1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to the field of containers. In particular the present invention is related to hot-fill containers.
2. Description of the Related Technology
In the past, containers used for the storage of products, such as beverages, were made of glass. Glass was used due to its transparency, its ability to maintain its structure and the ease of affixing labels to it. However, glass is fragile and heavy. This results in lost profits due to broken containers during shipping and storage caused by the usage of glass and additional costs due to the transportation of heavier materials.
Plastic containers are used more frequently today due to their durability and lightweight nature. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is used to construct many of today's containers. PET containers are lightweight, inexpensive, recyclable and manufacturable in large quantities.
PET containers are used for products, such as beverages. Often these liquid products, such as juices and isotonics, are placed into the containers while the liquid product is at an elevated temperature, typically between 68° C.-96° C. (155° F.-205° F.) and usually about 85° C. (185° F.). When packaged in this manner, the hot temperature of the liquid is used to sterilize the container at the time of filling. This process is known as hot-filling. The containers that are designed to withstand the process are known as hot-fill containers.
The use of blow molded plastic containers for packaging hot-fill beverages is well known. However, a container that is used in the hot-fill process is subject to additional stresses on the container that can result in the container failing during storage or handling or to be deformed in some manner. The sidewalls of the container can become deformed and/or collapse as the container is being filled with hot fluids. The rigidity of the container can decrease after the hot-fill liquid is introduced into the container.
After being hot-filled, the hot-filled containers are capped and allowed to reside at about the filling temperature for a predetermined amount of time. The containers and stored liquid may then be cooled so that the containers may be transferred to labeling, packaging and shipping operations. As the liquid stored in the container cools, thermal contraction occurs resulting in a reduction of volume. This results in the volume of liquid stored in the container being reduced. The reduction of liquid within the sealed container results in the creation of a negative pressure or vacuum within the container. If not controlled or otherwise accommodated for, these negative pressures result in deformation of the container which leads to either an aesthetically unacceptable container or one which is unstable. The container must be able to withstand such changes in pressure without failure.
The negative pressure within the container has typically been compensated for by the incorporation of flex panels in the sidewall of the container, Traditionally, these paneled areas have been semi-rigid by design and are unable to accommodate the high levels of negative pressure generated in some lightweight containers. Currently, hot-fill containers typically include substantially rectangular vacuum panels that are designed to collapse inwardly after the container has been filled with hot product. These flex panels are designed so that as the liquid cools, the flex panels will deform and move inwardly. The adjacent portions of the container, which are located between, above, and below the flex panels, are intended to resist any deformations which would otherwise be caused by hot-fill processing. Wall thickness variations, or geometric structures, such as ribs, projections and the like, can be utilized to prevent unwanted distortion. Generally, the typical hot-fillable container structure is provided with certain pre-defined areas which flex to accommodate volumetric changes and certain other pre-defined areas which remain unchanged.
An important aspect of creating a container that can withstand the hot-fill process without deformation is to create one with aesthetic. An increase in aesthetic appeal of a container improves sales of the product found within the container. However, certain aesthetic designs are difficult to incorporate into a hot-fill container due to the need to accommodate the negative pressure that occurs during the hot-fill process. Especially difficult is the incorporation of spherical features and certain types of labeling due to typical incorporation of strengthening measures. Therefore, a need exists to develop a hot-fillable container that can incorporate select features without compromising the usage of the features due to the need of strengthening structure.
An object of the present invention is a hot-fill container that has a dome shaped top portion.
Another object of the invention is a hot hot-fill container that has a waist portion that is adapted to support the domed shaped top portion on a hot-fill container.
Still yet another object of the invention is a hot-fill container having a groove located proximate to its base.
An aspect of the present invention may be a hot-fillable container comprising: a domed shaped top portion having a longitudinal axis; a waist portion located below the top portion, a body portion located below the waist portion; a base located below the body portion; and wherein a distance from the waist portion to the longitudinal axis is non-constant and a distance from the waist portion to the base portion is non-constant.
Another aspect of the present invention may be a hot-fillable container comprising: a domed shaped top portion; a waist portion located below the top portion, wherein the waist portion comprises four corners; a body portion located below the waist portion, wherein the body portion comprises four sides; a base located below the body portion; and wherein a distance from the corners of the waist portion to the base is greater than the distance from any other location on the waist portion to the base.
Still yet another aspect of the present invention may be a hot-fillable container comprising: a domed shaped top portion; a waist portion located below the top portion, wherein the waist portion forms a plurality of arcs; a body portion located below the waist portion, wherein the body portion is adapted to accommodate a hot-fill process; a circular base located below the body portion.
These and various other advantages and features of novelty that characterize the invention are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed hereto and forming a part hereof. However, for a better understanding of the invention, its advantages, and the objects obtained by its use, reference should be made to the drawings which form a further part hereof, and to the accompanying descriptive matter, in which there is illustrated and described a preferred embodiment of the invention.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate corresponding structure throughout the views,
The container 10 may be a one-piece construction and may be prepared from a monolayer plastic material, such as a polyamide, for example, nylon; a polyolefin such as polyethylene, for example, low density polyethylene (LDPE), high density polyethylene (HDPE), polypropylene, a polyester, for example, polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polyethylene naphtalate (PEN), or others, which may also include additives to vary the physical or chemical properties of the material. For example, some plastic resins may be modified to improve the oxygen permeability. Alternatively, the container may be prepared from a multilayer plastic material. The layers may be any plastic material, including virgin, recycled and reground material. The layers and may include plastics or other materials with additives to improve physical properties of the container. In addition to the above-mentioned materials, other materials often used in multilayer plastic containers include, for example, ethylvinyl alcohol (EVOH) and tie layers or binders to hold together materials that are subject to delamination when used in adjacent layers. A coating may be applied over the monolayer or multilayer material, for example to introduce oxygen barrier properties. In an exemplary embodiment, the present container is prepared from PET.
The container 10 is constructed to withstand the rigors of hot-fill processing. The container 10 may be made by a conventional blow molding processes including, for example, extrusion blow molding, stretch blow molding and injection blow molding. These molding processes are discussed briefly below.
For example, with extrusion blow molding, a molten tube of thermoplastic material, or plastic parison, is extruded between a pair of open blow mold halves. The blow mold halves close about the parison and cooperate to provide a cavity into which the parison is blown to form the container. As so formed, container 10 may include extra material, or flash, at the region where the molds come together. A moil may be intentionally present above the container finish.
After the mold halves open, the container 10 drops out and is then sent to a trimmer or cutter where any flash of moil attached to the container 10 is removed. The finished container 10 may have a visible ridge (not shown) formed where the two mold halves used to form the container came together. This ridge is often referred to as the parting line.
With stretch blow molding a pre-formed parison, or pre-form, is prepared from a thermoplastic material, typically by an injection molding process. The pre-form typically includes an opened, threaded end, which becomes the threaded member of the container 10. The pre-form is positioned between two open blow mold halves. The blow mold halves close about the pre-form and cooperate to provide a cavity into which the pre-form is blown to form the container. After molding, the mold halves open to release the container 10. For wide mouth containers, the container 10 may then be sent to a trimmer where the moil is removed.
With injection blow molding, a thermoplastic material may be extruded through a rod into an injection mold in order to form a parison. The parison is then positioned between two open blow mold halves. The blow mold halves close about the parison and cooperate to provide a cavity into which the parison may be blown to form the container 10. After molding, the mold halves open to release the container 10.
Plastic blow-molded containers, particularly those molded of PET, are utilized in hot-fill applications. Hot-filling involves filling the container 10 with a liquid product heated to a temperature in excess of 180° F. (i.e., 82° C.), capped immediately after filling, and then allowed to cool to ambient temperatures.
In the construction of containers it is important to keep the container's top load and hot-fill performance characteristics strong. The structural integrity of the container must be maintained after the hot-fill process. Furthermore, consideration must be made for preventing bulging of the container 10 that can occur with rectangular containers.
Now turning to
Located below the top portion 20 is the shoulder portion 16. The shoulder portion 16 merges the top portion 20 in to the body portion 30 and is recessed with respect to the outer surfaces of the top portion 20 and the body portion 30. The waist portion 16 is adapted to enable the placement of the dome shaped top portion 20 on the body portion 30. The waist portion 16 shown in
The body portion 30 shown in
Located at the bottom of the panel 19 and side 18 is a groove 33. The groove 33 extends horizontally along the flex panel 19. The groove 33 is continuous and extends along the bottom of the body 30 and along the top of the base 40. The groove 33 permits that base 40 to be increased in capacity without affecting the aesthetics of the container 10 and permits the container 10 to be stouter in appearance.
The base 40 has a top base portion 41 which merges with the groove 33. The base 40 may also have two ribs 43 and 44, which further increase the strength of the base 40. The base 40 shown in the FIGS. is cylindrical in shape, The ribs 43 and 44 are continuous circumferential ribs and additionally assist in increasing the overall capacity of the base 40. Additionally, the base 40 may be extended in order to increase the overall capacity of the container 10 without having to increase the diameter of the container 10.
As shown in
As shown in
Now referring to
Typically a container having two round sections, such as the top portion 20 and the base 40 in the present invention, and a square body will respond to the vacuum pressure equally and thus result in deformation. The structure of the container 10 permits the accommodation of a shrink film, a partial shrink film, or a glued spot label due to the isolated deformation due to vacuum pressure. The structure permits the panels 19 to take up most of the vacuum while trying to stabilize the label sides 18 without deforming. The undulating ring is localizing the changes in the body. The container 10 is also able to be accommodated on many existing co-packer filling lines. Additionally, the structure of the container 10 permits a clean aesthetic appearance.
It is to be understood, however, that even though numerous characteristics and advantages of the present invention have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and function of the invention, the disclosure is illustrative only, and changes may be made in detail, especially in matters of shape, size and arrangement of parts within the principles of the invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms in which the appended claims are expressed.
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