This invention generally relates to baby bottle liners, baby bottles, and a baby bottle having a reclosable plastic liner with properties that permit the liner to be reused.
Nursing pouches and disposable baby bottle liners provide a convenient way for nursing, working mothers to provide nourishment and sustenance for newborns and growing babies. Various studies have shown that there are benefits that accrue from breast feeding babies, and should breast feeding be contraindicated, from feeding children appropriate quantities of nutritious liquids and dietary supplements. However, there are various problems associated with the current technology.
Working mothers need a convenient way to store breast milk and then feed their children at appropriate times. Current baby bottle liners do not provide a way to safely store breast milk while minimizing the risk of external contamination of the milk, and internal bacterial growth. One such exemplary prior art baby bottle and liner is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,385,251 (“'251 patent”). The '251 patent describes a baby bottle liner that provides a reclosable feature at one end of the liner. A serious drawback of this prior art patent involves the risk of contamination of the contents of the liner at the ends of the reclosable fastener and through the fastener itself. The liner of the '251 patent permits contamination by microbes through the sides of the fastener which are open to the environment. Further, the fastener itself permits air and water to enter the inside of the liner and contaminate the contents thereof. Consequently, a nursing mother may be feeding her child breast milk that may be contaminated with microbes which could cause serious gastrointestinal problems for the child.
Further, the prior art does not solve the problem of how to place an airtight and watertight reclosable string fastener on a liner that is of a size of most liners for baby bottles. Conventional baby bottle liners are generally narrow in width. Hence, placement and sealing of a reclosable fastener onto a liner of narrow width is also a serious problem.
Similarly, U.S. Design Pat. No. 315,601, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,204,855, 3,672,122, 3,790,017, 3,822,806, 4,238,040, 4,339,046, 4,466,547, 4,501,585, 4,600,104, and 4,896,912 are designed for one time use, yet have a number of serious drawbacks. If the child does not consume the entire quantity of milk held in the liner, the milk must be transferred to another container for storage thereof since the liners were not created to store the unused portion of the milk in a substantially sterile condition. Another drawback of these prior art patents includes that lack of the ability to reuse the liner holder for another beverage. The contents of the liner that are initially held in the liner must be emptied, and the liner disposed of if the holder is to be reused.
Hence, there exists a need to solve the problems in the art that are articulated above.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to overcome the shortcomings of the prior art, and in doing so provide a baby bottle liner constructed and arranged to fit into a cavity of a rigid, conventional baby bottle or holder. The baby bottle liner has a continuous, profiled, elongated reclosable fastener sealed to the inside walls of the liner. The continuous, profiled, elongated reclosable fastener includes a first continuous elongated profile strip and a second continuous elongated profile strip. The first continuous elongated profile strip and the second continuous elongated profile strip are sized and dimensioned to provide an airtight and/or watertight seal upon interconnection thereof.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a baby bottle liner that has an airtight and/or watertight side seal at each end of the reclosable fastener. Each of the side seals connects an end of the reclosable fastener to an inside surface of a front wall and an inside surface of a back wall of the liner.
It is yet a further object of the invention to provide a baby bottle liner that includes a gussetted bottom, and an airtight and watertight seal at the gussetted bottom.
It is another object of the invention to provide a baby bottle liner in which the first continuous elongated profile strip and the second continuous elongated profile strip each have at least two hooks thereon. The hooks on the first continuous elongated profile strip, or optionally the hooks on the second continuous elongated profile strip, are adjacent to each other. In a variant of the invention, at least one of the hooks is at an end of the first continuous elongated profile strip. A second hook of the two hooks is located proximal to the hook at the end of the first continuous elongated profile strip.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide a baby bottle liner that includes a plurality of continuous recesses along a length of each of the profile strips. At least one of the recesses is dimensioned to resealably mate with one of the hooks, in one embodiment of the invention. In yet another embodiment of the invention, at least two of the continuous recesses are dimensioned to resealably mate with the hooks.
It is yet a further object of the invention to provide a baby bottle liner in which at least one continuous recess on each of the profile strips is not dimensioned to mate with the hooks, and, in a variant, provide at least one protuberance along a length of each of the profile strips dimensioned to fit securely in the one continuous recess on each of the profile strips not dimensioned to mate with the hooks.
In one variant, at least one of the hooks on the first continuous elongated profile strip is located near the center of the profile strip. In another variant of the invention the hooks are substantially symmetrically distributed on two sides of a center axis of the profile strip.
In yet another embodiment, it is an object of the invention to provide a reclosable fastener that has a plurality of ridges on a back side of each of the profile strips.
Another object of the invention is to provide a baby bottle liner that has infant formula therein. In this variant and other variants of the invention, a top end seal is placed above the reclosable fastener to keep the infant formula hermetically sealed within the liner.
Yet a further object of the invention is to provide a baby bottle with the baby bottle liner described herein, and a kit for infant nursing comprising a plurality of baby bottle liners according to the invention. The kit optionally includes a baby bottle, and/or infant formula.
Another object of the invention includes a baby bottle liner that is constructed from a microwavable plastic, a food grade microwavable plastic, and/or a microwave safe plastic.
In yet another embodiment of the invention, the baby bottle liner includes an additive that changes color when the temperature of the contents of the liner increases or reaches a predetermined temperature range.
It is another object of the present invention to solve these and other problems in the art, and to serve a market that demands hundreds of millions of reclosable plastic baby bottle liners annually. The objects and features of the present invention, other than those specifically set forth above, will become apparent in the detailed description of the invention set forth below and in the drawings.
Continuous, profiled, elongated reclosable fastener 130 includes first continuous elongated profile strip 136 and a second continuous elongated profile strip 138. An important aspect of the invention is the fact that the first continuous elongated profile strip 136 and the second continuous elongated profile strip 138 are dimensioned to provide an airtight and watertight seal upon interconnection thereof. The airtight and/or watertight seal provide the important function of keeping foreign material including bacteria, molds, and viruses from entering the interior of liner 100. Further, this seal starves any bacteria or other microbes inside the contents of the liner of oxygen, thus destroying the ability to replicate exponentially. Hence, the risk of deadly contamination of the milk in the liner is greatly reduced. Various types and configurations of reclosable fasteners can be used with the present invention as long as they provide the functionality of being airtight and/or water tight.
Also important to the invention is that baby bottle liner 100 includes airtight and/or watertight side seals 150, 152 at each end of said reclosable fastener, each said side seal 150, 152 connects an end of said reclosable fastener to an inside surface of a front wall 108 and an inside surface of a back wall 110 of liner 100. At each end 132, 134 of the reclosable fastener assembly 130 is an airtight and watertight side seal 150, 152. Each side seal 150, 152 connects end 132, 134 of the reclosable fastener assembly 130 to an inside surface 124 of front wall 108 and an inside surface 124 of back wall 110 (as seen in
In one variant of the invention, baby bottle liner 100 includes gusseted bottom 101, and an airtight and/or watertight seal 103 at gusseted bottom 101. The invention also contemplates placement of side gussets on liner 100 (not shown)
As stated above, liner 100 includes reclosable fastener 130. Reclosable fastener assembly 130 includes two ends 132, 134. Between ends 132, 134, a first continuous elongated profile strip 136 is releasably interlocked with a second continuous elongated profile strip 138. It is appreciated that first continuous elongated profile 136 and the second continuous elongated profile 138 can have any type of protruding male and female members which when interlocked provide an airtight and/or watertight seal.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a particular type of reclosable fastener 130 has been found to provide a particularly durable airtight/water tight seal for use in the present invention. Fastener 130 includes first continuous elongated profile strip 136 and second continuous elongated profile strip 138 which each have at least two hooks 336, 436, 338, 438 thereon (as seen in
In the embodiment shown in
Preferably, hooks 336, 436 on first continuous elongated profile strip 136 are adjacent to each other. Optionally, hooks 338, 438 on second continuous elongated profile strip 138 are also adjacent to each other in one variant of the invention. As shown in
In one variant of the invention, first continuous elongated profile strip 136 has a plurality of continuous recesses 536, 636, 776 and 800 along a length of strip 136 (
It is further appreciated that, preferably, at least two continuous recesses 536, 636 are dimensioned to resealably mate with hooks 338, 438, and/or at least two continuous recesses 638, 738 are dimensioned to resealably mate with hooks 336, 436.
In another variant of the invention, at least one continuous recess on each respective profile strip is not dimensioned to mate with a respective hook, but rather dimensioned to tightly fit into a recess that is substantially congruent to a profile member. It is appreciated that when member 126 is inserted into recess 538, the tight fit between member 126 and recess 538 also creates an additional substantially water tight and/or airtight fit. The interaction between the other recesses and members causes a similar result with the combination of the interaction of the various hooks, recesses, and members creating a substantially leak-proof failsafe seal. Of course, it is further appreciated that while the geometry of the members is as shown in the
As further seen in
As shown in
Optionally, baby bottle liner 100 can also have infant formula or other nutritional supplement or drink within liner body 102 (
It is appreciated that liner 100 of the present invention is used with baby bottle 200 and located within a cavity 202 therein (
Yet another variant of the invention provides liner 100 that is constructed of a food grade microwavable plastic or a microwavable coating(s) that permits the contents of the liner body 102 to be placed in a microwave for re-heating of the contents to a suitable temperature. It is appreciated that this feature of the invention permits several of the most common problems associated with infant nursing to be solved, e.g. re-use and re-heating of mother's milk or infant formula. It is also appreciated that the plastic is chosen to eliminate or minimize any leaching that may occur. Various types of food grade, microwavable plastics are known and commercially available in the industry, but they have not been used with bottle liners as in the present invention. One such suitable microwavable material is a film comprising Kraton™ polyolefin block co-polymers that are commercially available from Shell Chemical Products. Materials made with or comprising Kraton™ polymers also have the additional advantage that they are steam sterilizable or sterilizable by other conventional methods.
The liner 100 also optionally comprises an additive that is extruded with liner 100. The additive changes color when the temperature of the contents of the liner increases or turns a predetermined color when the contents of the liner 100 are at a suitable temperature. Liner 100 may also optionally have a temperature indicator or temperature range indicator associated with the liner 100, e.g. connected thereto or placed as a strip on or in liner 100 that changes color when the temperature of the contents of the liner increases or reaches a predetermined desirable temperature or temperature range. This feature solves the common problem of providing the infant formula or mother's milk at an appropriate temperature that is neither too hot nor too cold for the child. This feature of the invention permits the temperature of the contents of the liner 100 to be visually determined prior to infant nursing.
While the embodiment of the invention shown in
In a variant of the invention, liner 100 includes a frangible access 155 (
The film from which liner body 102 is constructed can be made from any suitable material, but is preferably made from a polymeric material as long as it is food grade and compatible with the contents of the liner 100. The film is folded and sealed such that bottom gussets 101 are created in a conventional manner. Optionally, side gussets (not shown) are also added to liner body 102. It is appreciated that the gussetting feature increases the overall carrying capacity of the liner 100 and makes the bottle 200 with liner 100 generally more stable where the entire bottle is filled with formula and the like.
The seals used in the present invention can be made using conventional sealing techniques, which include by way of example heat sealing, ultrasonic sealing, adhesive sealing, etc. To aid in the formation of the airtight and/or watertight seals used in the present invention, it is appreciated that the length L of the reclosable fastener 130 is less than the length of front wall 108 and/or back wall 110 that form liner body 102.
As seen in
It is appreciated that reclosable fastener assembly 130 can take many forms. Preferably, profile strips 136, 138 are each made from a single, extruded, flexible polymeric material. Further, tearoff tabs 172, 174 can be added to walls 108, 110 above to assist in placing of liner 100 in bottle 200.
Properly feeding, locating and sealing reclosable fastener 130 at predetermined locations on the material from which the liner body 102 is made are important aspects of the invention. Machines commercially available from Z-Patch, Inc. of Carbondale, Ill. are reliable and capable of repeatedly performing the steps referred to in the method described above with high throughput and with low cycle times.
While only a few, preferred embodiments of the invention have been described hereinabove, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the embodiment may be modified and altered without departing from the central spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, the preferred embodiment described hereinabove is to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims, rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are intended to be embraced herein.
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/360,184 filed on Feb. 6, 2003, which was a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/524,439 filed on Mar. 14, 2000 and which is now U.S. Pat. No. 6,576,278 issued on Jun. 10, 2003.
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Child | 10360184 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10360184 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 11426516 | US |