The invention relates to lids for cans for receiving foodstuff, which are to be subjected to a thermal treatment above 50° C. in the form of sterilization or at least pasteurization. Methods for the production of the lids and for securing the leak tightness of the sealing are also covered.
Lids are concerned having an annular ring for seaming to the can body, the lid can be firmly and tightly connected with the can body rim and is in particular made from metal, and a “lid diaphragm” (diaphragm or panel) in the form of a cover surface which is affixed to the annular ring (for seaming to the can body) in such a way that, for the opening of the can, the panel can be pulled off from the seamable annular ring or may be peeled off from it by means of pulling. This relates on the one hand to peeling foils and, on the other hand, also to foils which are to be torn at the edge or are to be further torn.
Various designs of such lid covers are known, see U.S. Pat. No. 4,211,338 (Bublitz). Difficulties with these lids arise at high temperatures, at any rate above 50° C., as they are—as a rule—present in sterilization or pasteurization processes in continuous autoclaves (retorts). The lid will leak or the lid diaphragm even begins to detach itself from the annular ring under the action of a difference in pressure which acts upon the lid, or can be damaged in such a way that this would result in a later leakage at the sealing line.
Consequently, these cans are mostly sterilized in such autoclaves (batch retort stations) which are equipped with means for generating an outer air or vapor pressure in order to apply a sufficient counter-pressure onto an outer surface of the lid, opposing the internal pressure in the closed can, due to which the lid, in particular the lid diaphragm, will be protected against too high differences in pressure ΔP.
It is not possible or requires great effort to equip “continuous autoclaves” with such counter-pressure means that are suitable for continuous passage.
Continuous autoclaves (for a pasteurization or a sterilization process) with a counter-pressure due to a vapour atmosphere certainly generate a low permanent counter-pressure on the lid surface of up to 1.6 bar (0.16 MPa), but they are not sufficient for stabilizing customary “peel lids” without damage.
In addition to this, the lid surface does not form any smooth, fine-looking surface after cooling of the cans, which impairs acceptance by the customers and results in illegibility of any type of inscriptions or bar codes by scanners.
It is an object of the invention, to remedy this by a lid of this peel type which allows a safe sterilization of filled and closed cans in continuous autoclaves (high temperature prevailing there and a resultant high pressure in the can) without the risk of the breaking, breaking up or detaching of a plane (surface oriented) cover panel on or from the seamable annular ring.
After the cooling of the can, the lid is also to have an acceptable appearance.
These objects is attained concerning the lid.
The invention also comprises steps for “ensuring” the tightness of the can closures during sterilization in a continuous autoclave in the sense of a securing or providing of tightness on the can closures that work with an “annular ring” (for seaming to the can body). Production processes for the can closure are disclosed.
The invention is not limited to lids for cans of a circular cross-section, but can also be applied with the same effect and the same advantages to cans of other circumferential or cross-sectional shapes such as oval, rectangular, rectangular with rounded corners or square shapes of cans (can bodies).
The “dome- or bowl-shaped preformation” (or deformation) of the cover panel allows—after filling with food or foodstuff and upon closing of each can with the lid—to substantially reduce the headspace in the can since the curved shape with its centre projects substantially downwards beyond that area of the annular ring that is placed innermost of a can body inside. If, under the internal pressure formed during the thermal heating in the interior of the can, the dome- or bowl-shaped panel portion then changes, in particular abruptly changes, to a bulging position that is mirror-inverted to the original position, now towards the outside, resulting in a substantial enlargement of the headspace and thus a reduction of the pressure in the can formed during thermal treatment.
This change function is supported by a stiffening of the cover panel at least in the central portion by the preformation of this portion. A plane material is used for this purpose, which itself or a layer thereof will get harder due to the deep-drawing process. Thus, a certain shape keeping hardness or stability results from this as a tightening. Said stability is distributed across the entire panel surface, radially within the annular ring. The panel surface is named plane or “areal oriented” as the surface has a lateral extension but on a curved panel, that is plane, but not flat.
This stability achieves that practically the same, but reversed or inverted panel shape is obtained upon outwards directed bulging. It corresponds to the inverted original dome shape without increasing the surface area, without plastic preformation, in particular without a “stretching” of the panel. After the temperature is reduced, the central portion of the cover panel is again returned to its preformed original shape upon cooling, which it adopts without any further help (due to the vacuum formed in the inner space and “under the panel”),
The smooth dome or bowl shape (preformed bulging) of the lid of the can that is ready for sale is very fine-looking and does not encounter any problems as regards acceptance by customers.
The process is for producing a lid closure for cans containing foodstuff. The lid provides tightness during sterilization or pasteurization in a continuous autoclave. Said cans being closed with a can closure as lid. The can closure is produced from an annular ring (adapted for seaming to the can body, a so called “Deckelring”) and a lid panel having an outer ring band. The band is sealingly placed onto an inner flat web. Prior to attaching the lid to the filled can a central area of the lid panel is reshaped by deep drawing to a smooth bowl shape or a dome shape with a plane surface, this as “original shape”. An outer ring band limits the central area (surrounds it in case of a circular lid). A material of this central area is solidified or hardened by the deep drawing process (step), this to such an extent that under an increased pressure in a headspace of the can during the can's passage through an autoclave station, the central area changes to an axially outwardly bulging shape that is mirror-inverted. The inversion is with respect to the “original shape”. During a subsequent cooling of the closed can, the central area automatically returns to the “original shape”. This is at least substantially the same.
The claimed lid permits a sterilization or pasteurization of the filled cans at the pertinent high temperatures and differential pressures in continuous autoclaves readily and without any risks, i.e. without any measure for generating a counter-pressure that additionally acts from the outside (other than the steam pressure). The steam pressure (vapor pressure) is regularly present, higher than atmospheric pressure, but not high enough to support forces on the outer surface of the lid.
The dimensions of the preformed shape (of the central portion) can be easily adjusted to the diameter and the volume of the cans. Likewise, the inclination of the flat web of the annular ring for seaming to the can body to which the outer ring band of the panel is affixed is adjusted in such a way with respect to a horizontal plane that an imaginary extension of the surface of the flat web extends at best tangentially to the dome- or inverted-bowl shaped central portion that bulges outwardly under pressure. The inclination of the web is directed upwards; this is “outwards axially” when the can body is taken as a reference, that is closed by the lid panel and the lid ring.
A preferred lid is adapted for closing a can with a diameter of 83 mm. The depth of the preformed lid panel is between 5 mm and 6 mm, approx. 5.6 mm, the lowermost point of it being about 3 mm below the lowermost points of the annular ring for seaming to the can body. The bulging corresponds to a sphere segment in the case of a circular cross-section of the lid. The angle of the flat web is preferably between 220 and 250 with respect to the horizontal. Here, peeling forces are practically completely avoided.
The smooth/plane bowl/dome surface of the preformed lid panel is not disturbed by or interfered with any undulations or grooves.
The filled can with the lid can be at least pasteurized, in particular even sterilized, in practically any of the known continuous autoclaves without additional counter-pressure means. The food in kept therein for a long time, resulting from thermal treatment
The production process of the lid closure is disclosed. The preformation (preforming) of the panel in the central area takes place in the same fashion. The processes permit the use of already used machines, in particular during a sealing on a plane flat web with subsequent inclined deformation of the web upwards/outwards. The panel surface may be applied onto the already inclined flat web or the—still plane—flat web which is to be inclined after heat sealing.
The invention is explained in greater detail in the following, using schematic drawings and embodiments serving as examples.
As can be seen from
The annular ring 2 (for seaming to the can body, in short: “lid ring”, seaming ring or “annular ring”) is e.g. made of sheet metal. It comprises an outer rim portion 4 as a “flared flange” for firm and liquid tight connection with a rim 24 of an opening of the can body, cf.
The lid panel 3 comprises an outer continuous ring band 3a which at least partially covers the flat web 6 of the annular ring from the outside, if the panel 3 is tightly connected with the annular ring 2 in a fastening strip 13, e.g. by means of contact sealing or induction sealing (pressure sealing, ultrasonic sealing, laser sealing). This ring band 3a limits the central portion 3b (provides its outer limit), a transition portion 3c between the two being within the area of the curling 7 after connection of the panel with the annular ring.
The central cover portion 3b of the lid panel is preformed by a deep-drawing process. This process can be implemented prior to or after the connection of cover panel 3 and annular ring 2 in the fastening strip 13. The stabilizing reshaping only covers the central portion. It is implemented across the entire surface of the panel.
The preforming converts the central portion 3b into a dome or bowl shape in the axially inwards direction, the edge of the bowl is in the transition portion 3c to the outer ring band 3a and the lowermost centre 3d of the panel is clearly, in particular at least a few millimeters below a horizontal plane 18 that passes through the lowermost points of the annular ring 2 according to
It is advantageous if, as is preferred, the panel itself comprises a material that is stiffened or hardened by the deep-drawing process such as aluminum or the like, or contains at least such a layer. Due to this, the preformed central portion 3b is provided with an inner shape (or dimensional) stability. This is of advantage for the entire appearance of the finished, closed and thermally treated can package.
During sterilization, if temperature and consequently pressure are generated in the interior of the filled can that was closed with the lid (cf. also
Due to the stiffening or hardening of material of the cover panel achieved during the preforming, the dilatability of the central portion 3b is accordingly practically zero so that even in the case of high pressures formed in the can during (thermal) treatment in a continuous autoclave, the outwardly bulging shape of the central portion can be determined in advance (by means of a computing).
2-D Model.
D is the diameter of the inner radius of the sealed zone, which is different from the can diameter, h is the dome deflection, y and z are the axes indicators, a is the angle of the dome with the y-axes. The volume increase, the angle and the radius of the convex dome can be calculated with the following equations:
3-D Model.
Stress in Domed Panel.
The tensile stress in the domed panel can be calculated rather straight forward with
The tensile stresses on all sides are therefore given by
The radius of curvature of the domed panel can be expressed in can dimension parameters. The tensile stress in the domed panel is
In this equation
P is the pressure [N/mm2]
ρ is the radius of the convex shaped domed panel
e is the domed panel thickness
h is the deflection of the domed panel
D is the inner radius of the sealed zone.
Slanted Sealed Zone (Sealing Strip).
The sealed zone can be “bended up” in such a way that the sealed zone is slanted upwards (axially outward, or upwards) and parallel to the domed panel. In this situation there is only a shear stress in the sealed zone and no longer a peel stress. The following relation between the tensile stress in the panel and the shear stress in the sealed zone applies
In this case the shear stress can be calculated by
As outlined in
Both contribute to a clear reduction of the maximally occurring pressure and secure the closed cans against damage upon their passage through the autoclave. Pressures of less than 1 bar (0.1 MPa) can be achieved, which, without the preforming of the panel would be clearly above this value, e.g. at 1.5 bar (0.15 MPa). This amount of the achieved lowering of the pressure depends in general on the temperature of the foodstuff filled in. At hot filling of food the differential pressure that occurs as a maximum on the panel is lower than the differential pressure when using cold filling such as for pet food as “foodstuff”.
The stability as to shape/form, i.e. the avoided permanent deformation (as a missing plastic deformation or—at most—a residual elastic deformation by means of the modulus of elasticity) of the central portion 3b contributes to the fact that, upon the cooling of the finished sterilized can, this preformed portion 3b practically exactly re-adopts the original dome/bowl shape. In both conditions or positions or according to panel shape 3b and 3b′ no undulations are contained in the panel. The bowls or domes are smooth (also called bulged, but with a plane surface in the bulging).
The fact that the central portion retains its area (in an envelope) permits the advance calculation of the measure of its bulging in the case of the pressures to be expected as a maximum during sterilization so that the angle of inclination 11 of the flat web 6 of the annular ring 2 for seaming to the can body can be adjusted to this right from the beginning. By no means is the angle smaller than the angle of a tangent at the bulging of the central portion 3b (next to the slanted web). The angle 11 is rather selected larger with preference so that that—in the case of the maximum internal pressures formed in the continuous autoclaves—practically exclusively shear forces and no peeling forces are active as resultant forces in the ring band 3a of the panel 3 that is affixed to the flat web.
The angle 11 is set to more than 20°. The radius or the transverse dimension (in the case of a deviation from the circular shape) of the central portion is shown as 9. Reference 16 in
The dimensions of the preforming and that of the angle of inclination depend upon the volume and the radial dimensions of the can and thus also on the size of the lid. The smaller the radius of the bulging in a pressure-loaded condition is, the smaller is the mechanical stress in the lid panel.
A suitable material of the lid panel 3 is a thin metal, preferably an aluminum, which is used for the body diameter of 83 mm. Other diameters may be used in the following manner, in a range of diameters between substantially 50 mm and 100 mm (for Europe), in particular with especially customary diameters: 73 mm, 99 mm, 65 mm, 83 mm; similar for containers (bodies) made of steel sheet.
The can body may be made of aluminum or steel sheet that are covered with a varnish.
The annular ring 2 is preferably made from an aluminum covered with varnish, the outer varnish layer being a hot sealable sealing layer, which is sealingly connected with the annular ring in the sealing portion 13. Instead of metal the ring material may also be plastic material or a plastic/metal composite, e.g. produced by means of an injection process with or without an insert or with a previous inserting of the lid panel in the shaped opening for the ring. Annular rings made of steel can likewise be used.
Instead of the hot sealable layer on the ring, ring 2 may also be laminated or extruded with polymers. The lamination of the ring is done prior to the cutting out and the shaping of the annular ring.
In a preferred embodiment the lid panel that is connected with the annular ring (for seaming to the can body) preferably comprises several layers:
coating varnish layer
print layer
aluminum layer (about 70 μm, in the range of 30 μm to 100 μm)
extruded polymer layer (material with approx. 12 g/m2 to 30 g/m2)
The extruded polymer layer is a co-extruded layer of a tie layer and a peel layer. Other extrusions and laminations can likewise be used.
The lid panel 3 was reshaped (deep-drawn) to a convex shape in the central area 3b as it is shown in
The sealing of the ring band 3a of the lid panel 3 can be achieved more easily with a horizontal flat web 6 than with an already inclined flat web. Consequently, the lid panel 3 may still not have any preforming shape of its own, but will only be provided with a corresponding preformed shape after the sealing in the connection area 13 as sealing strip. Here, the central area 3b is preformed to a bowl shape by means of the reshaping and stiffened or hardened, in order to admit hardly any elastic deformation, but to be capable of changing to a practically mirror-inverted, outwardly bulged bowl/dome shape in the case of an inner excess pressure. The central area is lowered that much below the plane 18 that there are several millimeters between the lowermost point of the initial bowl shape 3b and this plane (in the preformed state).
After the reshaping of the central area 3b an upwardly directed reshaping of the flat strip 6 (or the web) can be carried out. This obtains its inclination of more than 200 in this connection.
In a preferred embodiment that is not depicted these two re-shapings, that of the bowl-shaped bulging of the lid panel with a hardening, stiffening character and that of providing an inclination of an annular part the annular ring for seaming to the body, may also be carried out practically at the same time.
In the example there was a sealing strip 13 as the connection area of the still not preformed lid panel 3 on the initially horizontally oriented flat strip 6 of the ring, which was produced by implementing a sealing with the following parameters
The inwardly bulged bowl/dome shape had—as represented above—a maximum deflection as the depth 10a after the upwardly directed inclination of the flat web 6 which depth was between 5 mm and 6 mm, with a mean value of about 5.6 mm within a probe of a plurality of tests.
The lid 23 is shown in its position after firmly and tightly fixed to a can body 20, which is filled with the foodstuff 21 and then closed. A symbolic filling height is outlined at 22 or the level E1, above which the headspace H filled with air or vapor is located. The axis of the can is designated 25. The annular ring (for seaming to the can body) and the can body rim are connected with each other in customary fashion by means of a double seam 24a at the end 24 of the container (represented in a seamed fashion on the left-hand side, and in a placed fashion on the right-hand side in
A lid for a can with a diameter of 83 mm is assumed as a further practical example. The dome/bowl depth 10a/30 of the preformed lid panel is between 5 mm and 6 mm, about 5.6 mm, the lowermost point 30d of the bowl being about 3 mm below the lowermost points of the annular ring. The bulging corresponds to a sphere portion—in the case of a circular cross-section of the lid as is shown by
The reference symbols in
The smooth/plane dome/bowl surface is not disturbed by any undulations or grooves. The can may be at least pasteurized, in particular sterilized with the lid in practically each of the known continuous autoclaves without counter-pressure means.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2006 005 058 | Feb 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2007/051053 | 2/2/2007 | WO | 00 | 2/9/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/088212 | 8/9/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
549130 | Burnett | Nov 1897 | A |
1162520 | Shaffer | Nov 1915 | A |
2971671 | Shakman | Feb 1961 | A |
3369689 | Dodge | Feb 1968 | A |
3628689 | Rogers | Dec 1971 | A |
3814279 | Rayzal | Jun 1974 | A |
3894652 | Brown | Jul 1975 | A |
4087018 | Tebbutt | May 1978 | A |
4088242 | Schellenberg | May 1978 | A |
4125632 | Vosti et al. | Nov 1978 | A |
4129085 | Klein | Dec 1978 | A |
4211338 | Bublitz | Jul 1980 | A |
4253584 | Bloeck et al. | Mar 1981 | A |
4332332 | Ingemann | Jun 1982 | A |
4542029 | Caner et al. | Sep 1985 | A |
4680917 | Hambleton et al. | Jul 1987 | A |
4915254 | Zumsteg | Apr 1990 | A |
4998638 | Kawamata | Mar 1991 | A |
5016769 | Heilman | May 1991 | A |
5069355 | Matuszak | Dec 1991 | A |
5125632 | Blatt et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
5752614 | Nelson et al. | May 1998 | A |
5804237 | Diamond et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
6036043 | Erfgen et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6702538 | Heinicke et al. | Mar 2004 | B1 |
6817819 | Olson et al. | Nov 2004 | B2 |
7055713 | Rea et al. | Jun 2006 | B2 |
20010041115 | Erfgen et al. | Nov 2001 | A1 |
20050145630 | Williams et al. | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20060214430 | Wolfgang et al. | Sep 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
62 98273 | May 1975 | AU |
41 91078 | May 1980 | AU |
532675 | Nov 1954 | BE |
593 180 | Nov 1977 | CH |
262 652 | Jan 1912 | DE |
22 24 084 | Nov 1972 | DE |
22 58 462 | Jun 1974 | DE |
28 30 614 | Jan 1980 | DE |
30 43 899 | Jun 1981 | DE |
31 05 911 | Nov 1982 | DE |
88 02 824 | Aug 1989 | DE |
92 03 953 | Sep 1992 | DE |
41 26 027 | Feb 1993 | DE |
41 40 098 | Jun 1993 | DE |
43 32 306 | Mar 1995 | DE |
91 17 216 | Jun 1997 | DE |
198 22 739 | Nov 1999 | DE |
299 21 599 | May 2000 | DE |
601 01 454 | Oct 2004 | DE |
103 38 445 | Feb 2007 | DE |
0 090 957 | Oct 1983 | EP |
0 262 652 | Apr 1988 | EP |
0 419 764 | Apr 1991 | EP |
0 512 832 | Nov 1992 | EP |
0 545 143 | Jun 1993 | EP |
0 959 323 | Nov 1999 | EP |
1 153 840 | Nov 2001 | EP |
1 419 972 | May 2004 | EP |
1 559 655 | Aug 2005 | EP |
1 584 567 | Oct 2005 | EP |
1 777 165 | Apr 2007 | EP |
1 945 522 | Apr 2007 | EP |
2 137 293 | Dec 1972 | FR |
214 968 | Apr 1924 | GB |
454 429 | Mar 1935 | GB |
1 274 542 | May 1972 | GB |
1 549 668 | Aug 1979 | GB |
2 022 474 | Dec 1979 | GB |
2 237 259 | May 1991 | GB |
2 244 254 | Nov 1991 | GB |
01308770 | Dec 1989 | JP |
04087963 | Mar 1992 | JP |
91 08958 | Jun 1991 | WO |
97 14614 | Apr 1997 | WO |
01 19683 | Mar 2001 | WO |
WO 2005005277 | Jan 2005 | WO |
2007 045385 | Apr 2007 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report for PCT/EP2007/051053 mailed Jun. 5, 2007, 3 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090261099 A1 | Oct 2009 | US |