The present invention relates to the automatic packaging of a substance for infusion, such as tea, chamomile, or similar herbal products, in paper filter bags, designed to be immersed in a liquid to prepare the infusion. In particular, the present invention relates to a filter bag with a special structure and the method for its production.
Recent market research has highlighted renewed interest in filter paper bags with a containment chamber which has two compartments, also known as two-lobed filter bags, made by heat-sealing. The filter bag is obtained by folding the filter paper then sealing the folds obtained in this way, using heat to activate a layer of glue spread on the paper web during one of the production steps.
However, filter bags made of heat-sealable filter paper using the conventional method are heavier than bags of the same size and shape in which the chambers which hold the doses of product are obtained by folding alone.
Since the cost of the paper is proportional to its weight, the greater weight of the bags made of heat-sealable filter paper means that, all other conditions being equal, they are more expensive than those made using folding alone. Since they are products with a low absolute weight, even a weight which is just a few grams higher has a significant percentage effect on the overall cost of the bag. To make bags made of heat-sealed paper economically competitive with bags made using folding alone, it is common practice to give the bags made of heat-sealed paper smaller overall dimensions than those of the corresponding bags made of folded paper.
When the bag made of heat-sealed paper is made with the pick-up tag connecting thread wound around the bag and precisely as long as the outline of the bag, the latter's reduced dimensions mean that the working length of the thread available is shorter.
If the infusion is prepared in certain types of tea-pots or in particularly tall cups or glasses, said thread length may be insufficient to prevent the tag from accidentally slipping over the edge of the infusion container during infusion and falling into the infusion liquid, with obvious consequences in terms of hygiene and/or pick-up tag recovery.
Moreover, bags made of heat-sealed paper using the known method, at the production step also involve the use of a blob of adhesive—normally Mylar®, which, attached to the thread and the bag, allows them to be held together in a compact structure, preventing the tag from dangling freely from the bag.
The material used for the blob of adhesive has its own cost, which disadvantageously increases the overall cost of the filter bag. Other costs are also related to the complex construction of the packaging machines which require a purpose-designed unit for the adhesive for the bag.
The main aim of the present invention is to overcome the aforementioned disadvantages by providing a bag made of heat-sealable paper which is designed in such a way that it has a section of connecting thread whose length is not related to the length of the outline of the filter bag.
Another aim of the present invention is to eliminate the need for Mylar, making the filter bag even more economical and the equipment used to make it less complex and expensive.
According to the invention, these and other aims are fulfilled by a filter bag for containing a substance for infusion in a liquid comprising a containment chamber, with at least one compartment for holding a dose of the substance which is sealed by top and bottom joins; a tag for picking up the bag; and a section of thread, wound around the outside of the containment chamber and extending along an outline, one end of the thread being connected to the pick-up tag and the other end connected to the top of the containment chamber, and wherein the section of thread is longer than the outline of the containment chamber to which it is attached, the excess length of the section of thread relative to said outline being gathered on the outside of the containment chamber for the substance for infusion. The present invention also refers to a method for producing the bag.
The technical features of the present invention, in accordance with the above-mentioned aims, are set out in the claims herein and the advantages more clearly illustrated in the detailed description which follows, with reference to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention without limiting the scope of the inventive concept, and in which:
With reference to the accompanying drawings,
The containment chamber 2 has two separate compartments 3 for doses of the substance, which are connected to one another at a top join 4 and a bottom join 5.
The compartments 3 are set opposite one another, overlap and are connected by a folded base 14 which is “V”-shaped, with the narrow base of the V pointing upwards towards the inside of the containment chamber 2.
The section of thread 7 is wrapped around the outside of the containment chamber 2. It extends along an outline of the chamber and one end of the thread is connected to the pick-up tag 6, whilst the other end is connected to the top 15 of the containment chamber 2.
The section of thread 7 is longer than the outer outline of the containment chamber 2 to which it is attached. The excess length 8 of thread 7 relative to the length of the outline is looser than the rest of the section of thread 7 which, in contrast, is pulled taut along the outline of the containment chamber 2 and is gathered, on the outside of the containment chamber 2 for the substance for infusion, in the form of one or more first winding loops 10 attached to the pick-up tag 6.
This is clearly visible in
The pick-up tag 6 preferably has a layer of adhesive material on the faces of the flaps 9a and b facing the excess length 8 of thread, which can be activated by suitable heat, so that the flaps 9a, b of the tag 6 stick together and hold the excess length 8 of the section of thread 7 there gathered tightly and in an orderly fashion. This hold, sufficient to prevent any change in the state of the package during handling, is removable and can be overcome by applying a small amount of pulling force to the section of thread 7 outside the tag 6 to unwind the first loop(s) 10 and allow the consequent extraction of the excess length 8 of thread from the bag 1 pick-up tag 6.
The fixing to the tag 6 of the free end 36a of the section of thread 7 adjacent to the excess length 8 is achieved by passing it through and sealing flaps 37 of the tag 6 transversally to the section of thread 7. The flaps 37 are connected internally by a sealing bead 38 and the free end 36a of the section of thread projects from them towards the top 15 of the bag 1.
The section of thread 7 also comprises a second loop 11, housed in the compartment 3 of the containment chamber 2 opposite and separate from the compartment 3 contiguous with the tag 6. This second loop 11 has diverging ends 12a, 12b which project from the compartment 3. One end 12a goes towards the top 15, the other 12b towards the bottom 14 of the containment chamber 2. The end 12a which goes towards the top 15 is gripped and secured between opposite faces of the compartment 3 which are sealed together to form the top join 4—by heat activation of a layer of adhesive on the filter paper of which the walls of the compartment are made. The end 12b which goes towards the bottom 14 of the chamber projects through the side wall 16 opposite that on which the tag 6 is fixed, at a convenient slit 22 in the side wall 16.
Since, as illustrated in
Therefore, in the filter bag 1 described above, the ends 36a and 36b of the section of thread 7 are secured to the top 15 of the containment chamber 2 at the two top joins 4 which also seal the two separate containment chamber 2 compartments 3.
The aforementioned filter bag 1 is used for conventional infusion by manually picking up the tag 6 with the containment chamber 2 suspended from it. However, the presence of the excess length 8 of thread gathered between the pick-up tag 6 flaps 9a and b allows a change at the user's discretion in the actual distance between the tag 6 and the top 15 of the bag 1, so that on each occasion the length of the section of thread 7 can be made compatible with the different sizes of cups or glasses in which the infusion is prepared. This is all possible without the risk of the pick-up tag 6 accidentally falling into the infusion liquid.
With references to these figures, firstly it must be said that the production process involves the steps of feeding only three packaging materials along a predetermined feed direction 30 and parallel with one another in a suitable sequence. These materials consist of a filter paper web 17 with a layer of heat-activated adhesive, a cotton thread 31 positioned longitudinally and opposite the filter paper web 17, and a tag paper web 39, from which a set of tags 6 is made in succession which are positioned along the filter paper web 17 at predetermined intervals 32.
After the tag 6 has been cut and positioned relative to the thread 31, as illustrated in
In a subsequent step, schematically illustrated on the left of
At this point, with reference to the right-hand side of
The thread 31 is forced to pass through the slit 22—on the left of FIG. 7—over the filter paper web 17 to form the second loop 11. During the following step, the loop 11 may be tightly secured to the filter paper by sealing, thanks to conveniently localized heat re-activation of the layer of adhesive material on the filter paper.
During the same operation a seal may also be made which attaches the filter paper to the tag 6 below, including the hank of thread.
Then, as shown on the right-hand side of
When the edges 18, schematically illustrated on the left and at the center of
During a subsequent step, illustrated on the right of
During a subsequent step in the process, schematically illustrated in
During the step schematically illustrated in
Following sealing of the top, illustrated in FIG. 12—where the compartments 3 are attached to one another to form a single-piece top 15 of the containment chamber 2, in a subsequent step illustrated in
The invention described can be subject to modifications and variations without thereby departing from the scope of the inventive concept. Moreover, all the details of the invention may be substituted by technically equivalent elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2002A0013 | Jan 2002 | IT | national |
This application is a division of 10/341,570 filed Jan. 13, 2003.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040161497 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10341570 | Jan 2003 | US |
Child | 10780958 | US |