.
The illustrated, preferred form of the valve 20 is adapted to be used with a container having an opening to provide access to the container interior and to a product contained therein. The valve 20 can be used to dispense many substances, including, but not limited to, relatively low or high viscosity liquids, creams, gels, suspensions, mixtures, lotions, etc. (such as a material constituting a food product, a beverage product, a personal care product, an industrial or household cleaning product, or other compositions of matter (e.g., compositions for use in activities involving manufacturing, commercial or household maintenance, construction, agriculture, medical treatment, military operations, etc.)).
The container with which the valve 20 may be used would typically be a squeezable container having a flexible wall or walls which can be grasped by the user and squeezed or compressed to increase the internal pressure within the container so as to force the product out of the container and through the opened closure. Such a flexible container wall typically has sufficient, inherent resiliency so that when the squeezing forces are removed, the container wall returns to its normal, unstressed shape. Such a squeezable container is preferred in many applications but may not be necessary or preferred in other applications. For example, in some applications it may be desirable to employ a generally rigid container, and to either pressurize the container interior at selected times with a piston or other pressurizing system, or to instead reduce the exterior ambient pressure so as to cause the valve to open and to cause the product to be sucked out through the open valve.
As can be seen in
With reference to
In the preferred embodiment of the valve base 32 as shown in
In other contemplated embodiments, the valve 20 need not have a peripheral, annular ring configuration portion 36 at all, or the portion 36 could have some other configuration than that illustrated in
As can be seen in the preferred embodiment illustrated in
According to the present invention, there are at least three peripheral walls that project outwardly from the base 32, and in the preferred embodiment illustrated in
As can be seen in
The end wall 68 defines a spreading surface around the orifice 70 for use in spreading, smoothing, wiping, or scraping the dispensed product. The end wall 68 extends between, and connects, the outer margins of the peripheral walls 51, 52, 61, 62, and 64. The end wall 68 is oriented to present its spreading surface extending from a first location to a second location that is further outwardly from the base 32 than is the first location. That is, with reference to the particular preferred, first embodiment illustrated in
As can be seen in the plan view of
The mounting base 32, which includes the peripheral annular ring configuration portion 36 as previously described, also includes portions which extend laterally inwardly from the annular ring configuration portion 36. Specifically, with reference to
The valve head 30 extends over an interior volume defined above the base 32. The valve head 30 preferably tapers or narrows over most of its height.
In the preferred embodiment, each valve head slit 71 and 72 has a planar configuration through the valve end wall 68, and each slit 71 and 72 is formed so that the opposing, transverse side faces the valve slits closely seal against one another when the dispensing orifice 70 is in its normal, fully closed position. The length and location of the slits 71 and 72 can be adjusted to vary the predetermined opening pressure of the valve 20, as well as other dispensing characteristics.
The valve 20 is especially suitable for dispensing thicker products, such as denture creams and thick lotions, and the like. The dimensions of the various portions of the dispensing valve 20 may be readily adapted for use in conjunction with a particular container and a specific type of product, so as to achieve the dispensing characteristics desired. For example, the viscosity and density of the fluid product can be factors in designing the specific dimensions of portions of the valve 20. The rigidity and durometer of the valve material, and specific size and shape of the valve head 30 also can be selected to accommodate the desired dispensing characteristics.
It is to be understood that, according to the present invention, portions of the valve 20 may be varied, particularly as may be necessary to accommodate the type of container and product to be dispensed therefrom. The predetermined opening pressure of the valve 20 may be varied in accordance with those dispensing criteria desired for a particular product. Flow characteristics of the dispensed product through the valve 20 can also be adjusted, such as for relatively a wide ribbon-like discharge, narrow discharge, multiple discharges, and the like.
The valve head 30 can be made sufficiently small in cross section so that the valve head 30 can fit in narrow regions or crevices. The valve 20 is especially suitable for directing a product into a confined area, such as in the underside of a denture. The valve 20 can be used to press and spread the product onto the desired surface or surfaces. The valve 20 can be made sufficiently flexible to help the valve to fit within constricted, narrow regions (i.e., putting the valve head 30 into a narrow region may require that some or all of the peripheral walls 51, 52, 61, 62, and 64 be temporarily deformed (e.g., flexed laterally inwardly)).
The spreading surface on the exterior of the end wall 68 can be used in spreading or placing the dispensed product in the desired locations with the desired lateral distribution, thickness, smoothness, etc.
Further, the upper, outermost projecting, side or edge along the top of the end wall 68 (i.e., the edge at location B in
The smooth spreading surface on the end wall 68 of the valve 20 facilitates removal of excess dispensed product from the face of the valve after the dispensing activity has been completed. The surface of the end wall 68 can also be scraped against an edge of another surface, including the surface of a substrate onto which the product has been dispensed, so as to scrape or clear away much, if not all, of any residual product that may remain on the end wall 68.
The valve 20 can be provided in an appropriate size and made from a selected material with selected wall thicknesses that will accommodate dispensing of the product through the valve without requiring that an excessively high pressure differential be imposed across the valve end wall 68 to achieve the desired discharge flow.
The product can be dispensed through the valve 20 in a one-handed operation. The use of such a valve 20 can accommodate various users, including the elderly and/or people with arthritis who might otherwise have difficulty dispensing a product from other types of dispensing devices.
According to one presently contemplated form of the first embodiment of the valve 20 illustrated in
Further, in one presently contemplated preferred embodiment, the valve 20 has a maximum straight line distance across the planar exterior surface of the end wall 68 from any point along one edge of the end wall planar exterior surface to any other point along another edge of the end wall planar exterior surface that is greater than about 50% of the maximum straight line distance across the base 32 between any two points on the base 32 where the base 32 joins the back wall 64, the rearward side walls 61 and 62, and the forward side walls 51 and 52.
In one presently contemplated form of the first embodiment of the valve 20 illustrated in
In the illustrated preferred form of the valve 20, the valve 20 normally remains in the closed configuration shown in
The valve 20 could also be opened by applying a sufficiently reduced atmospheric pressure on the valve exterior so that the pressure on the valve head exterior is sufficiently below the internal pressure acting against the valve head interior surface to cause the valve to open outwardly (see
If the container on which the closed valve 20 is mounted inadvertently tips over, then the product will not flow out of the valve 20 because the valve 20 remains closed. Preferably, the valve 20 is designed to withstand the weight of the fluent substance product on the inside of the valve 20 when the container is completely inverted. Preferably, the valve 20 is designed to open only after a sufficient amount of pressure differential acts across the valve (e.g., as by the user squeezing the container with sufficient force (if the container is not a rigid container)).
When dispensing product through the preferred form of the valve 20 in the open condition, if the differential pressure across the valve 20 decreases sufficiently, then the inherent resiliency of the valve 20 will cause it to close. The valve 20 will then assume the closed position illustrated in
In one preferred embodiment, the valve 20 opens outwardly only when the valve head 30 is subjected to a predetermined pressure differential acting in a gradient direction wherein the pressure on the valve head interior surface exceeds—by a predetermined amount—the local ambient pressure on the valve head exterior surface. The product can then be dispensed through the open valve 20 until the pressure differential drops below a predetermined amount, and the valve 20 then closes completely.
In one optional form of the valve 20, the valve 20 can be designed to be flexible enough to accommodate in-venting of ambient atmosphere as described in detail below, then the closing portions of the end wall 68 adjacent the slit 71 can continue moving inwardly to allow the valve to open inwardly as the pressure differential gradient direction reverses and the pressure on the valve head exterior surface exceeds the pressure on the valve head interior surface by a predetermined amount.
For some dispensing applications, it may be desirable for the valve 20 not only to dispense the product, but also to accommodate such in-venting of the ambient atmosphere (e.g., so as to allow a squeezed container (on which the valve is mounted) to readily return to its original shape). Such an in-venting capability can be provided by selecting an appropriate material for the valve construction, and by selecting appropriate thicknesses, shapes, and dimensions for various portions of the valve head 30 for the particular valve material and overall valve size. The shape, flexibility, and resilience of the valve head 30 can be designed or established so that the valve head end wall 68 will deflect inwardly at the slit 70 when subjected to a sufficient pressure differential that acts across the head 30 and in a gradient direction that is the reverse or opposite from the pressure differential gradient direction during product dispensing. Such a reverse pressure differential can be established when a user releases a squeezed, resilient container on which the valve 20 is mounted. The resiliency of the container wall (or walls) will cause the wall to return toward the normal, larger volume configuration. The volume increase of the container interior will cause a temporary drop in the interior pressure. When the interior pressure drops sufficiently below the exterior ambient pressure, the pressure differential across the valve 20 will be large enough to deflect the valve head and wall 68 inwardly to permit in-venting of the ambient atmosphere. In some cases, however, the desired rate or amount of in-venting may not occur until the squeezed container is returned to a substantially upright orientation that allows the product to flow under the influence of gravity away from the valve head 30.
The illustrated preferred embodiment of the valve 20 provides an improved dispensing valve with the capability for allowing the user to readily view, target, and control the dispensing of the fluent material from the valve 20. The valve 20 can function to dispense a product accurately while minimizing the likelihood of accidental, premature, or undesired product discharge, and while providing good product cut-off at the termination of dispensing with little or no mess of product left on the exterior of the valve (or package containing the valve). The closed valve can minimize, or at least reduce, the likelihood either of the product drying out in the package or being contaminated.
The forward side wall 51B, forward side wall 52B, and back wall 64B taper inwardly with increasing height or distance away from the base 32B, and the outer margins or top edges of the walls 51B, 62B, and 64B define the sides of an end wall 68B which extends between the top edges or outer margins of the forward side wall 51B, forward side wall 52B, and back wall 64B.
The end wall 68B defines a normally closed dispensing orifice 70B comprising an elongate slit 71B terminating at each end in a short slit 72B. Each short slit 72B is at an oblique angle relative to the length of the elongate slit 71B.
The fourth embodiment valve 20C, illustrated in
It will be readily apparent from the foregoing detailed description of the invention and from the illustrations thereof that numerous variations and modifications may be effected without departing from the true spirit and scope of the novel concepts or principles of this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
421362 | Underwood | Feb 1890 | A |
1919859 | Phillips | Jul 1933 | A |
2316516 | Hammerstein | Apr 1943 | A |
D136098 | Hartman | Aug 1943 | S |
2611515 | Smith | Sep 1952 | A |
2684789 | Marchant | Jul 1954 | A |
2851203 | Nowak et al. | Sep 1958 | A |
3773233 | Souza | Nov 1973 | A |
4368746 | Spatz | Jan 1983 | A |
4419393 | Hanson | Dec 1983 | A |
4652163 | Karliner et al. | Mar 1987 | A |
4685820 | Kremer | Aug 1987 | A |
4693623 | Schwartzman | Sep 1987 | A |
4709836 | Andersen | Dec 1987 | A |
5033655 | Brown | Jul 1991 | A |
5172996 | Tamiya et al. | Dec 1992 | A |
5398853 | Latham | Mar 1995 | A |
5588560 | Benedict et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
5921448 | Stewart | Jul 1999 | A |
6402413 | Schwartzman | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6547808 | Tuckey et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
6688501 | De Groot et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
6932532 | Schwartzman | Aug 2005 | B2 |
6935543 | De Groot et al. | Aug 2005 | B2 |
7086572 | Socier et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
7226230 | Liberatore | Jun 2007 | B2 |
7306128 | Eimer | Dec 2007 | B2 |
7314328 | Liberatore | Jan 2008 | B2 |
7325994 | Liberatore | Feb 2008 | B2 |
7465118 | Liberatore | Dec 2008 | B2 |
7645085 | Liberatore | Jan 2010 | B2 |
20080205971 | Liberatore | Aug 2008 | A1 |
20090045230 | Liberatore | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20090218374 | Liberatore | Sep 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
976 113 | Oct 1975 | CA |
0 178 377 | Apr 1985 | EP |
2 790 454 | Sep 2000 | FR |
43-16514 | Jul 1968 | JP |
37-999 | Aug 1984 | JP |
WO 0076873 | Dec 2000 | WO |
WO 2005011875 | Feb 2005 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090196677 A1 | Aug 2009 | US |