The invention relates to a filling element for filling containers with a liquid charge according to the preamble of claim 1, to a method according to the preamble of claim 7 and to a filling system according to the preamble of claim 11.
Containers in the context of the invention are generally packaging means which are usually used for liquid and/or paste-like products, in particular for beverages, for example including soft packagings made from flat material, containers made from metal, glass and/or plastic, for example cans, bottles, etc.
In the context of the invention, the expression “substantially” means deviations of +/−10%, preferably of +/−5%, from an exact value and/or deviations in the form of changes which have no effect on the function.
Filling elements and filling methods for filling containers are known in different embodiments, in particular including for free-flow filling and for pressure filling.
In the context of the invention, free-flow filling is to be understood to mean a method in which the liquid charge flows into the container to be filled in a free charge stream, wherein the container does not bear with its container mouth or opening against the filling element but rather is spaced apart from the filling element or from a dispensing opening thereon. An important feature of this method is also the fact that the air displaced from the container by the liquid charge during the filling process does not enter the filling element or a gas-conducting region or channel formed therein but rather flows freely into the environment.
In the context of the invention, pressure filling is to be understood to mean a method in which the liquid charge is fed to the container to be filled which is arranged sealingly against the filling element and is usually pressurized with a pressurizing gas (inert gas or CO2 gas), wherein the container is arranged with its container mouth or opening in a sealed position against the filling element and the inert gas displaced from the interior of the container by the inflowing charge during the filling process is conveyed away via a gas channel formed in the filling element.
Regardless of the type of filling method and regardless of the design of the respective filling element, it may happen under certain conditions, in particular including operating conditions, that gas and/or vapor constituents, in particular including gas and/or vapor constituents which do not belong to the charge, enter the interior of the filling element or the liquid channel thereof, for example air and/or residues of a cleaning and/or disinfecting medium in gas and/or vapor form which is used to clean and/or disinfect the filling system or filling machine. Specifically, air or gas may enter the liquid channel of the filling element for example under the following operating conditions:
The penetration of air and/or gas into the filling element or into the liquid channel thereof results in considerable disadvantages. For instance, air and/or gas bubbles resulting therefrom may rise inside the product lines or channels and may reach the charge-providing vessel in a filling machine, and germs which damage the product may thereby enter this vessel and the charge located therein. In addition, gas and/or air bubbles impair the measurement accuracy of measuring equipment or measuring devices which control the filling volume of the containers, and thus impair the filling quantity accuracy or filling level accuracy when filling the product into the container.
In order to avoid these disadvantages caused by air and/or gas residues, it has until now been customary firstly to pass a relatively large quantity of charge through the filling elements of a filling machine in a pre-running mode prior to the actual start of production and then to discard this charge. In practice, no containers are fed to the filling machine during this pre-running mode, wherein the charge exiting from the filling elements flows for example freely onto the floor and is conveyed away as unusable.
The problem addressed by the invention is that of providing a filling element which avoids air and/or vapor and/or gas residues, but also excess gas (inert gas or CO2 gas) which is not bound in the product or is intrinsic to the product but released, within the liquid channel of the filling element and which avoids the associated disadvantages.
In order to solve this problem, a filling element is designed in accordance with claim 1. A method and a filling machine form the subject matter of claims 7 and 11 respectively.
In the method according to the invention, the venting of the filling elements of the filling system or filling machine takes place in particular prior to each start of production, namely in such a way that the liquid valves of the filling elements are closed and the gas pathways which serve for venting are opened. At the same time or thereafter, charge is introduced into the filling elements or into the liquid channels (valve chambers) thereof until they are in each case completely filled with the charge and any gas and/or vapor and/or air residues are completely displaced from the liquid channels by the charge. A venting of the filling elements may also take place during ongoing production, for example by manual intervention or else automatically, e.g. at predefined time intervals.
Further developments, advantages and possible uses of the invention will become apparent from the following description of examples of embodiments and from the figures. All the features described and/or shown in the figures, per se or in any combination, form in principle the subject matter of the invention, regardless of the way in which they are combined or refer back to one another in the claims. The content of the claims also forms part of the description.
The invention will be explained in more detail below with reference to the figures and on the basis of an example of embodiment. In the figures:
In
The filling element 1 is arranged on the circumference of a rotor 3, which can be driven in rotation about a vertical machine axis, and together with a container carrier 4 forms a filling position 5 which is provided with a plurality of identical filling positions 5 on the circumference of the rotor 3 and at which the respective bottle 2 is held by a bottle or mouth flange on the container carrier 4 during the filling process and is suspended with its bottle opening 2.1 at a distance below the filling element 1 or below a dispensing opening 6 of the filling element 1, namely with its axis coaxial or substantially coaxial to a vertical filling element axis FA, so that during the filling process the charge flows into the respective bottle 2 as a free charge stream FS.
Formed in a housing 7 of the filling element 1 is a liquid channel 8 (valve space) which at the lower end has the dispensing opening 6 and at the upper end is connected via a product channel portion 9 to the lower end of a product channel 10 which is vertical in the illustrated embodiment. The latter is connected in the upper region via a metering valve 11 (liquid phase valve) to a vessel 12 which during the filling operation is partially filled with the first, more liquid component of the charge, and via a metering valve 13 (solid valve) to an annular channel or annular vessel 14 which during the filling operation is filled with the second component which contains solid constituents in high concentration. The vessel 12 and the annular channel or annular vessel 14 are provided on the rotor 3 jointly for all the filling elements 1 of the filling machine.
Arranged in the product channel 10 is a flow meter 15 which is for example an electromagnetic flow meter and delivers a signal corresponding to the respective flow quantity to a central control device (not shown), for example a computer-aided machine controller, by means of which (measurement signal) not only is the mixing ratio of the two components corresponding to the respective recipe achieved by actuating the metering valves 11 and 13 but also the closing of the liquid valve 16 arranged in the liquid channel 8 is brought about, namely after reaching the predefined charge quantity introduced into the respective bottle 2.
The liquid valve 16 consists substantially of a plunger 17 which is arranged coaxial to the filling element axis FA and which is configured at its lower end as a valve body 18 with a valve body seal which concentrically surrounds the filling element axis FA, wherein said valve body seal, in order to close the liquid valve, cooperates with a valve surface formed on a conical face 19 of the liquid channel 8, said conical face being rotationally symmetrical to the filling element axis FA. In order to open and close the liquid valve 16, the valve plunger 17 with its valve body 18 is moved by an actuating mechanism 20 in the filling element axis FA between the closed position shown in
The valve plunger 17 is sealingly surrounded by a bellows-type element 21 which acts as a seal that seals off the passage of the valve plunger 17 through the filling element housing 7 but at the same time also has an external diameter which is equal to or substantially equal to the maximum external diameter of the valve body 18.
In the illustrated embodiment, the liquid channel 8 is shaped in such a way that it has an upper, substantially circular-cylindrical channel portion 8.1, into which the product line portion 9 also opens. The liquid channel 8 is also shaped in such a way that the channel portion 8.1 is adjoined in the axially downward direction—relative to the filling element axis FA—by a likewise substantially circular-cylindrical channel portion 8.2, wherein this channel portion 8.2 has a reduced cross-section in comparison to the channel portion 8.1. It is in turn adjoined in the downward direction by the channel portion 8.3, which has the conical face 19 and narrows in the manner of a funnel toward the underside of the filling element 1, and then by a channel portion 8.4 which has the dispensing opening 6 and a circular-cylindrical cross-section.
All of the channel portions 8.1-8.4 are preferably arranged coaxial to one another and coaxial to the axis FA. In the closed state of the filling element 16, the valve body 18 is accommodated in the channel portions 8.3 and 8.4. In the fully open state of the liquid valve 16, the valve body 18 is accommodated in the liquid channel portion 8.2 with the full gap width of the opening gap 21.
In order to convey away from the filling element 1 any medium in gas and/or vapor form which exists in the liquid channel 8 and which is for example a residue of a cleaning and/or disinfecting medium remaining in the liquid channel 8 and/or ambient air remaining in the liquid channel 8 and/or having entered the liquid channel 8 during the filling process, and thus to avoid any rising of air and/or gas and/or vapor bubbles in the product channel 10 and into the vessels 12 and 14, together with the associated disadvantages of possible contamination of the product and/or impairment of the measurement accuracy of the flow meter 15, the liquid channel 8 is designed with a venting system.
This venting system comprises inter alia the venting channel 23 which is formed in the filling element housing 7 and which opens into the liquid channel 8 via an opening 24 on the upper side remote from the dispensing opening 6, i.e. at the highest level of the liquid channel 8. The venting channel 23 is in communication with a channel 25, wherein the channel 25 is connected to a collecting channel or annular channel (not shown in detail) provided on the rotor 3 and common to all the filling elements 1 of the filling machine, or to a vacuum channel.
The venting channel 23 is preferably designed in such a way that, proceeding from the opening 24 in a portion 23.1, it runs firstly upward and then downward again before opening into the channel 25. By virtue of the course taken by the portion 23.1, a gas trap is formed in which constituents in gas and/or vapor form which are present in the liquid channel 8 can collect in order to be conveyed away via the venting channel 23.
In order to enhance this effect, the upper boundary wall of the liquid channel 8 is convex on the inner side, so that there is formed above the liquid channel portion 8.1 and above the opening at which the product line portion 9 opens into the liquid channel 8 a dome-like widening or a dome-like liquid channel portion 8.5, in which constituents in gas and/or vapor form can collect and into which the venting channel 23 opens with its opening 24.
Formed in the filling element housing 7 is a further channel 26 which opens via an opening 27 into the liquid channel portion 8.3, namely, in the direction of flow of the liquid charge, above the valve seat which is formed on the conical face 19 and against which the valve body 18 or the seal thereof bears when the liquid valve 16 is closed. The channel 26 likewise opens into the channel 25.
Preferably, the venting is controlled by means of at least one valve (venting valve), which is then provided for example separately for each filling element 1 of the filling system or filling machine, for example in the channel 25, or else jointly for a group of multiple filling elements 1 or for all the filling elements 1 of the filling machine.
It is also possible to incorporate the venting channel 23 in a charge heating circuit which also includes the channels 25 and 26, and/or in the event of a possibly provided CIP cleaning and/or disinfection in a circuit for the appropriate cleaning and/or disinfecting medium, namely once again together with the channels 25 and 26.
As mentioned above, the venting of the respective filling element 1 via the venting channel 23 takes place in particular prior to each start of production, namely in such a way that the liquid valve 16 is closed and the gas pathways or channels 23 and 25 which serve for venting are opened. Thereafter, the charge is introduced into the vessels 12 and 14 and conducted via the product line 10 into the liquid channel 8 of the filling elements 1, wherein any gas and/or air residues present in the respective liquid channel 8 are conveyed away via the venting system formed by the venting channel 23, so that the respective filling element 1 is completely filled with the charge. A venting of the filling elements 1 can also take place during ongoing production, for example by manual intervention or else automatically, e.g. at predefined time intervals, preferably with the liquid valve closed in each case.
The filling element 1 and the liquid channel 8a thereof are once again designed with a venting system for conveying away constituents in gas and/or vapor form. In this embodiment, the venting system comprises a venting channel 30 which opens via an opening 31 into the liquid channel 8a, namely once again at the highest region of the liquid channel 8a and above the opening at which the product channel 10a opens into the liquid channel 8a. In the illustrated embodiment, the opening 31 is located in the region of a seal 32 which seals off the liquid channel 8a at its upper side. The venting channel 30 is for example once again connected to a collecting channel or annular channel, for example to a vacuum channel, which is provided on the rotor 3a jointly for all the filling elements of the filling machine. The venting system is moreover controlled, namely using at least one valve (venting valve) which is provided separately for each filling element 1a or else jointly for all the filling elements or for a respective group of multiple filling elements. Furthermore, the venting channel 30 may also be incorporated in the circuit for a cleaning and/or disinfecting medium in the case of CIP cleaning and/or disinfection.
The invention presented above is configured in a particularly advantageous manner when the product line portion 9 and/or the metering valve 11 and/or the vessel for the first component 12 and/or the metering valve 13 and/or the flow meter 15 and/or further components are designed and/or arranged in such a way that gas bubbles which may be present in these components or which may flow through these components can rise through these components without disruption until they reach the vessel for the first component 12. To this end, it is necessary to prevent such gas bubbles from adhering to walls, undercuts or connection points of the components, etc. In order to avoid adhesion, it is provided for example that all the flow pathways have a sufficient incline relative to the horizontal. It is also provided that the geometric dimensions or properties of the components are selected in such a way that undercuts, rough surfaces and protrusions, etc. are completely avoided.
The invention has been described above on the basis of examples of embodiments. It will be understood that numerous changes and modifications are possible without thereby departing from the inventive concept on which the invention is based.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2010 027 512.3 | Jul 2010 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP11/02364 | 5/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 1/9/2013 |