This invention has to do with foam dispensers, of the kind which pump foam from a manual plunger-operated pump adapted to combine air with foamable liquid drawn from a container of the dispenser.
Hand-operated foamers (foam dispensers) are widely used for dispensing foams of toiletries, bathroom products and the like by manual pump action using a foamable liquid in a container and air from the surroundings. The pump plunger carries an air piston and a liquid piston, operating respectively in an air cylinder and a liquid cylinder of the pump body. The air chamber and liquid chamber have outlets to a mixing region where air and liquid mix to form a precursor foam, which passes through a regulator (typically one or more meshes) and to a discharge nozzle. The outlets and discharge nozzle are usually part of the plunger. The volume of air needed is much larger than that of liquid, and since the air and liquid pistons are operated by the stroke of the same plunger the air cylinder has a much larger diameter than the liquid cylinder. Usually the air and liquid cylinders are formed together coaxially in one piece, as portions of a moulded cylinder component having the air cylinder at the top, the liquid cylinder at the bottom and a transition region of diameter reduction between them, often with an upwardly re-entrant wall to reduce pump height. The bottom end of the liquid cylinder has an inlet portion defining a liquid inlet (usually connected to a dip tube) with an inlet valve, usually a ball valve.
See for example our US2011/0272432A, and
In the prior art dispenser of
A further feature in
See also U.S. Pat. No. 6,053,364.
In this application we propose new features for a foam dispenser and foam pump.
Some aspects of our proposals are set out in the claims.
In one aspect, our proposals enable a pump spring to be positioned outside the liquid chamber, in conjunction with the use of a pin-operated liquid outlet valve. In another aspect, our proposals enable improved manufacture of the liquid inlet of the pump body.
The invention relates to a foam dispenser of the type comprising a pump body and a pump plunger reciprocable relative to the pump body;
the pump body comprising an air cylinder and a liquid cylinder respectively defining an air chamber and a liquid chamber, the liquid cylinder having an inlet portion providing an inlet for receiving liquid from a container of liquid to be foamed, and including an inlet valve, and
the pump plunger comprising an air piston movable in the air cylinder to vary the volume of the air chamber and a liquid piston operable in the liquid cylinder to vary the volume of the liquid chamber.
As is known, the dispenser pump generally has a mixing region, preferably a mixing chamber, for mixing air and liquid under turbulent conditions to form foam. One or more air outlets lead from the air chamber to the mixing region, and one and more liquid outlets lead from the liquid chamber to the mixing region. From the mixing region, an outlet passage leads to a discharge nozzle for the foam, preferably via a foam regulator e.g. in the form of one or more permeable structures such as meshes extending across the outlet passage. Preferably the air and liquid outlets, the mixing region and the outlet passage are incorporated in the pump plunger.
The dispenser pump comprises a pump spring biasing the plunger towards an extended position relative to the body, usually with a lower end acting against the pump body and an upper end acting against the pump plunger.
In one of our proposals herein, in relation to a foam dispenser of the type described, the pump body comprises a cylinder component which is a one-piece moulded component comprising a larger diameter air cylinder portion, a smaller diameter liquid cylinder portion and a diameter transition portion (i.e. with a radial direction component) which generally constitutes a bottom of the air cylinder, and which may be or may comprise a re-entrant wall portion so as to form an outer annular trough and an inner annular ridge, the ridge being at or adjacent the top of the liquid cylinder. We propose that the inlet portion of the liquid cylinder, including an inlet valve formation, is comprised in a discrete inlet piece which connects to the liquid cylinder portion of the cylinder component to define the liquid chamber and complete the liquid cylinder with its inlet.
The discrete inlet piece is generally a one-piece tubular moulding. It may have an upwardly-directed fitting to connect to the cylinder component, usually of a larger diameter, and a downwardly-directed region or portion, usually of a smaller diameter, which may be a dip tube connector for connection to a dip tube for liquid intake. It comprises an inlet valve formation, usually comprising a downwardly-convergent valve seat, for an inlet valve member typically a ball. The valve seat typically is or comprises a conical surface. The inlet piece may also define an inlet flow restriction or flow orifice, below (upstream of) the valve seat. The corresponding formation may be an inward annular flange with the flow orifice at its centre, and which may act as a stop for dip tube push-insertion. The upper part of the inlet piece is adapted to fix in a liquid-tight manner to the liquid cylinder portion of the cylinder component, e.g. by a snap fit. It may have an upward skirt or collar fitting around or into a corresponding downward skirt or collar of the cylinder component, e.g. with snap formations on the two components.
This proposal offers advantages in moulding the liquid inlet valve region. Moulding of this region requires accurate formation of the tapered valve seat, leading down to the inlet flow restriction where a mould pin must be inserted to form the orifice. Conventionally it is necessary to vent air at that point to avoiding air trapping in the mould, so that there is a risk of flashing at the vent point. Moulding the cylinder component, which has substantial diameter and area and a convoluted form, is in any case challenging. Moulding material must flow over a large area in a relatively thin layer. To achieve this, material is usually injected at multiple points at an intermediate position of the structure, such as around the bottom of the air cylinder wall portion. However the liquid inlet portion is still remote from the injection points at an extremity of the mould, hence the mentioned need for venting, and it has been difficult to achieve accurate moulding quality of the inlet valve formation. By providing an inlet portion instead as a separate piece, a good quality inlet valve formation can be made more easily because it need not be part of a large and complex component.
The discrete inlet piece is also advantageous when the liquid outlet has a valve operated by a valve pin connected to a valve pin retainer in the liquid chamber. This valve retainer needs to be held down in the liquid chamber, but because it is not practicable to mould it integrally it has generally been a separate component, held down (as mentioned above) by acting as a bottom abutment for a pump spring. Provision of the inlet as a discrete piece enables the valve pin retainer to be formed integrally, preferably integrally with the liquid cylinder portion of the cylinder component (although it might alternatively be integrated with the inlet piece) so that firstly, component count is not increased by having the discrete inlet piece and secondly, the pump spring is not needed to hold it and can be outside the liquid chamber. Desirably the pump spring is positioned in the air chamber, resting on the bottom of the air chamber e.g. around the pump plunger stem (e.g. around a liquid piston portion of the plunger), such as at an inner annular ridge of the transition portion of the cylinder component that connects between the large diameter and small diameter portions. Accordingly, where a valve pin-operated liquid outlet valve is used, our proposal enables convenient disposition of the pump spring outside the liquid chamber.
A second aspect of our proposals, in relation to a foam dispenser of the type described, is that the liquid outlet has a liquid outlet valve operated by a valve pin connected to a valve pin retainer in the liquid chamber downstream of the inlet valve, and the pump spring is positioned in the air chamber. A bottom end of the pump spring preferably acts against the pump body at the bottom of the air chamber, such as around the pump plunger and especially around a liquid piston portion of the plunger. The pump spring bottom end may engage an inner annular ridge of a re-entrant wall comprised in a transition portion of the cylinder component that connects between larger diameter and smaller diameter portions constituting the air cylinder and liquid cylinder respectively.
Features and preferred features described above for the first aspect are of course also applicable with the second aspect since they are compatible and advantageously combined.
An example of our proposals is now described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. shows a prior art foamer design, already discussed.
The foam dispenser consists of a foam pump 1 mounted on a container 10 which contains a foamable liquid, to be drawn into the pump 1 through a dip tube 55. The container is indicated only schematically in
The closure cap 4 holds the body component down onto the edge of the neck of the container through an outward top flange 312 of the body component and a seal ring 43.
The pump body 3 consists of a main cylinder component 31 including a larger diameter air cylinder portion 32 with a cylindrical outer wall and a coaxial smaller-diameter liquid cylinder portion 33, also with a cylindrical outer wall and terminating at a downward spigot 331. A re-entrant transition wall 37 extends between the larger diameter and smaller diameter portions, defining an outer annular trough 35 and an inner annular ridge 36. A liquid cylinder of the dispenser is completed by an inlet piece 9 which is a generally tubular moulded part consisting of a lower dip tube socket 92, a top fitting in the form of a socket 91 which fits with a snap onto the downward spigot 331 of the cylinder component, and a convergent valve seat portion 93 between them which forms, on the inside, a conical valve seat surface for a valve ball 58 and a restricted flow orifice 94 immediately below the valve.
It is a particular feature here that the inlet piece 9 is separately moulded, so that long mould flow paths are avoided in the delicate operation of forming the valve region.
The plunger 2 moves in the body 3 between extended and retracted positions (the extended position being shown) and carries an outer (upper) air piston 22 and an inner (lower) liquid piston 21 forming a hollow stem, with a bottom annular lip 210 which wipes the wall of the liquid cylinder 33. The internal cavity of the liquid piston 21 constitutes, with the liquid cylinder 33, a liquid chamber 211 which communicates upwardly via a liquid outlet 86 with a mixing chamber 8. The mixing chamber 8 is the beginning of an outlet passage 67 leading to the discharge nozzle 63 via a foam regulator 81. The foam regulator 81 may be of any known type; that shown is a conventional insert comprising meshes 83 on either end of a sleeve 82 which fits into the plunger head 6.
The plunger 6 has a shroud 64 with a front axial rib 65, fitting down through a locking flange 42 and a corresponding slot 44 of the closure cap 4. In the plunger-extended position the plunger can be turned so that a locking slot 66 (see
The air piston 22 (see also
Valves for the liquid flow are provided by the inlet ball valve 58,93 at the inlet piece 9, and by a valve pin 25 comprising an elongated shaft 252 with a tapered head 251 acting as a liquid outlet valve member seating in the liquid outlet 86. The pin 25 has a retaining enlargement 253 at the bottom end which is trapped by an inward flange 391 at the top of an upwardly-projecting retainer tube 39; the bottom end of the valve pin is snapped into this tube during assembly and retained thereafter.
A feature of this construction is that the upstanding retainer tube 39 for the pin 25 is moulded in one piece with the main cylinder component 31, as a re-entrant formation of the bottom end of the liquid cylinder portion 33 thereof. This obviates having a separate component for the pin retainer, which has previously been necessary in dispensers using one-piece liquid cylinder portions.
The pump spring 5, to compress during depression of the plunger and urge the plunger back to the extended position afterwards, is housed in the air chamber 311 surrounding the liquid piston 21 so that it is out of the liquid flow path. Its bottom end rests on a spring seat 36 provided on the inner annular ridge of the re-entrant transition wall 37 of the body component 31, around the top of the liquid cylinder portion.
Operation of the dispenser proceeds according to known principles. After a preliminary depression of the plunger, the plunger re-extends driven by the spring, drawing liquid into the liquid chamber 211 and air into the air chamber 311 through the corresponding inlet valves. As the plunger extends, the valve member 251 at the top of the valve pin 25 is drawn down to seal the liquid outlet 86.
Subsequently the plunger 6 is depressed by pushing on the push top 61. Liquid pressure lifts the valve member 251 of the valve pin 25 off its seat, so that liquid jets into the mixing region 8 at the same time as air under pressure is driven into the same region from the air outlets 85 via the air outlet valve. The turbulent mixing of the air and liquid forms a foam precursor which is then made more uniform and adjusted in bubble size by passing through the regulator meshes 83, subsequently passing out through the outlet channel 67 to the discharge nozzle 63.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1603949.7 | Mar 2016 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2017/055480 | 3/8/2017 | WO | 00 |