Dispenser pumps

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6612468
  • Patent Number
    6,612,468
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, September 12, 2001
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 2, 2003
    20 years ago
Abstract
A hand operated non-aerosol foam dispenser comprising a combined liquid pump and air pump for mounting at the top of a container of foamable liquid, the liquid pump having a liquid cylinder and a liquid piston defining between them a liquid chamber, the air pump having an air cylinder and an air piston defining between them an air chamber, and the liquid piston and air piston being reciprocable together in their respective cylinders by the action of a pump plunger which carries said pistons;an air inlet valve and liquid inlet valve being provided for the air chamber and liquid chamber respectively;an air discharge passage and a liquid discharge passage leading from the air chamber and the liquid chamber respectively, the air discharge passage and liquid discharge passage meeting one another for mixing the pumped air and liquid which passes to an outlet passage of the dispenser by way of a permeable foam regulation element;one or more vent openings being provided to admit air into a cap chamber and into the air chamber through the air inlet valve.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present proposals have to do with hand-operated dispenser pumps, and partially in certain aspects to such pumps adapted for the dispensing of foam from a supply of foamable liquid in a container to which the dispenser is fitted.




BACKGROUND




Over the last 15 years or so the use of foam dispensers based on aerosols using pressurized gas has declined steeply for environmental reasons, leading the development of foaming dispensers which exploit a manual pumping action to blend air and liquid and create foam.




A particular category of such known dispensers to which certain of the present proposals relate (referred to in what follows as foaming dispensers “of the kind described”) provides both a liquid pump and an air pump mounted at the top of a container for the foamable liquid. The liquid pump has a liquid pump chamber defined between a liquid cylinder and a liquid piston, and the air pump has an air pump chamber defined between an air cylinder and an air piston. Preferably these components are arranged concentrically around a plunger axis of the pump. The liquid piston and air piston are reciprocable together in their respective cylinders by the action of a pump plunger: typically the two pistons are integrated with the plunger. An air inlet valve and a liquid inlet valve are provided for the air chamber and liquid chamber. An air discharge passage and a liquid discharge passage lead from the respective chambers to an outlet passage by way of a permeable foam-generating element, preferably one or more mesh layers, through which the air and liquid pass as a mixture. Preferably the air discharge passage and liquid discharge passage meet in a mixing chamber or mixing region immediately upstream of the permeable foam-generating element.




It is not easy to achieve a good quality foam consistently from dispensers of the kind described. There are also difficulties in providing for adequate venting and valving of the different fluid spaces and paths while assuring a positive operation without leaks.




EP-A-565713 (equivalent to U.S. Pat. No. 5,271,530) describes admitting air to the air cylinder through a ball valve in the top wall of the air piston. This does not work when wet, nor when the plunger is pressed slowly, and there is a problem of liquid entering the air chamber via the mixing chamber and air discharge passage.




EP-A-613728 refines the air valving using a single elastomeric annulus in the air piston roof whose outer rim acts as an air inlet flap valve and whose inner rim acts as an air discharge flap valve against the plunger stem. This arrangement dispenses air at all speeds and helps prevent liquid getting into the air chamber.




WO-A-97/13585 notes a tendency for such a double-acting valve element to stick, and addresses this by providing some axial play between the plunger stem and the air piston. This play is taken up in alternating directions as the plunger reciprocates, keeping the valve element moving freely.




EP-A-736462 is another system using axial lost motion between air piston and plunger, for a double-acting valve action via holes near the inner periphery of the air piston roof.




Our present proposals provide new and useful developments in various aspects of the construction of dispensers, particularly foam dispensers of the kind described. A first set of aspects is concerned with the venting and valving of air flows in relation to the air chamber. A further aspect relates to venting in plunger operated pumps in general. Other aspects relate to a new overall disposition of the pump parts.




A first proposal herein is that the plunger includes a cap shroud whose outer skirt continues down and connects fixedly or integrally adjacent the air piston's peripheral seal, defining thereby an internal cap air chamber above a roof of the air piston, enclosing the air inlet valve. Access for exterior air to the air chamber in the air cylinder is then via this internal cap air chamber. External air may enter the cap through one or more holes in the cap shroud e.g. holes above where the cap shroud projects through a guide opening of a fixed pump body.




A further independent but combinable proposal herein is that the air inlet valve through which air enters the air chamber comprises a radially inwardly-projecting flexible valve flap formed integrally with at least an outer sleeve portion of the air piston, carrying or including a seal portion shaped to engage the air cylinder wall. In a preferred embodiment this outer sleeve of the air piston is fixed directly to a cap shroud of the plunger which encloses the air inlet.




The air inlet valve flap, which preferably extends substantially in a radial plane and is preferably a uniform annulus, is flexible relative to an air inlet valve seat. A preferred valve seat is a downwardly-directed edge, especially an annular edge, of a core sleeve comprised in the pump plunger and which moves axially, preferably fixedly, with the pump plunger.




Desirably the components of the pump plunger are fixed together in pre-determined axial register so that the air inlet valve flap is resiliently urged axially against the air inlet valve seat, such as the annular edge of a core sleeve as mentioned. The air discharge passage may lead up inside such a core sleeve. The core sleeve may then also provide a valve seat for air outlet valve flap which is provided on a radially inner plunger core portion. Or, the core sleeve may itself comprise integrally an air outlet valve flap e.g. extending from at or from adjacent the seat edge engaged by the inlet valve flap. Thus, in one preferred embodiment the air inlet valve flap extends radially relative to, e.g. inwardly of, the core sleeve, and an air outlet valve flap extends radially (or at least, with a radial component) out towards or in from the core sleeve. Such a core sleeve preferably encloses an annular air discharge space, all or partly downstream of the air outlet valve when one is provided, and communicating (from downstream of any such outlet valve) inwardly (optionally also upwardly) to a mixing chamber for liquid and air. Such a mixing chamber and/or the point(s) of air injection into such a mixing chamber is preferably axially overlapped by the annular air discharge space in the core sleeve. This gives an axially compact construction.




The core sleeve in any of the other embodiments may be constituted by a downward skirt from a plunger component. This skirt may include a core part projecting down inside the core sleeve at a radial spacing. This inner core part might be for example a surround to a mixing chamber, through which the air is injected, and/or part of a plunger stem which is or carries the liquid piston.




A further proposal herein is that the air outlet valve is provided as an upwardly diverging conical or cup-shaped element, sealing outwardly against an inwardly directed air discharge passage wall, such as that of a core sleeve as mentioned above, or some other part of the air discharge passage. A benefit of this air outlet valve conformation is that it catches drops of liquid escaping from the foam-generating region and helps prevent them from reaching the air chamber.




Further aspects herein relate to modes for arranging the mixing of liquid and air. Typically the liquid discharge passage rises axially from the liquid chamber in the liquid cylinder. The liquid discharge passage may extend up inside a hollow stem inside the plunger. A liquid discharge valve is usually provided for this passage. We prefer to provide the valve at the entrance to the passage e.g. by means of a sliding seal on the liquid piston which covers and uncovers windows in the hollow stem However, it would also be possible to provide a liquid discharge valve midway along the liquid discharge passage, as in the prior art patents mentioned above. Preferably a mixing chamber or region where air and liquid are present together is provided immediately upstream of the foam-generation element. We prefer that at or immediately before this mixing chamber the liquid discharge passage diverges around a central baffle or block, either freely in a chamber or along one or more restricted diametrically-spaced passageways in parallel. The airflow from the air discharge passage may impinge on this diverged or distributed liquid flow in order to promote mixing.




We prefer that the air discharge passage opens to the region of mixing with the liquid, e.g. into a mixing chamber, with a substantial radially inward direction component. Optionally, it may also have a tangential component. We particularly prefer that the air discharge passage has a circumferentially distributed air injection locus e.g. surrounding or opposed across the liquid flow. There may be plural (for example at least two or at least three) air injection points at the combination with the liquid flow. The liquid flow may rise as a generally tubular curtain from a generally annular slit forming an outlet of the liquid discharge passage.




The preferred foam-generating element uses one or more layers of mesh to produce a uniform foam for discharge. The nature of the mesh is not critical: we prefer a coarser mesh followed by finer mesh. These meshes may be provided on a foam-generating module in which discs of the meshes are bonded across the open ends of a short tube which can be fitted into a complementary housing recess of the plunger during assembly.




A third aspect of the present proposals relates to a novel disposition of the discharge passageways. In this aspect the pump has a fixed discharge nozzle arrangement beside the reciprocable plunger. The air and liquid discharge passages leave the respective chambers at or adjacent their bottoms, and the foam-generating element is fixed in or beneath the fixed nozzle component, instead of being in the plunger as in prior art designs. There is obvious user benefit in having a foaming dispenser whose discharge nozzle does not move during dispensing. The necessary topology of discharge passages can be created with injection-moulded components using a moulded discharge-passage forming lower shell which fixes on to the pump below the cylinder-forming component(s).




In all of the above aspects it is preferred that the air cylinder and liquid cylinder be concentric. It is also preferred, as in the prior art, that they are formed together in one piece of plastics material. The cylinder-forming component(s) can be secured into a container neck either directly, e.g. by having its own downturned rim with appropriate securements (thread or snap ribs), or indirectly by means of a discrete retaining collar having such securements.




A further aspect may relate to the first proposal above, i.e. venting for the air cylinder of a foam dispenser via the cap shroud, but is also independently applicable in general in pumps which have a pump body secured to the top of a product container, e.g. integrally or by means of a screw or snap cap, and the pump is operated by a plunger which works reciprocally in or on the pump body to alter the volume of a pump chamber communicating via an inlet valve with the container interior and—usually via an outlet valve—with a discharge opening. Usually the plunger carries a piston working in a cylinder provided by the body, although it can be the other way around. The discharge opening may be on the plunger (moveable nozzle pump) or on the body (fixed nozzle pump).




In any event there is a general need in dispenser pumps of this kind to allow air into the container or pump to compensate a volume dispensed.




One conventional product vent arrangement provides one or more small vent holes through the cylinder wall near the top. Air can enter the pump body through the clearance between the plunger stem and the surrounding collar of the body cap and into the container space via the vent holes, which are above the piston seal. In other known constructions the vent channel bypasses the cylinder interior e.g. by means of a channel between a closure cap and the container neck to the container interior, or a channel from the above-mentioned clearance around the stem which skirts around the top of the cylinder wall. A further possibility is to vent air inwardly through a hole or channel in the plunger head itself rather than through an annular clearance between plunger and collar.




While conventional venting relates to compensating for volume of dispensed product, there may be other needs for venting air. In particular, foam dispensing pumps as described herein are adapted to dispense foam by pumping simultaneous flows of air and liquid to some mixing location in the pump. In this case there is a need to admit air to the pump system for pumping to form foam, and the volume of air required is likely to be greater than the volume required for compensating dispensed liquid product volume. We particularly envisage use of the present proposals for air venting in such a foaming dispenser or in conjunction with other plunger-operated foam dispensers which pump air and liquid together in the manner referred to above.




Known foam dispensers admit air for pumping by various routes, including some of those mentioned above.




There are special difficulties when a dispenser has to be used in a wet environment, e.g. outdoors in the rain, or especially indoors in a shower. Water has a tendency to get in or be drawn in through the air vents, particularly where these are between the plunger stem and collar surround because water can lie in the gap. Water getting in this way can contaminate or dilute the product in the container. In a foam dispensing pump it can accumulate undesirably in the air pumping system.




What we propose in this aspect are new arrangements for venting air via an opening in the shroud or casing of a pump plunger, and particularly where the plunger (e.g. the mentioned shroud or casing thereof) makes a close or sealing fit through the collar or other top opening of the pump body so that venting there is prevented or is insufficient. What we propose is to provide a cover element overlying one or more vent opening(s) of the plunger casing. Preferably this cover element is a discrete second element which is clipped or snapped onto or into a first element of the plunger casing. Access to the opening(s) through the plunger casing is or is via a venting clearance defined between the cover element and the plunger casing. Entry to this access clearance may be via one or more entry openings defined on one side by the edge of the cover element.




The opposed surfaces of the casing and cover element may define between them one or more elongate and/or tortuous channels or clearances leading from the entry opening(s) to the opening(s) which open(s) to the interior of the casing. To provide elongate and/or tortuous channels or clearances, the surface of a discrete cover element and/or of a first plunger casing element can be formed with grooves or open channels or other recesses which become closed channels or clearances when the cover element and plunger are assembled together. When they are discrete components, it is simple to form non-straight (bent or curved) channel or clearance shapes by moulding.




It is strongly preferred that from the entry opening(s) the access path between the cover element and plunger casing leading to the opening(s) through the casing is at least partly uphill. The path(s) may be for example uphill at least from the entry opening(s). Additionally or alternatively it is uphill over most or all of its length. This helps to drain away any water which may get into the venting clearance.




The cover element may be laminar. It may for example be a simple single layer with integral fasteners such as snap pins or pegs by which it is secured to the main plunger casing.




A particularly preferred position for the cover element is on top of or as the top of the plunger. It may extend to a lateral extremity of the plunger, e.g. to the side and/or a rear face, and have the entry opening(s) there to reduce the chance or water collecting at the vent. In a preferred embodiment the top of the plunger slopes down to the rear and the cover element provides or is on the sloping region, with one or more entry openings at the rear of the plunger below the rear edge of the cover element. One or more elongate and/or tortuous vent channels may be defined between a plunger top surface of a first element and the cover element. Such channel(s) might extend forwardly up that top surface, and one or more corresponding holes through the wall of the first element and into the plunger interior towards the front. In this embodiment the cover element may be presented as a finger grip push button finish for the plunger. It may be outwardly concave.




Or, the one or more vent channels may open to the plunger interior at an opening also defined between the cover element and the first plunger element. Indeed the whole channel may be defined between opposed surfaces of such elements, to take advantage of the ease of forming complicated internal moulded shapes between opposed surfaces of discrete components.




There are cosmetic advantages to providing the entry opening(s) between the plunger casing and the edge of the cover element, because the existence of the boundary distracts the eye from the opening. Nevertheless it is in principle possible to provide the entry opening through a first, inner element plunger casing only, and lead it to the interface between the casing and cover element, again to take advantage of the ease of making a more tortuous—and hence less water-penetrable—vent passage between two elements.




The present proposals are particularly useful where the plunger casing extends down as a continuous shroud into the pump body opening, particularly with a sealing fit. Such a shroud or cap may enclose an interior plunger cavity. We also envisage, where the plunger houses a hollow discharge channel of the pump leading to a nozzle, that the channel formation of one or more vent passages as mentioned above may extend alongside e.g. to either side of the discharge channel wall at the top of the plunger. From the interior of the plunger, the route for vented air is not particularly restricted. For example in a foam-generating dispenser it may pass down inside the plunger to an air intake valve for an air cylinder, which may be the only other opening from this interior space of the plunger.




A further embodiment has a plunger cap having an upwardly open, generally tubular lower element and the cover element as a top lid or closure which defines at least part of a discharge channel e.g. nozzle for the pump, at the same time as defining between it and the lower element a vent channel or vent channel entry according to any of the proposals previously outlined, when the elements are fitted together e.g. with the top lid plugging the lower element. The top lid may also provide a core sleeve or core sleeve portion as referred to previously, preferably as a one-piece integral downward extension.











Embodiments of the invention are now described by reference to the accompanying drawings, in which;





FIG. 1

is an axial section of a first embodiment of a dispenser pump;





FIG. 2

is a perspective view of an air piston seal component thereof;





FIG. 3

is a perspective view of a plunger core component thereof;





FIG. 4

is a perspective view of a plunger core sleeve extension incorporating an air outlet valve;





FIG. 5

is an axial section of a second embodiment of dispenser pump;





FIG. 6

is an exploded view of the pump components;





FIG. 7

is an axial section of a third embodiment of a dispenser pump;





FIG. 8

is an exploded view of the components of the third embodiment;





FIG. 9

is a perspective view from the top of a plunger core component in the third embodiment;





FIG. 10

is an axial section of a fourth embodiment of dispenser pump having a fixed nozzle;





FIG. 11

is an exploded view of the components of the fourth embodiment;





FIG. 12

is an axial cross-section of a fifth embodiment of foamer having a discrete vent cover;





FIG. 13

shows enlarged the

FIG. 12

embodiment at region B;





FIGS. 14 and 15

is similar but with the vent cover removed;





FIGS. 16 and 17

correspond to

FIGS. 14 and 15

with the pump components axially sectioned;





FIG. 18

shows in axial cross section the top of a sixth embodiment of dispenser, also having a vent cover;





FIG. 19

shows the top of the main plunger component of the sixth embodiment with the vent cover removed; and





FIG. 20

shows a seventh embodiment of foam dispenser.












FIGS. 1

to


4


show a first embodiment of hand-operated foam dispenser. The dispenser is mounted on the threaded neck


92


of a conventional blow-moulded cylindrical container


91


. The container need not be cylindrical, however. As is already familiar for people skilled in this field, the dispenser includes a one-piece cylinder component


10


e.g. of polypropylene. This includes a lower, smaller-diameter liquid cylinder


102


and an upper larger-diameter air cylinder


101


, with a side vent hole


109


. The cylinder component


10


is recessed down into the neck


92


of the container and held in place by a threaded retaining collar


95


. At the bottom end of the liquid cylinder


102


a valve seat


104


is integrally formed, also a socket for a dip tube


94


. These are conventional features.




A plunger


1


is mounted to act reciprocally in the air and liquid cylinders


101


,


102


. The plunger has a projecting central stem


13


carrying a piston seal


41


which works in the liquid cylinder


102


. A tubular piston-retaining insert


105


is snapped into the base of the air cylinder


101


and the liquid piston seal


41


is trapped beneath it; this keeps the plunger in the assembly. A return spring


93


is fitted around the plunger stem


13


—in the air chamber


16


so as to avoid spring corrosion—and acts to urge the plunger


1


to its uppermost position.




The air piston


2


surrounds the upper part of the plunger stem


13


. Unlike prior art constructions, it is not retained and driven by engagement at the plunger stem but rather by a snap fitting engagement into the lower end of a cap shroud


5


of the plunger. This cap shroud


5


is of substantially the same diameter as the air cylinder. The discrete air piston component is shown in FIG.


2


and is a generally cylindrical sleeve


23


having a snap rib at the top to locate it at a predetermined degree of axial insertion into the cap shroud interior. An outwardly-directed sealing lip


21


,


22


towards its lower end acts against the air cylinder wall. Thus, pressing down the plunger


1


directly (without play or lost motion) operates the air piston


2


in its cylinder. Projecting radially inwardly from near the top of the sleeve


23


is a radial annular valve flap


24


tapering in thickness towards its edge.




Considering now the central parts of the plunger the nozzle


12


communicates with an inner axial downwardly-open tube


11


which forms a top foamer unit housing. This tube


11


snap fits into an upwardly-open cylindrical tube


32


of a core insert component


3


, trapping in the space between them a foam-generation element


8


in the passage leading to the nozzle


12


. This foam-generating element


6


has conventional features, being a cylindrical plastics tube


81


fitting closely in the housing tube


11


and having ultrasonically welded across its open ends a disk of coarse nylon mesh


82


(bottom end) and fine nylon mesh


83


(top end).




The snap fit between the tubes


11


,


32


involves snap ribs that fix the relative axial positions of the plunger cap


5


and the insert core


3


.




Below the foam-generating element


8


the core insert


3


(see also

FIG. 3

) defines a small circular mixing chamber


180


above a floor


38


. Projecting down from the centre of this floor


38


is a hollow cylindrical stud


31


with a set of axial ribs or splines


311


which fit closely, again with a snap fit, into the slightly enlarged top-diameter of the hollow plunger stem


13


. This connects the plunger top to the liquid piston


41


, and at the same time blocks the exit of the liquid discharge passage


15


except for a set of narrow axially-extending peripheral channels


171


extending up between the splines


311


and the stem wall and passing through the floor


38


of the insert core component


3


, via holes


172


which are stepped slightly radially inwardly from the openings


171


along between the splines


311


.




The enlarged diameter section at the top of the stem


13


is dimensioned so that when the splined stud


31


fits right into it, its top edge has a clearance from the underside of the core insert's floor


38


. This clearance thus communicates with the passages


171


between the splines, immediately before where they pass up through the floor


38


.




Projecting integrally at the lower end of the core component


3


is an outward radial flange with a downward cylindrical skirt or core sleeve


33


. Around this in turn is snap-fitted a generally cylindrical core sleeve extension


34


; see FIG.


4


. Projecting radially in perpendicularly from the bottom edge of this extension


34


is an integral valve lip


341


of progressively decreasing thickness. The bottom of the edge of this lip rests on an annular valve seat ledge


131


extending around near the top of the plunger stem


13


, as seen in FIG.


1


. An annular air discharge chamber


17


is thereby defined between the top of the stem


13


, the core sleeve extension


34


and the core floor


38


. There is a way into this annular air chamber


17


from the air cylinder chamber


16


, by means of displacing the valve lip


341


upwardly. There are six ways out of the air discharge chamber


17


, via the small radially-inward passageways referred to above and up into the mixing chamber


180


.




It will be noted that in this embodiment the piston seal


41


of the liquid piston is of the “sliding seal” type which acts as a discharge valve at the entrance to the liquid discharge passage


15


. That is to say, on the downstroke of the plunger the sliding seal


41


is displaced upwardly relative to the plunger stem


13


and uncovers the plunger stem windows


42


, allowing liquid to flow under pressure from the liquid pump chamber


14


into the liquid discharge passage


15


and up to the narrow discharge passages


171


between the insert splines


311


.




The action of the pump on pressing down the plunger is as follows. At the same time as liquid is driven up passage


15


as mentioned, air in the air chamber


16


is forced—by the decrease in volume of that chamber—through the air outlet valve flap


341


into the air discharge chamber


17


and radially in from all directions to mix vigorously with the rapid and distributed upflow of liquid. The liquid and air flows mix as they enter the mixing chamber whence they pass through the progressively decreasing meshes and merge as foam from the nozzle


12


. The one way action of the air inlet valve flap


24


prevents escape of air from the chamber


16


by that route as the plunger is depressed.




Conversely, as the plunger rises again under the force of the spring


93


, the liquid chamber


14


is primed in the conventional way via the inlet valve


104


. Air flows in to occupy the air chamber


16


by downward displacement of the air inlet valve flap


24


relative to its valve seat (the bottom edge of the core extension


34


) under the prevailing pressure difference. At this time the resilient sealing of the outlet valve flap


341


prevents any liquid from dripping through into the air chamber Air flows into the air chamber


16


from the cap air apace


51


inside the cap shroud


5


which encloses the inlet valve


24


. In turn, air may enter the cap air space


51


via channel clearances between channels


25


of the air piston insert sleeve


23


and the bottom rim of the cap shroud


5


. Alternatively and preferably, air may enter the cap shroud


5


via an upper opening


19


in the shroud itself (see FIG.


1


), the air piston sleeve being connected air tightly.




The skilled person will appreciate that the in-plane disposition of the two flap valves, each formed integrally with another functional component and one using the other's component as its seat, is a very neat, compact and component-economical way of providing the air-valving, which is always a vexed issue in pumps of this type.





FIGS. 5 and 6

show a second embodiment which in many respects is similar to the first. Analogous components are numbered similarly. One difference here is that the top of the cylinder component


10


is bent right over and round as a threaded retaining collar


106


in one piece with the cylinder component


10


. Another difference in this embodiment is in the formation of the core component


3


and its interaction with the air outlet valve


342


. Here the core component


3


is a one-piece integral whole including the hollow piston stem


13


, a generally cylindrical body containing the mixing chamber


180


for the air and liquid and defining a cup which holds the housing tubes for the foam-generating element


8


, as well as the radial flange and downward cylindrical core sleeve


33


. Here the mixing chamber


180


is recessed down inside the core


3


and is fully overlapped axially by the annular radial space


17


in between the body of the core


3


and its outer core sleeve


33


. The air piston


2


and its integral inlet valve flap


24


are generally similar to those in the first embodiment although the cap shroud


5


of the plunger is differently shaped being narrower at the top. The inner edge of the inlet valve flap


24


makes its sealing engagement against the terminal edge of core sleeve


33


as a valve seat, as in the first embodiment. However in this embodiment the air outlet valve is not formed integrally with the core sleeve


33


. Rather, it is a discrete cup-shaped component with a base


340


fitting up around the stem


13


beneath the core


3


, and having a conical, upwardly outwardly divergent sealing lip


342


which projects up into the air discharge chamber


17


within the core sleeve


33


and bears against the inwardly directed surface of the core sleeve


33


which is then the valve seat.




The components are dimensioned and their snap positions determined so that the resilient air inlet and outward valve lips are lightly biased, i.e. deformed against their resilience, against their valve seat surfaces. This assures a positive action.




The air passages leading from the air discharge chamber


17


into the mixing chamber


180


are not shown in the section of

FIG. 5

, but can be seen in the view of the corresponding component in FIG.


9


. They are provided as a series of tangentially-inclined radially-extending slots leading in through the central boss of the core


3


and from the space


17


into the chamber


180


at the same axial level. A further difference in this embodiment is that the baffle


132


(formed as a disk


132


with a serrated edge: see

FIG. 6

) projects freely into the centre of the mixing chamber


180


and does not project into the top of the liquid discharge passage


15


. Liquid rising from the discharge passage


15


strikes the baffle


132


directly and is scattered for mixing with the radially/tangentially impinging air streams. Prom there the air/liquid mix rises through a hole into an upper part


180


′ Of the mixing chamber, inside a lower foamer housing tube


32


formed integrally with the baffle disk


132


, thence to pass through the foam unit


8


.




The reader will readily appreciate the action of the air outlet valve


342


as the plunger


1


is depressed. The outlet valve lip


342


is urged by the air pressure in the chamber


16


away from its seat. Should any liquid escape from the mixing chamber


180


it is retained in the cup-shaped valve element


340


,


342


and does not get into the air chambers


16


. The economy of parts is again excellent. Air reaches the air cylinder through the cap air space


51


and the air inlet valve


24


. Access to the cap air space may be through a set of channels between shroud and air piston


2


, as in the first embodiment, or through a hole


19


in the top of the shroud as mentioned previously.





FIG. 5

also shows an outer cover cap


107


(a similar cap used for the

FIG. 1

embodiment has not been shown) for shipping.





FIG. 7

shows a third embodiment in which the conformation of the pump core


3


and the air inlet and outlet valves is essentially the same as the second embodiment above. A slightly different form of baffle


133


is used.




The difference in this embodiment is in the structure and disposition of the cylinder-forming parts of the pump. Unlike the wide threaded neck


92


of the first and second embodiments, the container


91


in this embodiment has a more standard narrow neck and the pump is specially designed to fit on it. To achieve this the air cylinder


101


is constructed so that the deep peripheral trough, down into which the piston seal slides, fits down around the outside of the neck and is internally threaded to engage it. The liquid cylinder


102


is still formed in one piece with the air cylinder


101


, and is the only part projecting down inside the neck. This constructions which at the expense of some extra vertical height enables use of a dispenser of the present kind on a standard-neck container, brings an extra issue of venting into the container. In the previous embodiments the vent hole


109


is through an upper part of the side wall of the air cylinder


101


, and valved by alternate covering and uncovering by the air piston (as is known in the prior art). In this third embodiment the air cylinder does not share a wall with the container's internal space, so instead a vent passageway is defined (by means of surface grooves) between the piston-retaining insert


105


and a transitional section of the cylinder component


10


between the air cylinder and the liquid cylinder portions. Compensation air can reach this vent channel


191


via the threaded engagement between the cylinder component


10


and the container neck


92


.





FIGS. 10 and 11

show a substantially different embodiment in which the discharge nozzle


12


remains fixed in relation to the container


91


during dispensing. This is achieved by leading the air and liquid discharge channels


15


,


17




a


out of their respective cylinders within the container interior, and leading them up alongside the pump body in a fixed pump body discharge module


85


.




The plunger


1


carries a simple top button shroud


5


in which the piston stem


13


and the core sleeve


33


protect down concentrically with one another, integrally from the top web of the cap shroud


5


. Because there is no need to accommodate the discharge arrangement in the plunger, and in order to minimise the axial height of the arrangement, the liquid cylinder


102


is brought up inside the air cylinder


101


(although still concentrically and in one piece with it), and the liquid piston seal


41


on the end of the stem


13


is a simple one, no longer needing to form any valve.




Enclosed valved passageways can be formed using moulded components by means of a lower basin component


111


clipped around the bottom of the cylinder component


10


. The passageways are formed between shaped opposed surfaces and walls of these components. At the foot of the liquid chamber


14


a flexible valve disc


46


is trapped between the components


10


,


111


and provides an outlet flap valve for the liquid leading into the liquid discharge passage


15


. This passage is defined initially through a radial tube of the basin component


111


and then up through an axial side tube having a crenellated top opening immediately below the foam generating module


8


. The air cylinder


101


is formed in one piece with the fixed discharge passage module


85


, and the two communicate via an air discharge opening


17




a


near the bottom of the air cylinder


16


. Here it meets the liquid discharge tube rising towards the foam-generating meshes. An air outlet valve component, in the form of a sleeve with a conically-divergent flexible upper part, fits around the liquid discharge tube at this point in an annular air discharge space


17


. Thus, air driven from the air chamber


16


on pressing the plunger


1


passes the outlet valve lip


442


and mingles with the upflow of liquid via the crenellations at a mixing zone


208


. The formation of foam as essentially as previously. The function of the air inlet valve


24


contained within the plunger is also the same as previously, although the plunger construction is simplified. A special issue with this pump is closing the liquid discharge valve for shipping purposes. The need to do this is avoided by instead closing the liquid inlet port by means of an end enlargement


842


on the end of a port closing rod


86


. This rod extends up to a snap engagement in the bottom mouth of the plunger stem


13


. With the plunger


1


urged up by the spring, the rod


86


is pulled up and holds the liquid inlet port shut. When the plunger is first depressed, its stem mouth snaps out of the groove at the head


861


of the port closer rod


86


and dispensing can proceed.




With reference to

FIGS. 12

to


17


, a fifth embodiment of dispensing system comprises a foam-generating dispenser


1


,


10


, secured by a threaded cap


95


onto the neck of a container


91


.




The construction of the foam dispensing pump is generally as described in the first embodiment above. Thus, the pump body element provides two coaxial cylinder portions, a lower liquid cylinder


121


defining a liquid pump chamber


127


and an upper, larger-diameter air cylinder defining an air chamber


126


. Correspondingly the plunger


1


carries two pistons, an inner liquid piston


122


and an outer air piston


125


working in their respective cylinders. Liquid from the liquid chamber (which has a conventional ball inlet valve


129


) is pumped up the hollow stem


124


of the liquid piston to a foam generating area


128


where it emerges as fine jets. In the same stroke of the pump, air is forced from the air chamber


126


through the air outlet valve


1212


. A core component


143


encloses the foam-generating region where the pumped air and liquid meet and are forced together up through a foam-regulating element having upper and lower meshes


142


,


141


. This element is seated in the discharge channel


134


of the plunger head, which leads vertically up to the top of the plunger and then sideways to a spout


132


.




The precise details of the plunger


1


are not critical, but the following are relevant. Firstly, the top of the plunger is a one-piece moulded element having a central tubular extension


133


providing the discharge passage and an outer cylindrical shroud


131


, with an interior space


136


between them around the central tube


133


and the foam-generating core


143


. The air piston


125


is snapped sealingly into the bottom of this plunger shroud


131


at a joint


138


. The air intake valve


146


for the air pump therefore opens from the interior space


136


of the plunger.




The outer surface of the shroud


131


fits closely through the central hole of the securing cap


95


, which has a sealing lip


151


to ensure a seal. The dispenser is designed for use in the shower and this seal keeps falling water out of the pump.




Other components shown are a dip tube


94


from the pump inlet down into the container and a cover cap


107


.




Supply of air into the air cylinder


126


is from the plunger interior


136


, so it is important to allow air into that interior space. At the same time it is important to keep water out of it, since any such water will accumulate in the air cylinder


126


and gradually spoil foam production.




To this end we provide a special conformation of the plunger top as is now described. The top (integral) wall


137


of the plunger casing slopes down towards the rear. A discrete moulded plastics cover element


156


is clipped onto it by means of downward prongs


161


fitting tightly in corresponding sockets


130


of the plunger casing. The top face of the plunger casing is slightly recessed inside a peripheral rim


1310


(see FIG.


15


). The cover


156


fits down closely inside this to form a smooth exterior contour. At the rear of the plunger top the rim


1310


is interrupted by a notch


172


. The cover


156


has a rearward lug


166


which fits into this notch, covering it from above but not blocking off its rear opening.




With reference to

FIGS. 15

to


17


, the top surface of the top wall


137


of the plunger has two curved grooves


171


which communicate with the rear notch


172


and lead forward from it in a curve around to either side of the region above the discharge channel tube


133


. These grooves do not penetrate the top wall except at their forward extremities where each has a through hole


173


communicating with the plunger's interior space


136


. The underside of the cover


156


has a smooth surface closely complementing the top of the plunger wall


137


except at these grooves


171


, where the cover is plain and acts as a lid to form closed channels leading between the cover and plunger wall


137


forward from the rear notch


172


to each of the front through-openings


173


.




By this means there is a substantial venting capacity to the interior space


136


of the plunger, enabling operation of the foam-generating pump's air cylinder


126


. Because the external opening


172


of the vent is at the rear of the button between two components (which may for example be colour-contrasting) it is visually unobtrusive. Because the channels


171


between the entry openings


172


and the actual through-holes


173


are relatively narrow and elongate, the chance of water getting right through is small. Because the channels slope back to the entry opening


172


, any water that does get in almost inevitably drains away before reaching the entry holes


173


.




There is a container vent hole


1211


through the wall of the air cylinder. This hole


1211


is closed by the air piston in its rest position i.e. the upward position, towards which it is biased by a pump spring


123


.




Because in this embodiment the plunger shroud


131


is sealed by the lip


151


in the cap


95


, and the air cylinder inlet


146


is the only way out of the plunger's interior space, compensation air for the container interior does not come through the plunger. Instead, a small localised notch


1213


in the cap underside provides a leak between the space below the cap and the threaded engagement region between the cap and the outside of the container neck. Sufficient air can pass here from the outside down to the hole


1211


to compensate for the relatively small volume of liquid dispensed in each stroke.





FIGS. 18

,


19


show details of the venting of the internal plunger space of a further embodiment, whose plunger head has a large, rounded top surface


237


designed for palm actuation. The top of the main plunger element has a shallow circular depression


2378


with a central upstanding cylindrical socket


2371


. A pair of vent holes


273


is provided through the top wall of the plunger head to the internal cavity thereof, to either side of the plunger course leave in this central region. A domed, circular cover element


206


has a downward central stud


2062


by which it clips into the socket


2371


to cover the circular area


2378


with its through-holes


273


. This cover element


206


, which preferably has a colour contrast with the remainder of the plunger, provides a runoff for water which lands on the plunger top while at the same time leaving a small annular crack around its periphery through which venting air can easily enter the plunger interior via the holes


273


, for refilling the air cylinder after each foam-dispensing stroke. Other elements of the dispenser are substantially as seen previously.





FIG. 20

describes a further embodiment, again corresponding in general respects to the embodiment of

FIG. 1

but with the following significant differences.




Firstly, the plunger is adapted to cover the air vent as in the previous two embodiments. In this embodiment the cover element


406


is not a mere adjunct but rather constitutes the entire top of the plunger


1


, comprising in an integral one-piece whole the discharge nozzle


412


, top plunger wall with its rearwardly-inclined surface and finger-engagement depression, a downward central core sleeve portion


411


which forms the top part of the housing for the permeable filter element


81


, and a downward short outer skirt


4063


. This outer skirt


4063


is a tight snap fit into the top of the main cylindrical tubular wall


5


of the plunger cap. The outer tubular wall


5


is molded in one piece, via a lower bridge having vent apertures


314


, with the upwardly-projecting tubular wall or sleeve


32


that compliments the downward sleeve


411


to enclose the mesh module


81


. This avoids increasing the component count. The rear of the downward skirt


4063


of the cover plug


406


is interrupted by a narrow notch


4064


which in the assembled plunger cap aligns with an exterior shaped notch


511


adjacent the top rim of the tubular wall


51


, to the rear side. The rear edge of the cover plug


406


has an overhang


421


which slides down over this notch but at a clearance, so that the vent channel is defined between the two components to extend upwardly from its rear entry opening, over the top edge of the wall


5


via a small clearance and into the cap interior via the notch


4064


. From the cap interior, the air can reach the air cylinder inlet valve (which is as in the previous embodiments) via the vent apertures


314


.




Another feature in this embodiment is that the simple open tubular formation of the plunger wall


5


enables the lower edge of the this tube to be moulded with an integral radaial flange


52


. This flange retains the plunger more securely in the pump, by engagement beneath the edge of the securing cap. There is a slight variation also in the splined plug


31


which fits into the liquid discharge passage to provide a liquid discharge in the form of an essentially tubular high-velocity curtain flow. Here the plug


31


is a discrete component fitting into the top of the liquid discharge stem. As before the air discharge is brought in to impinge radially inwardly on this curtain flow before the mixed flows rise through the meshes.




A further modification relates to venting of the container to compensate for dispensed liquid. In the embodiment of

FIG. 1

this venting was by way of the small opening


109


through the air cylinder


101


, intended to be covered in the rest condition by the air piston. In practice such a hole may allow liquid to escape between the plunger sleeve and threaded retaining cap, or into the air cylinder, particularly if the container is tipped. Thus, the present embodiment allows venting instead between the threads of the container neck


92


and the retaining collar. Leakage is avoided by an elastomeric gasket


199


trapped beneath the pump body flange and the container neck edge. Such a gasket is conventionally used and would normally prevent venting, but in this variant the container body flange has a localized vent opening


1001


and the gasket


199


has a thinner, more flexible inner flange projecting out to cover this opening to form a vent valve. Under normal conditions this keeps air out and prevents escape of liquid with the bottle tipped. Negative pressure in the container after dispensing draws air in by flexing the lip


299


.



Claims
  • 1. A foam dispenser comprising a combined liquid pump and air pump for mounting at the top of a container of foamable liquid, the liquid pump having a liquid cylinder and a liquid piston defining between them a liquid chamber, the air pump having an air cylinder and an air piston defining between them an air chamber, and the liquid piston and air piston being reciprocable together in their respective cylinders by the action of a pump plunger which carries said pistons;an air inlet valve and liquid inlet valve being provided for the air chamber and liquid chamber respectively; an air discharge passage and a liquid discharge passage leading from the air chamber and the liquid chamber respectively, the air discharge passage and liquid discharge passage meeting one another for combinations of pumped flows of air and liquid and passing to an outlet passage and foam discharge opening of the dispenser by way of a permeable foam regulation element; and wherein the pump plunger comprises a core sleeve in surrounding relation to the outlet passage, a foam discharge nozzle, defining said foam discharge opening, and an outer cap shroud having an outer skirt which extends down and connects fixedly to the air piston adjacent a peripheral seal of the air piston so as to define an internal cap chamber above a roof of the air piston and enclosing the air inlet valve and the outer cap shroud has one or more external vent openings separate from the foam discharge opening to admit air to the cap chamber for drawing into the air chamber through the air inlet valve.
  • 2. A foam dispenser according to claim 1 in which the air cylinder, the liquid cylinder and their respective pistons are arranged concentrically around the plunger axis.
  • 3. A foam dispenser according to claim 1 in which the air piston comprises an outer sleeve portion which carries the peripheral seal of the piston, and the air inlet valve comprises a radially-inwardly-projecting flexible valve flap formed integrally with the outer sleeve portion of the air piston.4.A foam dispenser according to claim 3 in which an air inlet valve seat relative to which the air inlet valve flap is flexible is a downwardly-directed edge on said core sleeve.
  • 5. A foam dispenser according to claim 3 in which the air discharge passage extends up inside the plunger's core sleeve alongside the liquid discharge passage, and the core sleeve carries an air outlet valve seat and an air outlet valve flap constituting the air outlet valve.
  • 6. A foam dispenser according to claim 4 in which a plunger core sleeve portion having said downwardly-directed edge of the air inlet valve seat also comprises the flexible flap of an air outlet valve.
  • 7. A foam dispenser according to claim 6 in which the air outlet valve flap is a radially-projecting flap in axial register with the air inlet valve flap.
  • 8. A foam dispenser according to claim 1 in which the core sleeve has upper and lower parts which fit together to define a housing enclosing the permeable foam regulation element.
  • 9. A foam dispenser according to claim 1 in which the permeable foam regulation element comprises a cylindrical sleeve with a first mesh across its lower end and a second mesh across its upper end, the first mesh being coarser than the second mesh.
  • 10. A foam dispenser according to claim 1 in which the plunger's outer cap shroud includes a discrete cover element overlying said one or more vent openings.
  • 11. A foam dispenser according to claim 10 in which a vent path is defined between opposed surfaces of the discrete cover element and a further element of the plunger cap shroud onto which it is secured.
  • 12. A foam dispenser according to claim 11 in which the discrete cover element comprises a top lid incorporating said foam discharge nozzle for the dispenser, secured to a lower element of the plunger in such a manner as to put said discharge nozzle in communication with said outlet passage.
  • 13. A foam dispenser according to claim 11 in which the vent path is elongate.
  • 14. A foam dispenser according to claim 11 in which the vent path is tortuous.
  • 15. A foam dispenser according to claim 11 in which the discrete cover element is laminar, and comprises integral fasteners to secure it to a main casing of the plunger's outer cap shroud.
  • 16. A foam dispenser according to claim 10 in which the discrete cover element is on top of the plunger.
  • 17. A foam dispenser according to claim 16 in which the cover element provides a top region of the plunger sloping down to the rear thereof, with said external vent openings at the rear of plunger, opening below a rear edge of the cover element.
  • 18. A foam dispenser comprising a combined liquid pump and air pump for mounting at the top of a container of foamable liquid, the liquid pump having a liquid cylinder and a liquid piston defining between them a liquid chamber, the air pump having an air cylinder and an air piston defining between them an air chamber, and the liquid piston and air piston being reciprocable together in their respective cylinders by the action of a pump plunger which carries said pistons;an air inlet valve and liquid inlet valve being provided for the air chamber and liquid chamber respectively; an air discharge passage and a liquid discharge passage leading from the air chamber and the liquid chamber respectively, the air discharge passage and liquid discharge passage meeting one another for combinations of pumped flows of air and liquid and passing to an outlet passage of the dispenser by way of a permeable foam regulation element; and wherein the pump plunger comprises a core sleeve in surrounding relation to the outlet passage and an outer cap shroud having an outer skirt which extends down and connects fixedly to the air piston adjacent a peripheral seal of the air piston so as to define an internal cap chamber above a roof of the air piston and enclosing the air inlet valve, the air piston comprising an outer sleeve portion which carries the peripheral seal of the piston, and the air inlet valve comprising a radially-inwardly-projecting flexible valve flap formed integrally with the outer sleeve portion of the air piston.
  • 19. A foam dispenser according to claim 18 in which the air cylinder, the liquid cylinder and their respective pistons are arranged concentrically around the plunger axis.
  • 20. A foam dispenser according to claim 18 in which an air inlet valve seat relative to which the air inlet valve flap is flexible is a downwardly-directed edge on said core sleeve.
  • 21. A foam dispenser according to claim 20 in which the air discharge passage extends up inside the plunger's core sleeve alongside the liquid discharge passage, and the core sleeve carries an air outlet valve seat and an air outlet valve flap constituting the air outlet valve.
  • 22. A foam dispenser according to claim 20 in which a plunger core sleeve portion having said downwardly-directed edge of the air inlet valve seat also comprises the seat of an air outlet valve.
  • 23. A foam dispenser according to claim 22 in which the air outlet valve flap is a radially-projecting flap in axial register with the air inlet valve flap.
  • 24. A foam dispenser according to claim 18 in which the core sleeve has upper and lower parts which fit together to define a housing enclosing the permeable foam regulation element.
  • 25. A foam dispenser according to claim 18 in which the permeable foam regulation element comprises a cylindrical sleeve with a first mesh across its lower end and a second mesh across its upper end, the first mesh being coarser than the second mesh.
  • 26. A foam dispenser comprising a combined liquid pump and air pump for mounting at the top of a container of foamable liquid, the liquid pump having a liquid cylinder and a liquid piston defining between them a liquid chamber, the air pump having an air cylinder and an air piston defining between them an air chamber, and the liquid piston and air piston being reciprocable together in their respective cylinders by the action of a pump plunger which carries said pistons and defines an outlet passage and foam discharge opening;an air inlet valve and liquid inlet valve being provided for the air chamber and liquid chamber respectively; an air discharge passage and a liquid discharge passage leading from the air chamber and the liquid chamber respectively, the air discharge passage and liquid discharge passage meeting one another for combinations of pumped flows of air and liquid which pass to the outlet passage and foam discharge opening of the dispenser by way of a permeable foam regulation element; and wherein the pump plunger comprises a plunger casing comprising an outer cap shroud which defines an internal cap chamber communicating with the air inlet valve, the plunger casing having one or more vent openings, separate from the outlet passage, to admit outside air to the cap chamber for drawing into the air chamber through the air inlet valve, the plunger further comprising a discrete top cover element which overlies the one or more vent openings.
  • 27. A foam dispenser according to claim 26 in which a vent channel extending from the vent opening to the internal cap chamber is entirely defined between opposed surfaces of the cover element and a plunger casing part onto which the cover element is secured.
  • 28. A foam dispenser according to claim 26 in which a venting clearance is defined between the discrete cover element and a plunger casing part onto which the cover element is secured, and a vent path from the vent opening to the internal cap chamber is defined through an external entry opening, defined on one side by an edge of the cover element, then through said venting clearance between the discrete cover element and said plunger casing part, and then through at least one opening leading through said plunger casing part into the internal cap chamber.
Priority Claims (2)
Number Date Country Kind
0022700 Sep 2000 GB
0105003 Feb 2001 GB
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