This invention relates generally to flexible packages for flowable materials and more particularly to fitments, in the form of closure systems, for such packages, packages including such fitments, method of filling such packages on a form-fill-seal machine and methods of dispensing flowable materials from such packages.
“Bag-in Box” Technology for filling larger pouches and bags with liquid products has existed for many years. This technology has evolved over the years to allow many products to be filled in a variety of bag sizes and formats. However, the main requirement of the Bag-in-Box system is a fitment (spout assembly) which is used primarily as an entryway or port to allow a passageway for products to be forced into the package. To accomplish this, the fitment assemblies must be large enough in size the allow products to be pumped through them at a rate which allows for meaningful production rates. In the largest majority of applications, the fitment assembly's sole purpose is to be this conduit for filling.
Over the years, applications for bags and pouches filled with liquid products have evolved to meet demand in the “dispensing” industry whereby liquid products such as diary creamer, liquid yogurt, beverages and even industrial chemicals etc., are first filled into a pouch or bags with a fitment and then after distribution are—at the point of use—connected via a specially designed fitment to a dispensing machine or device.
One major example of such pouches in commercial use is found in the soft drink beverage syrup industry where large 2.5 gallon (and even five gallon bags) are filled through the spout of a specially designed fitment assembly which also contains the necessary features to allow it to be connected to a pump-out system which draws the proper amount of syrup from the package to create a soft drink beverage.
The Bag-In-Box industry has further evolved its offering to include systems which can fill aseptic products. This is accomplished through the use of properly designed filling equipment which can be rendered commercially sterile under the FDA guidelines within CFR113 and CFR114. For such applications fitment assemblies are utilized which incorporate a flanged tubular base (spout) and a cap assembly to close off the base. The fitment assembly is heat sealed to a pre-made bag such that the seal between the bag and fitment assembly creates a hermetic barrier to the ambient atmosphere. The entire bag unit then is exposed to gamma radiation (e.g., cobalt 60) to render it commercially sterile on all of its internal surfaces. Bag filling is then accomplished on the automated equipment by re-sterilizing the exterior surfaces of the fitment assembly and then inserting the fitment assembly into a sterile chamber integral to the filling machine. Inside the sterile chamber a gripper pulls a sealing cap portion of the cap assembly off of the spout and then inserts a filling valve into the spout. The filling valve is opened and product dispensed into the bag. When the proper fill volume is reached, the filling valve is removed from the spout and the sealing cap is reinserted onto the spout, capping or “corking” the spout closed. The filled bag is then released to the next steps of production.
Examples of prior art packages making use of the aforementioned technology are found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,357,277 (Verespej et al.), 7,387,220 (Verespej et al.), and U.S. Published Applications 2006/0249536 (Hartman et al.), 2009/0212078 (Gaus), and 2010/0133273 (Thurman et al.).
Recently, Fres-co System USA, Inc., the assignee of this invention, has developed a Bag-In-Box fitment assembly known as the “FRES-CAP”™ assembly, which is shown in
The FRES-CAP”™ assembly is designed to not only allow for filling of the pre-made bags under aseptic conditions, but also to mate up with equipment at a user's location, e.g., a fast food restaurant. To accomplish this, the FRES-CAP”™ assembly (and other assemblies like it) include a passage through the cap body which allows for insertion and retention of the slit valve 2. The slit valve contains as a feature of its manufacture a series of cuts through its face which allow it to be penetrated by a dispensing probe (e.g., a tubular member, like that shown in
The removable cover 4 is disposed above the molded silicone slit valve and includes a post or pillar 6 which extends downward from its undersurface to a point immediately adjacent the portion of the valve 2 containing the slits. This post provides support to area of the molded silicone slit valve to prevent or reduce the incidence of the slit valve being deformed after sterile product has been filled into the package. Deformation of the slit valve after filling would cause the contents of the bag to be allowed to pass through the slits or cuts, thus creating a breach of the sterile barrier within the fitment assembly.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that while Bag-In-Box technology is successful and suitable for its intended purposes. It nevertheless leaves much to be desired. In particular, it does not lend itself to high filling rates given that the flowable product introduced into the package must enter it through the spout. In aseptic applications, Bag-in-Box systems are even slower, given the exterior of the fitment assembly must be sterilized before the cap can be removed for filling. Most commercial sterilization systems for Bag-in-Box fitments require exposure to atmospheric steam (210 degrees F.) for about 10 seconds which yields cycle rates of approximately 6 bags per minute.
Thus, a need exists for a closure system which can be used on a flexible package produced and filled on a form-fill-seal machine so that the filling of the packages does not have to occur through the fitment. That fitment should be arranged to be opened when desired to accommodate a conventional dispensing probe to effect the dispensing of the package's contents. Moreover, the production and filling of the flexible package and the securement of the fitment to the package should be able to be accomplished under aseptic conditions. The subject invention provides a closure assembly in the form of a fitment that addresses those needs.
All references cited and/or identified herein are specifically incorporated by reference herein.
One aspect of this invention entails a dispensing closure system for a flexible package holding a flowable product. The package, e.g., a pouch, has a wall portion including an openable port (e.g., a perforated or otherwise weakened portion of the wall of the package) to the interior of the package. The dispensing closure system comprises a body member, a resilient dispensing valve, and retainer assembly. The body member is arranged to be fixedly secured to the wall of the package, whereupon the cylindrical sidewall encircles the openable port. The resilient dispensing valve is located within the sidewall and held in place by the retainer assembly. The retainer assembly comprises a retaining member and a cap integrally connected to each other by a frangible connection. The retaining member is arranged to engage an interior portion of the sidewall to hold the resilient dispensing valve in place over the openable port, with the cap being disposed over and covering the resilient dispensing valve. The cap includes a first portion, (e.g., a ring-like handle) which may be grasped to break the frangible connection and thereby remove the cap from the retaining member to expose the resilient dispensing valve. The resilient dispensing valve is openable to enable a dispensing probe to be extended therethrough and through the openable port into the interior of the package to enable the product in the package to be dispensed therefrom.
Another aspect of this invention entails a package have the dispensing closure system such as described above.
Still another aspect of this invention entails a method of forming, filling and sealing a flexible package with a flowable product. The method may be conducted under aseptic conditions and comprises forming a package having a hollow interior from a flexible sheet material on a form, fill and seal machine. The package comprises a wall portion including an openable port to the interior of the package. The interior of the package is filled with the flowable product before sealing the package. The openable port is initially closed to prevent the egress of the flowable product therethrough when the package is filled and sealed. A dispensing closure system is provided for the package. The dispensing closure system comprises a hollow body member, a resilient dispensing valve, and retainer assembly. The retainer assembly comprises a retaining member (e.g., a ring) and a cap integrally connected to each other by a frangible connection. The retaining member holds the resilient dispensing valve in the hollow body with the cap being disposed over and covering the resilient dispensing valve. The cap includes a first portion (e.g., a ring-like handle) which may be grasped to break the frangible connection and thereby remove the cap from the retaining member to expose the resilient dispensing valve. The dispensing closure system is secured to the wall of the package, whereupon the hollow body member encircles the openable port and the resilient dispensing valve is disposed over the openable port, with the cap isolating the resilient dispensing valve from the ambient atmosphere.
Packages constructed in accordance with this invention may be utilized to dispense their flowable contents by grasping the first portion of the cap to break the frangible connection so that the cap can be removed from the retaining member to expose the resilient dispensing valve. A dispensing probe (or other tubular member) can then be extended through the resilient dispensing valve and into engagement with the openable port in the wall of the package to cause that port to open, whereupon the dispensing probe can pass therethrough into the interior of the package. The flowable material can then be made to flow out of the package through the dispensing probe.
Referring now to the various figures of the drawing wherein like reference characters refer to like parts, there is shown in
The fitment 20 is arranged to be secured onto an exterior portion of the wall 22 of a package formed, filled and sealed on a form-fill-seal machine (not shown). Before describing the details of the construction and operation of the fitment 20, a brief description of the flexible package is in order. To that end, the wall of the package can be formed of any suitable flexible material, e.g., a film, having one or more plies or layers of one or more types of materials, e.g., plastics, foils, etc. An openable port 24 is provided in one of the walls of the package. The fitment 20 is arranged to be secured to a portion of the wall of the package which includes the openable port 24 since it will be through that port that the contents of the package are accessed for dispensing. Three exemplary embodiments of a myriad of possible embodiments of an openable port 24 are shown in
Turning now to
In order to hold the resilient valve 28 in place and provide a bias to it so that its slits 40 remain closed the heretofore identified retainer assembly 30 is provided. That assembly is preferably an integrally molded unit that basically comprises a retaining ring 42 and a cover or cap 44 connected to each other by a frangible connection (e.g., circular line) 46. The retaining ring portion of the assembly 30 is a ring-like member having an outer surface 48 that is arranged to be disposed (e.g., snap-fit) under a lip 50 extending slightly radially inward from the inner surface of the sidewall 32, whereupon the peripheral portion 38 of the valve 28 is tightly interposed between the retaining ring 42 and the ledge 36.
The cap 44 is a generally planar disk-like member of circular shape. The outer peripheral edge portion of the cap tapers downward in thickness in the outward radial directions, as best seen in
The use of the package 20 to dispense its contents will now be described with reference to
As should be appreciated from the foregoing, because the fitment 20 of this invention need not include a means to effect the filling of the package though the fitment the molded slit valve 28 can be retained within the main body of what is in effect the spout portion of the fitment. Further, the retaining ring 42 which applies circumferential force to both hold and provide sealing pressure to the slit valve sealing surface is designed to include a means of access for the end user of the package. In particular, the retainer assembly 30 is preferably molded with a “tear-out” section, i.e., the cap 44, and a means of grasping it, i.e., the handle 54, to tear out this circular section. This construction creates several improvements over existing Bag-in-Box fitment assemblies. For example, because the retaining ring and tear out access cap are molded as in integral component and are connected to each other by a frangible connection, e.g., line 46, the assembly 30 will create a hermetic seal which eliminates the need for an addition safety cover over the spout portion (i.e., body 26) of fitment assembly.
It should be pointed out at this juncture that while the exemplary disclosed embodiment of the fitment 20 of this invention includes a center support post 52 to ensure that the slits 40 in the valve remain closed to prevent leakage (seepage) therethrough, such an arrangement is not mandatory. In fact, it is contemplated that the center support post of the cap 44 can be eliminated altogether from the fitment 20, given that the combination of the cap 44 and the retaining ring 42, itself, serves as the hermetic barrier to both internal pressures and to the ambient atmosphere.
It should also be noted that the method by which packages incorporating the fitment of this invention are produced also constitutes another aspect of this invention (as es the method of removing the contents of the package). With respect to the former, because the aseptic form-fill-seal machine produces packages with film that has been rendered commercially sterile the fitment assembly of this invention can be applied (heat sealed) to the film in line. Further, the fitment's construction lends itself to be sterilized from the back side (i.e., its flange side) prior to sealing it to the outer surface of a portion of the wall of the pouch or bag. To that end, it is envisioned that prior to sealing the fitment to the sterile pouch material that the film making up the pouch would be pre-cut, or pre-slit such that the film section directly beneath the fitment would open to the sterilized internal section of the fitment. Some examples of such pre-cuts are shown in
Without further elaboration the foregoing will so fully illustrate my invention that others may, by applying current or future knowledge, adopt the same for use under various conditions of service.
This application claims priority from Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/434,633, filed on Jan. 20, 2011, entitled Dispensing Closure System, Flexible Package with a Dispensing Closure System, Method of Filling the Same by a Form-Fill-Seal Machine and Method of Dispensing a Flowable Product from said Package, which application is assigned to the same assignee as this application and whose disclosure is incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61434633 | Jan 2011 | US |