This application is a National Stage of International Application No. PCT/FR2013/050257 filed Feb. 7, 2013, claiming priority based on French Patent Application No. 1251437, filed Feb. 16, 2012, the contents of all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
The invention relates to the field of containers obtained by blowing or stretch blow-molding from a blank (for example a preform or intermediate container) of plastic material such as PET (polyethylene terephthalate).
The invention relates more particularly to flat containers, namely containers having a flattened cross section, typically oval or rectangular in shape. This type of container is especially suitable for some applications (particularly cosmetics) in which the contents have a high viscosity, so that pressure on the body of the container causes the contents to flow.
However, this type of container is not limited to cosmetics applications, and for ergonomic reasons, it is also used in the packaging of beverages, the flattened section offering a better grip, as explained in the international application WO 2007/127789 (The Coca-Cola Company) or its American equivalent US 2010/0000963.
Nevertheless, this ergonomic advantage also has a mechanical disadvantage: instability, due to the flattening of the container which increases the risk of tipping in an axial plane parallel to the smaller width of the container.
The stability of the container is inversely proportional to its facility of grip. It is a compromise between these two limitations that resulted in the solution explained in the aforementioned document, which proposes on the one hand to maintain the W/D ratio (where W is the larger width of the container, and D is its smaller width) between 1.2 and 1.8, and on the other hand to provide the bottom of the container with rounded chamfers (sic) the diameter of which is smaller in the small width of the container than in the larger width of the container.
In reality, this solution contributes only a partial response to the instability problem that affects flat containers. In practice, it is seen that the natural instability (due to the flat shape) of such a container is frequently compounded by instability due to defects of shape on the bottom.
Indeed, during the forming of a flat container it is stretched farther in the direction of its larger width than in the direction of the smaller width. This variation of the stretching rate can induce undesirable defects of flatness on the bottom.
A first simple solution could consist of increasing the blowing pressure, but manufacturers are faced with the need to control the energy consumption of the machines, thus requiring low blowing pressure.
A second simple solution could consist of increasing the blowing time (and thus increasing the cycle time) in order to promote a better impression of the bottom, but this solution is also faced with process limitations which seek to decrease the cycle time in order to increase production rates.
What remains, therefore, is to optimize the shape of the bottom.
The invention seeks to propose a flat container capable of fulfilling one or more (and preferably all) of the following objectives:
To that end, proposed firstly is a container of plastic material having a flattened body and a bottom in the extension of the body at a lower end thereof, the bottom comprising:
Dimensioned in this way, the container offers a better compromise between ergonomics and stability.
Various characteristics can be provided, alone or in combination:
and preferably:
where CM is the distance from the point M to an axis of the container.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will be seen from the description of a preferred embodiment, provided with reference to the appended drawings in which:
Represented in
The container 1 comprises a body 2 which extends along a principal axis X and is extended, at a lower side, by a bottom 3, and an upper side, opposite to the bottom 3, by a shoulder 4 which in turn is extended by a neck 5 defining a mouth.
The body 2 has a cross-section that is flattened in shape, in this instance substantially oval. This shape extends to the bottom 3, the contour of which is substantially the same as the body 2 in cross-section.
At the junction between the body 2, at the lower end thereof, and the bottom 3, the container 1 has an outer connecting fillet 6 having an arc-of-circle profile of small radius (equal to or less than 2 mm).
The bottom 3 comprises a peripheral seat 7 which defines a continuous seating plane 8, substantially perpendicular to the principal axis X of the container 1, and by which said container can rest flat on a flat surface (particularly the upper surface of the table or a conveyor belt, in a handling machine on a container production line).
The seating plane 8 is transversely delimited towards the exterior (i.e. opposite the axis X of the container) by an outer perimeter 9 defined internally by the fillet 6.
A transverse extension of the seating plane 8 is denoted A, measured perpendicularly to the principal axis X of the container 1 at the outer perimeter 9. Because the seating plane 8 has an oval contour, A is not constant and has a maximum, called large dimension and denoted A1, and a minimum, called small dimension and denoted A2, the ratio of which must be greater than 1:
More specific examples of this ratio will be provided hereinafter.
Furthermore, B denotes a transverse extension (or width) of the body 2 measured perpendicularly to the principal axis X of the container, near the bottom 3, i.e. at a distance from the seating plane 8 that is less than or equal to ⅕ of the total height of the body 2. Since the body 2 in cross-section has an overall contour like the bottom 3, B is not constant and has a maximum B1, called large dimension of the body and a minimum B2, called small dimension of the body, the ratio of which must be greater than 1:
The seat 7 comprises an inner annular cheek 10 which extends axially towards the interior of the container 1 in the extension of the seating plane 8, substantially perpendicular with respect thereto. The seating plane 8 is connected to the cheek 10 by an inner fillet 11 having an arc-of-circle profile of small radius (equal to or less than approximately 2 mm), or a medium radius (of between approximately 2 mm and 5 mm).
The seating plane 8 is transversely delimited towards the interior (i.e. in the direction of the axis X of the container) by an inner perimeter 12 defined externally by the inner fillet 11.
The bottom 3 further comprises a concave arch 13, with the concavity turned outward from the container 1. Said arch 13 extends from the seat 7, in the extension of the cheek 10, to a central zone of the bottom defining a disc 14 that extends axially, projecting towards the interior of the container 1.
The following notation is used:
The bottom 3 is dimensioned as follows:
This dimensioning significantly increases the stability of the container 1.
The ratios A1/B1 and A2/B2 can be dimensioned separately; they can be substantially identical:
According to a preferred embodiment, the ratio A2/B2 is equal to or greater than 0.90, and for example substantially equal to 0.95, as illustrated in
and for example:
This dimensioning, which moves the outer perimeter 9 of the seating plan 8 outwards, that is, opposite to the axis X, gives the container 1 a substantially cylindrical shape near the bottom 3. The result is increased stability of the container 1 in the plane of the small dimension A2.
The ratio A1/B1 can also be equal to or greater than 0.90, and for example substantially equal to 0.95, as illustrated in
and for example:
As a variant, the ratios A1/B1 can be different, the ratio A1/B1 preferably being less than the ratio A2/B2:
Thus, the ratio A2/B2 being maintained equal to or greater than 0.90, and for example substantially equal to 0.95 as illustrated in
and for example:
This makes it possible to maintain the stability of the container 1 in the plane of the small dimension A2 (high A2/B2 ratio), while maintaining good blowability of the container (relatively low A1/B1 ratio) in the plane of the large dimension A1, where the stretching is more difficult but where the stability of the container 1 is naturally better.
According to a preferred embodiment illustrated in
In other words, the seating plane 8 is wider parallel to the large dimension A1 than parallel to the small dimension A2. This greater width relative to the seating plane 8 in the larger dimension contributes to good blowability of the bottom 3 in this direction, minimizing the risk of appearance of distortions (or flatness defects) on the seating plane 8.
Moreover, the narrowness of the seating plane 8 in the small dimension gives said seating plane a quasi-linear character that decreases the risks of hyperstatism of the seat 7 and consequently increases the stability of the container 1.
Preferably, the ratio L1/L2 is between 1 and 3:
According to an embodiment illustrated in
Moreover, according to a preferred embodiment illustrated in
preferably the ratio H1/H2 is between 0.5 and 1:
According to a particular embodiment illustrated in
Thus, the cheek 10 is higher in the plane of the small dimension A2 than in the plane of the large dimension A1. This characteristic contributes in particular:
Thus, without compromising the stability, it is foreseeable that the container 1 could be flattened beyond a ratio A1/A2 (or B1/B2) greater than 1.5, to the benefit of the ergonomics. Preferably, the ratio A1/A2 (or B1/B2) must be greater than 1.8:
Thus, according to a particular embodiment illustrated in particular in
The variations, mentioned above, of the width L of the seating plane 8 and/or the height H of the cheek 10 can be expressed by a variation of the ratio L/H along the perimeter 9, with, preferably:
This inequality results in particular in the fact that:
The width of the seating plane 8, denoted LM, can also be dimensioned at any point M of the outer perimeter 9 of the seating plane 8, as a function of the distance, denoted CM, from the point M to the axis X of the container 1, preferably with:
Thus, the width of the seating plane 8 at any point remains small with respect to the distance to the axis X of the container 1. This guarantees a more homogeneous formation of the seat 7 during the blow-molding of the container 1, the material being distributed more uniformly over the periphery of the seating plane 8. The result is a better blowability of the container 1, and better stability thereof.
According to a preferred embodiment, the bottom 3 of the container 1 is formed by a stretch blow-molding method comprising a boxing operation, in a mold provided with a side wall defining an impression corresponding to the body 2 of the container 1, and a mold bottom that is movable with respect to the wall, in such a way as to cause an overstretching of the bottom 3, resulting in good rigidity and a good impression thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12 51437 | Feb 2012 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2013/050257 | 2/7/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/121131 | 8/22/2013 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4197954 | Oltman et al. | Apr 1980 | A |
4502607 | Szajna | Mar 1985 | A |
7150371 | Larson et al. | Dec 2006 | B1 |
20020148805 | Wurster et al. | Oct 2002 | A1 |
20040164045 | Kelley | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20100000963 | Inomata et al. | Jan 2010 | A1 |
20130153530 | Boukobaz et al. | Jun 2013 | A1 |
20140209558 | Wright et al. | Jul 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 130 023 | Jan 1985 | EP |
02-144507 | Dec 1990 | JP |
05-51716 | Jul 1993 | JP |
2011-251519 | Dec 2011 | JP |
2011-251756 | Dec 2011 | JP |
2007127789 | Nov 2007 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/FR2013/050257 dated Apr. 16, 2013. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140374373 A1 | Dec 2014 | US |