The invention relates to a dispensing container for liquid or flowable goods, comprising a container wall, a container base, a container lid having an outlet, and a removal insert for dispensing portions of goods from the dispensing container, and a method for handling the dispensing container.
Dispensing containers are known in the form of refillable sugar dispensers, and have a screw-on lid together with a central dispensing tube whose lower end projects into the container and which may be inclined. A portion of sugar may be removed by tipping the container, provided that the level in the container is above this portioning opening. However, it is not possible to completely empty the container.
A refillable measuring container having a conical shape is known from DE 26 01 491 A, having a channel with an outlet opening, which extends upwardly from the base of the container, for dispensing a powdered food product. A measuring cylinder having sector-shaped divisions is connected to the container in order to deliver a metered portion of dispensed goods to the channel when the container is tipped. In one exemplary embodiment, a closure cap having a discharge opening is provided above the outlet opening in the container, and may be aligned with the outlet opening in order to dispense goods. However, sealed storage of the goods without loss of flavor is not possible.
A refillable tilting container for dispensing a portion of goods is known from DE 201 06 891 U1, having two closure caps placed one inside the other, the upper cap being rotatable and being provided with a curved outlet tube, while the lower closure cap has an outlet opening which may be aligned with the outlet tube. To minimize interspaces, a sealing plate having an outlet opening is situated between the two closure caps; this outlet opening is aligned with the outlet opening in the lower closure cap, and therefore is not able to seal this outlet opening. Thus, sealed storage of goods is not possible.
A dispensing container having complete emptying of goods is known from WO 2006/125604 A1. The container wall is either cylindrical or has a basic four-sided polyhedral shape. In the case of a cylindrical dispensing container, an outlet is provided in the container lid, near the edge of the container wall, from which the removal insert extends to near the container base. Before the goods are used, the outlet is suitably closed by a lid, tear-off film, or the like, and is opened in order to remove the goods. However, there is no subsequent protection, for example evaporation protection or protection against penetration of atmospheric oxygen, after opening the container.
A container is known from US 2004/0256421 A1, having mutually alignable dispensing openings which are provided in an inner lid that is fixedly connected to the container, and in an outer, rotatable lid. The inner lid has an annular wall which is situated in the container opening in a sealing manner. The outer lid overlaps the inner lid and also the container neck, which has a detent rib which engages in a groove in the outer lid. The edge of the outer lid is formed by a tear-off tamper-evident band. The outlet opening in the inner lid is surrounded by a lip seal which cooperates with the underside of the outer lid in the closed position of the container. When the opening in the outer lid is rotated over the opening in the inner lid, goods may be poured from the container. However, metered dispensing of goods is not possible.
A dispensing container is known from U.S. Pat. No. 2,704,623 which is composed of a cylindrical container body, a screw-on lid, and a dispensing tube provided with a funnel. The funnel occupies the base of the container, and has radial slits which allow the goods to pass into the funnel, and thus into the dispensing tube. The screw-on lid has a central outlet opening which aligns with the outlet tube, a pour opening at the edge, and a group of sprinkling openings which communicate with the interior of the container outside the outlet tube and outside the funnel. A rotary disk having a dispensing opening is rotatably supported on the top side of the lid in order to overlap the dispensing opening with the central opening, or with the pour opening, or with the group of sprinkling openings, thus determining the manner in which the goods are dispensed. When the dispensing opening is not overlapped by an opening in the screw-on lid, a closed position of the dispensing container is achieved which, however, is not aroma-tight.
It is an object of the invention to provide a dispensing container in the form of a dispenser which is fillable as originally manufactured.
A further object of the invention is to appropriately design the dispenser for the original filling using customary, existing automatic filling machines.
A further object of the invention is to ensure gas- and aroma-tight enclosure of the goods in the dispenser.
A further object of the invention is to be able to quickly close the dispensing container after removing goods from it.
According to yet a further object of the invention, the evaporation of the goods and the penetration of atmospheric oxygen into the container are largely avoided.
According to the invention, a dispenser is provided in which an outlet opening is provided in the container lid which is opened by pulling off a sealing membrane. A rotary slide lid having a removal opening is clipped onto the container lid and aligned with the outlet opening in the container lid. A portion of goods is dispensed by tilting the dispenser. The rotary slide lid is rotated into a position in which the outlet opening in the container lid is hermetically sealed.
In particular, the dispenser includes a container body, a container lid, a sealing membrane, a removal tube, a rotary slide lid, and optionally a tamper-proof seal. The container body has a container wall and a container base, and at the upper end is provided with an opening that is surrounded by a crimped edge. The container lid has a so-called lid panel which is surrounded by a crimped edge, and in which an outlet opening and optionally also a filling opening are provided. A tear-off tab of the sealing membrane may be pulled off from the outlet opening. The lower end of the removal tube has a removal funnel near the container base, and at the upper end is connected to the outlet opening in the container lid. The rotary slide lid has a removal opening which may be brought into and out of alignment with the outlet opening in the container lid by rotating the rotary slide lid. For this purpose, the rotary slide lid has a guide edge which cooperates with the interlocking ring, composed of the folded edges of the container body and the container lid, in the sense of a detent connection and a rotary guide. The rotary slide lid has a sealing collar which extends around the removal opening and which, depending on the design of the sealing membrane, rests on the lid panel or the sealing membrane in a sealing manner in order to close the dispenser in an aroma-tight manner in the closed position, and in the open position to allow the removal of goods via the removal tube, the outlet opening, the broken or removed sealing membrane, and the removal opening.
Further particulars of the invention result from the claims and the following description of exemplary embodiments in conjunction with the drawings.
a shows an enlarged detail from
a shows an enlarged detail from
In
The container lid 2 (see
With reference to
The rotary slide lid 5 (see
The dispenser is assembled from its individual parts as follows:
The container body 1 is provided. The removal tube 4 is fastened to the container lid 2, thus connecting the tube interior 41 to the outlet opening 21. The container lid 2 with the removal tube 4 fastened thereto is placed as an insert into the opening 10 in the container body 1, and the flanged edge 24 together with its sealing compound is brought into the opening 10 for sealing purposes. The removal tube 4 finds a natural hold at the container base 12 in which the lower edge 42a of the removal tube engages in the groove 16a at the container base. The folding edges 15 and 25 are then folded to form the interlocking ring 15/25.
The dispenser is prepared for filling with liquid or pourable goods in such a way that filling occurs through the filling opening 22. The sealing membrane 3 is then placed on the lid panel 20, with the tear-off tab 32 aligning with the outlet opening 21, and is sealed, thus closing the openings 21 and 22 in a gas-tight manner. The rotary slide lid 5 is then placed on the shoulder formed by the interlocking ring 15/25 in order to engage behind same. A rotary position of the rotary slide lid 5 is preferably selected such that the sealing collar 52 surrounds the tear-off tab and is aligned with the outlet opening 21. As the last step, the tamper-proof seal 6 may also be placed over the rotary slide lid 5.
For liquid or soft goods, the container body 1 may first be filled, after which the removal tube 4 is pushed into the filled material until it reaches the base 12 of the container. The container lid 2 together with the removal tube 4 is mounted on the container body 1. It is possible to attach the sealing membrane 3 to the underside of the lid 2 beforehand, and to use the edge region of the sealing membrane 3 for sealing between the container lid and the container body. In this embodiment the filling opening 22 is omitted, since filling is possible through the main opening 10.
The handling of the dispenser proceeds as follows:
After the tamper-proof seal 6 is removed, access is gained to the tip 33 of the tear-off tab 32, so that the tear-off opening 31 in the sealing membrane 3 may be exposed. The goods removal channel, which is formed by the interior 41 of the removal tube 4 and by the outlet opening 21 as well as the removal opening 51, is thus opened. The liquid, flowable, or pourable goods are removed by tipping and tilting the container body 1, as is known for sugar dispensers. A metered quantity of material is dispensed in each case.
By turning the rotary slide lid 5 having the removal opening 51 around the region of the lid panel 20, the outlet opening 21 is closed in a sealing manner by the sealing collar 52, so that the remaining goods in the dispenser remain protected from external effects.
A filling opening 17 is provided in the container base 12 for filling the container 1 in a reverse orientation compared to the illustration in
Reference is made to
After the container 1 is filled, the tapering insertion section 71 of the stopper 7 is pushed into the filling opening 17 until the edge of the lid opening engages in the groove 72. The sealing effect results from the contact of the shoulder between the insertion section and the groove at the edge of the opening 17, and is increased by internal pressure in the container. Due to the curvature of the base 12, the container remains closed even when considerable internal pressure is present in the container, since the opening 17 becomes smaller when there is decreased curvature as the result of internal pressure. The stopper 7 is therefore also suitable for closing containers which have been filled with goods under gas pressure.
For cost reasons, containers having increasingly thinner walls are finding more frequent use. Such thin-walled containers may be reinforced by means of internal pressure. This option is useful when the container is filled with pourable bulk material. During the filling a dry inert gas such as liquid nitrogen is introduced, which after evaporation creates the stabilizing internal pressure and also provides a degree of oxidation protections.
Instead of a stopper, the filling opening 17 may also be closed using a pressure shock-resistant welded film 8. The welded film 8 is welded to the underside of the dome-shaped container base using a suitable welding method, for example ultrasonic welding or heating element welding. Welded films having sufficient barrier properties against gas or loss of flavor are used in the packaging of certain foods.
Since the filling opening 17 is attached to the container base 12 in the embodiment according to
Stops 57 and 58 are also provided on the rotary slide lid 5, and a stop 27 is provided on the container lid 2, for more convenient handling of the rotary slide lid 5. The stops 27, 57, and 58 are situated at the same radial distance from the vertical axis of the container, and have an angular orientation such that in one stop position the removal opening 51 in the rotary slide lid 5 is aligned with the outlet opening 21 in the lid 2, while in the other stop position the removal opening 51 is outside the alignment with the outlet opening 21.
The advantage over containers which are hermetically sealable using a clamping lid is that the removal opening 51 is relatively small and the removal channel 41 is relatively long, so that the air exchange with the interior of the container during the removal process remains small compared to the known hermetically sealable containers, with the result that there is less loss of flavor and less penetration of atmospheric oxygen into the container. The rotary slide lid 5 also provides natural protection from improper removal of material, using a wet spoon, for example. A higher level of overall protection may be expected for sensitive container contents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2009 003 541.7 | Mar 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/001337 | 3/4/2010 | WO | 00 | 10/27/2011 |