The present invention relates to a fluid product dispenser comprising:
The dispensing member generally comprises an actuation rod that is movable back-and-forth and that communicates with the dip tube through a chamber and at least one inlet and/or outlet valve. The dispensing head also comprises a pusher that is removably mounted on the actuation rod.
This is an entirely conventional design for a manual dispenser in the fields of perfumery, cosmetics, and pharmacy. The user presses on the pusher, thereby depressing the actuation rod, which discharges fluid product from the chamber through the outlet valve that is forced into the open state. When the pressure on the pusher is released, fluid product from the reservoir is sucked into the chamber through the dip tube and the inlet valve. Simultaneously, outside air penetrates into the reservoir through the open vent path, in order to compensate for the volume of fluid product sucked in by the dispensing member. The reservoir is thus always at atmospheric pressure. The outlet valve and the vent path are opened by depressing the actuation rod. All of operation is entirely conventional for a manual dispenser.
When the reservoir is empty, it is sometimes possible to fill it, when the dispensing head is removable, for example by unscrewing.
Document EP 3310491 describes a particular method of filling, without having to remove the dispensing head. It is sufficient for the pusher to be removable, which is the case for most dispensers. Thus, after the pusher has been withdrawn, the dispenser is disposed upside down, and fluid product is injected under pressure into the reservoir, not through the actuation rod, the chamber, and the dip tube, but through the vent path, which is forced into the open state by the actuation rod being depressed, even in part. And the air contained in the reservoir is discharged through the dip tube, the chamber and the actuation rod: the communication being opened by the actuation rod being depressed.
When the fluid product that fills the reservoir arrives at the inlet of the dip tube (disposed upside down), it is discharged through the dip tube. This overflow of fluid product spilled through the dip tube is finally collected by an absorbent ring, which must then be discarded. Furthermore, the reservoir is overfilled, since it no longer contains the minimum volume of air necessary to compensate for temperature and/or pressure variations. The filling according to this document leads to a double disadvantage, namely a dangerous reservoir and a waste (ring soaked with fluid).
The object of the present invention is to overcome the abovementioned disadvantages of this prior art document by preventing the reservoir from being filled excessively and by eliminating the overflow being spilled through the dip tube.
To do this, the present invention proposes a fluid product dispenser comprising:
Thus, when the reservoir disposed upside down is filled with the method of document EP3310491, the shut-off valve will close off the inlet of the dip tube as soon as the fluid product reaches it. Its movable member is moved by the fluid product against the seat, thereby cutting off communication with the dip tube. Thus, the fluid cannot be discharged through the dip tube.
Advantageously, the movable member has a density lower than that of the fluid product, such that it floats in the fluid product. The movable member can be made of a solid material, the density of which is less than that of the fluid product and/or contains air or another gas.
According to another aspect of the invention, the fluid product reservoir with the dispensing head mounted thereon and therein defines a useful volume, the seat being disposed in the fluid product reservoir in the vicinity of the bottom, so as to maintain in the fluid product reservoir, which is filled with fluid via the vent path with the dispenser upside down, a quantity of air that is sufficient to absorb pressure and/or temperature variations. Thanks to the shut-off valve, the quantity of air remaining can be adjusted to a value that makes it possible to guarantee the integrity of the dispenser even in case of significant temperature and/or pressure variations.
According to a feature of the invention, the shut-off valve can comprise a valve body forming the seat and a connection sleeve for the inlet of the dip tube, the movable member being trapped in the valve body with an axial degree of freedom enabling it to come selectively into sealed contact with the seat.
According to an embodiment, the movable member can be a hollow ball. In this case, the seat and the ball can be disposed beside the dip tube.
According to another embodiment, the movable member can be a cap engaged around the valve body, the seat extends around the dip tube and the cap defines an annular contact zone intended to come into sealed contact with the seat, this annular contact zone extending around the dip tube.
It can clearly be seen that the shut-off valve of the present invention considerably improves the filling method of document EP3310491. Instead of discharging the fluid product overflow into the absorbent ring, the valve of the invention shuts off the dip tube. The injection of fluid product can continue after the shut-off valve has been closed, leading to an overpressure in the reservoir which results in the remaining air being compressed.
In order to reduce or avoid this overpressure in the reservoir, the shut-off valve can be provided with a device providing perceptible information, in particular a sound that is perceptible to a user, the perceptible information being generated in response to an airflow passing through the shut-off valve. For example, it is possible to provide a sound device that emits a sound generated by the passage of the airflow. The sound can be continuous like a whistling or jerky like a clicking sound. It can be amplified by the walls of the reservoir. The user is therefore informed of the filling of the reservoir by stopping the sound. It is also possible to modify the sound of the device when the movable member of the valve moves towards its seat: the user perceives this modification of the sound and then knows that the reservoir is almost full. At worst, stopping the sound indicates that the tank is full. It is even possible to imagine that the sound is produced by the valve member which moves under the effect of the air flow. By way of example, the ball of the valve can be agitated and knocked against the valve body, thereby generating a sound that is perceptible to human hearing. Instead of or in addition to the sound, the device can generate a vibration that is perceptible to the touch.
The present invention also defines an assembly comprising a source of fluid product, an adapter defining a filling duct and a vent duct, and a dispenser according to any one of the preceding claims, the adapter making it possible to connect the source of fluid product to the dispenser so as to make a fluid product flow and an airflow to intersect each other, the adapter being provided with a device providing perceptible information, in particular a sound that is perceptible to a user, the perceptible information being generated in response to an airflow passing through the air duct of the adapter.
In a variant, a detector can be provided that detects the absence of airflow, the detector thus sending a stop signal that stops the injection of fluid product. This is an active, even electronic, version, while the device mentioned above is passive.
The present invention also defines a method for filling a dispenser such as defined above, the dispensing head comprising a pusher that is removably mounted on an actuation rod that is in fluid communication with the dip tube via a chamber and at least one valve, the method comprising the following steps:
The spirit of the present invention is based on using the Archimedean buoyancy force of the fluid product stored in the reservoir disposed upside down to actuate a shut-off valve that closes off access to the dip tube, in order to avoid overfilling the reservoir and spilling the overflow through the dip tube.
The invention will now be described more fully below, with reference to the accompanying drawings which show two embodiments of the invention by way of non-limiting examples.
In the figures:
Thus, the dispenser D comprises a fluid product reservoir R defining a bottom R1 and a neck R2. The dispenser D also comprises a dispensing head T which makes it possible to take the fluid product stored in the reservoir R and to dispense it, in particular in sprayed form. The dispensing head T comprises a dispensing member P, that can, in this case, be a pump or a valve. This dispensing member P is mounted on and in the neck R2 of the reservoir R by means of a fastener F, which can be conventional. The dip tube TP extends from the dispensing member P to the vicinity of the bottom R1 of the reservoir R. Although not shown in
This source S comprises a source reservoir S1 preferably containing the pressurised fluid product. The source S is equipped with a source valve S2, through which the pressurised fluid product can be dispensed. The source S is provided with an adapter A that enables the dispenser D to be connected in order to be able to inject pressurised fluid product from the source S into the reservoir R of the dispenser D. The dispenser D is therefore associated with the adapter A in the upside down position, as can be seen in
The dispensing member P comprises a body P1 which forms at its upper end, a collar P2 used for fastening the body P1 in the neck R2 by means of the fastener F. At its lower end, the body P1 forms a receiving tube P3, in which the dip tube TP is engaged. The body P1 is formed with a vent hole P4 that makes it possible to communicate the inside of the body P1 with the inside of the reservoir R. The inside of the reservoir R thus communicates with the outside through a vent path that extends through the dispensing member P. The dispensing member P also comprises an actuation rod P5 that is axially movable back-and-forth inside the body P1. A piston P6 is mounted on the actuation rod P5 to slide in a sealed manner inside the body P1 under the action of a return spring. This piston P6 forms, with the rod P5, an outlet valve for the fluid product coming from an internal chamber P0 formed inside the body P1. An inlet valve P7 is also provided between the internal chamber P0 and the dip tube TP. For example, this inlet valve P7 can be in the form of a ball that rests selectively on a seat formed by the body P1.
This is an entirely conventional design for an atmospheric or return air pump making it possible to pump fluid product into the reservoir R and to repel it through the actuation rod P5. This pump also makes it possible to make outside air enter into the reservoir R through the vent path that ends with the vent hole P4.
The adapter A, which can be associated or integrated with the fluid product source S, comprises a first connection sleeve As for the source valve S2 and a second connection sleeve Ap for the valve rod P5 of the dispensing member P. The connection sleeve As communicates directly with the vent path of the dispensing member P through a filling duct Ap. The second connection sleeve Ap is connected to the outside through a vent duct Aa. Thus, the actuation of the source valve S2 makes it possible to inject fluid product into the reservoir R of the dispenser D through the filling duct Ap and the vent path of the dispensing member P. The injected fluid product enters the reservoir R through the vent hole P4. Simultaneously, the air contained in the reservoir R of the dispenser D is discharged through the dip tube TP, the inlet valve P7 in the open state, the internal chamber P0, the outlet valve in the open state, the actuation rod P5 and finally the vent duct Aa of the adapter A.
The adapter A thus makes it possible to implement the particular filling method of the above-mentioned document EP3310491.
It can be said that the dispenser D of
This shut-off valve V comprises a valve body V1 that can be made as a single piece. The valve body V1 forms a receiving housing V2 for the lower end Tl of the dip tube TP. This receiving housing V2 communicates with a connecting duct V3 that opens into a chamber V4. The chamber V4 forms a valve seat V5 for a movable member V6 that is, in this case, a floating ball that can be solid or hollow. It is sufficient for its density to be lower than that of the fluid. This ball V6 can move inside the chamber V4 so as to come selectively into sealed contact with its valve seat V5. For moulding reasons, the shut-off valve V also comprises a stopper V7 that enables the connecting duct V3 to be moulded.
It can be noted that the chamber V4 forming the valve seat V5 and the ball V6 are disposed adjacent to the dip tube TP.
In
By continuing the filling of the reservoir R according to the method illustrated in
In this way, the discharging of the air stored in the reservoir through the dip tube TP during the filling of the reservoir R is not prevented, but any spilling of fluid product through the dip tube TP is prevented, at the end of filling of the reservoir R. In summary, the air is discharged, but not the fluid product. There then remains in the reservoir a minimum quantity of air, referenced Air.min in
Once the reservoir R of the dispenser D has been filled, it can be put back upright and used conventionally: the ball V6 of the shut-off valve V being urged by floating away from its seat V5. When the reservoir R is almost empty, the ball V6 falls back onto its seat V56: the shut-off valve V is then closed again.
In
However, when the level of fluid Nf reaches the level of the cap V6′, the cap starts to float and therefore moves so as to establish sealed contact between the valve seat V5′ and the contact zone V65. This is shown in
In this second embodiment, it can be noted that the valve seat V5′ and the contact zone V65 extend coaxially around the dip tube Tp.
Thus, the whistle V8 emits a sound that is perceptible to the user throughout the filling operation, because the air stored in the reservoir is discharged into the dip tube TP through the whistle V8. The perception of the sound generated by the whistle V8 thus gives the user an audible indication that the filling process is in progress. And as soon as the sound generated by the whistle V8 stops, the user knows that the filling operation is finished. They can then disconnect the dispenser D from the fluid product source S, as shown in
In
Once the dispenser is filled, it can be turned upright, as shown in
With reference to
The sound device A1 can be an accessory of the adapter A, but it can also be integrated into the adapter A, for example in the form of a particular configuration of the air discharge duct Aa for generating sound, such as a whistling or a clicking sound.
Although not shown, it is also possible to provide a detector that detects the absence of airflow at the outlet of the adapter A such that the detector can send a stop signal that stops the injection of fluid product.
The shut-off valve of the invention makes it possible to design a filling method comprising the following steps:
The device V8 or A1 enables the user to know when filling is finished.
Thanks to the shut-off valve of the invention, disposed at the end of the dip tube, any spilling of fluid through the dip tube is prevented. This makes it possible to avoid any loss of fluid at the outlet of the adapter A, but also to maintain a minimum volume of air inside the reservoir.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FR2202353 | Mar 2022 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5890624 | Klima | Apr 1999 | A |
6126042 | Meshberg | Oct 2000 | A |
10981187 | McGarry | Apr 2021 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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3 310 491 | Aug 2019 | EP |
10-2009-0127979 | Dec 2009 | KR |
WO-0004997 | Feb 2000 | WO |
Entry |
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French Search Report for FR 2202353 dated Oct. 19, 2022. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20230294118 A1 | Sep 2023 | US |