The invention herein resides in the art of foam pumps, wherein a foamable liquid and air are combined to create a foam product. More particularly, the invention relates to a piston pump wherein a liquid piston portion and an air piston portion are provided as part of a piston assembly that is received by a piston housing for reciprocal movement with respect to the housing.
For many years, liquids, such as soaps, sanitizers, cleansers, disinfectants, and the like have been dispensed through the use of user-actuated pumps. The pump mechanism employed with such dispensers has typically been a liquid pump, simply emitting a predetermined quantity of the liquid upon movement of an actuator. Recently, for purposes of effectiveness and economy, it has become desirable to dispense the liquids in the form of foam, generated by the interjection of air into the liquid. Accordingly, the standard liquid pump has given way to a foam generating pump, which necessarily requires means for combining the air and liquid in such a manner as to generate the desired foam.
Typically, foam pumps include an air pump portion and a fluid pump portion—the two requiring communication to ultimately create the foam. One type of foam pump, such as those shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,271,530 and 5,445,288, employs air and liquid pistons that move within respective air and liquid piston housings and employ valves to drawn air and liquid from separate sources and direct them into a common chamber and/or through a screen member to create a foam product. This invention improves upon such piston-based dispensers.
This invention provides a pump including a piston housing and a piston assembly received in the piston housing thereby defining a collapsible liquid chamber, which contains a foamable liquid, and a collapsible air chamber, which contains air. The piston assembly includes a premix chamber separated from both the collapsible liquid chamber and the collapsible air chamber by a premix chamber wall and fluidly communicating with both the collapsible liquid chamber and the collapsible air chamber through a mix aperture in the premix chamber wall. A biasing member urges the piston assembly to a non-actuated position, and the foam pump is actuated by urging the piston assembly against the biasing member to an actuated position in which the collapsible air chamber and the collapsible liquid chamber are reduced in volume such that air is expelled from the collapsible air chamber and through the mix aperture while at the same time foamable liquid is expelled from the collapsible liquid chamber through the mix aperture, with the simultaneous movement of the air and foamable liquid through the mix aperture causing a turbulent mixing thereof.
In a particular embodiment the piston housing includes a base wall, at least one sidewall extending from the base wall, a liquid tube extending from the base wall interiorly of the at least one sidewall, and an inlet communicating with the liquid tube through the base wall. A liquid valve regulates the flow of foamable liquid through the inlet from a foamable liquid source. The piston assembly includes a liquid piston sealed to the liquid tube of the piston housing to define the collapsible liquid chamber, an air piston sealed to the sidewall of the piston housing to define the collapsible air chamber. The liquid piston is positioned in the collapsible air chamber and secured to the air piston to move therewith.
With reference to
The piston assembly includes a liquid piston 30, which is sealed to the liquid tube 22 of the piston housing 12 to define a collapsible liquid chamber 32, and an air piston 34, which is sealed to the at least one sidewall 18 of the piston housing 12 to define a collapsible air chamber 36. As seen, the liquid piston 30 is positioned in the collapsible air chamber 36 and secured to the air piston 34 to move therewith. A biasing member 38 urges the liquid piston 30 to a non actuated position, which is shown
A bracket 44 extends from liquid piston 30 to secure the liquid piston 30 to the interior wall of the air piston 34 at groove 46. A plurality of ribs 45 extend radially and upwardly from the premix chamber wall 41 to form groove 46. As seen in comparison of the different cross sections provided in
The foam pump 10 is actuated by urging the piston assembly 14 against the biasing member 38 to an actuated position as shown in
In this particular embodiment, a cap member 70 is provided to secure the foam pump 10 to a bottle neck (not shown), as generally known. Threads 72 accessible through open end 74 interact with threads on a bottle neck, and a radial flange 76 extends from the open end 20 of the pump housing 12 to secure to a flange mount 78 in cap member 70. At open end 80, a radial flange 82 extends inwardly to interact with a radial flange 84 extending from the exterior of the collapsible air chamber 36. The pump housing 12 is secured, while the piston assembly 14 can move relative thereto, though limited by radial flange 82. An actuation flange 86 can be provided on piston assembly 14 for engagement by a dispenser element to pushing on the piston assembly 14 against the biasing member 38.
The ratio of air to liquid fed to the mixing cartridge 50 can be altered by altering the size of the collapsible air chamber 36 and collapsible liquid chamber 32. In particular embodiments the collapsible air chamber 36 and collapsible liquid chamber 32 are designed so that the ratio of the volume of air to the volume of liquid fed to the mixing chamber is about 10:1.
In light of the forgoing, it should be evident that this invention provides improvements in the art of foam pumps. While only particularly desired embodiments have been described herein in accordance with disclosure requirements, it should be appreciated that structural aspects of this invention might be altered and yet be considered within the scope of this invention, which will be defined by the claims herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5271530 | Uehira et al. | Dec 1993 | A |
5445288 | Banks | Aug 1995 | A |
5462208 | Stahley et al. | Oct 1995 | A |
5570819 | Uehira et al. | Nov 1996 | A |
5823394 | Davis et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
7147133 | Brouwer et al. | Dec 2006 | B2 |
7588170 | van der Heijden | Sep 2009 | B2 |
7717301 | Tsai | May 2010 | B2 |
7726518 | Brouwer | Jun 2010 | B2 |
20050115988 | Law et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050224519 | Law et al. | Oct 2005 | A1 |
20070119864 | Tsai | May 2007 | A1 |
20070215643 | Law et al. | Sep 2007 | A1 |
20090008412 | Choi et al. | Jan 2009 | A1 |
20090039110 | Brouwer | Feb 2009 | A1 |
20090206109 | Santagiuliana | Aug 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090188944 A1 | Jul 2009 | US |