This disclosure relates to foam pumps and in particular foam pumps pressurize the air before pressurizing the liquid.
Recently, a new type of pump capable of dispensing hand cleansers with mechanical scrubber in a foam format through a non-aerosol dispensing system has been developed (U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,002,151 and 8,281,958). This pump is an integral part of a platform that has allowed for the creation of a new hand cleanser category. This category is foam soap with mechanical, scrubbers.
Prior to the development of a pump that was capable of creating foam with mechanical scrubbers, existing foam pumps such as those described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,445,288 & 6,082,586 had the limitation of dispensing foam only. The reason for this is that standard foaming technologies create the foam by passing liquid and air through a porous media to generate the foam. If this technique was employed to create foam with mechanical scrubbers, the pump would simply ‘sieve’ the scrubbers from the liquid and cease to operate. A key characteristic of the hand cleansers dispensed from this type of pump is low viscosity. The viscosity of this form of hand cleanser is generally less than 100 cPoise and is tailored to be easily mixed with air through a porous media to produce foam from a pump.
The hand cleanser characteristics required to create foam with mechanical scrubbers are very different. If the hand cleanser is too thin (viscosity too low) and has a Newtonian rheological behaviour, the mechanical scrubbers will fall out of suspension. If the product is too thick (too viscous), the amount of force required to foam the formulation becomes too high resulting in excessive operating force for the dispenser user and a poor quality foam results. The viscosity range of this type of hand cleanser is generally between 500 cPoise and 4000 cPoise.
Typical non-aerosol foam pumps operate by pumping both air and liquid simultaneously. In essence the foam pump is a combination two pumps (an air pump and a liquid pump) working in tandem to bring a predetermined volume of air together with a predetermined volume of liquid. Since air is generally introduced into the liquid, the viscosity of the liquid will impact on the ability of the air to efficiently infuse. The resistance to infusion translates into back pressure being generated within the pump.
The efficiency of the infusion process is also limited by the simultaneous action of pumping the air into the liquid. Air is a compressible medium whist the liquid is not. Therefore when the air and liquid are being pumped the air compresses due to the resistance applied to it as it is being forced to infuse into the liquid. The result of this is variable foam quality where the ratio of air to liquid is lower at the start of the pumping process and higher at the end of the pumping process. For the pump user, this means the foam generated at the start of the pumping process is wetter than it is at the end. This condition is even more pronounced if a bellows pump or a diaphragm pump is used. These types of pumps deform as they collapse and during the deformation phase, little to no air is being delivered to a mixing chamber and thus the resultant foam is watery at the beginning part of the stroke. This problem is largely overcome with piston pumps for both the air and liquid. However, with a foaming element that includes a sparging element it would be advantageous to build up air pressure on the air side of and within the sparging element before liquid is delivered to the foaming element. Another issue that arises when attempting to foam higher viscosity foam soaps with mechanical scrubbers (as described above) using a foaming element that includes a sparging element is the ability to provide sufficient dwell time to maximize the air infusion process to create a high quality foam.
The present disclosure relates to a non-aerosol foam pump for use in association with an unpressurized liquid container and a foaming element comprising. The pump includes a liquid pump portion and an air pump portion. The liquid pump portion has a liquid chamber with a liquid internal volume and a shuttle liquid piston. The liquid chamber is in flow communication with the unpressurized liquid container and in flow communication with the foaming element. The air pump portion has an air chamber with an air internal volume. The air chamber is in flow communication with the foaming element. The liquid pump portion and the air pump portion have an activation stroke and a return stroke and during the activation stroke the air internal volume is reduced and during a beginning stage of the activation stroke the liquid internal volume of the liquid chamber remains the same and during a later stage of the activation stroke the liquid internal volume of the liquid chamber is reduced.
The shuttle liquid piston may include a shuttle portion and a main portion and the shuttle portion slidingly engages the main portion, the shuttle portion slides relative to the main portion in the beginning stage of the activation stroke and engages the main portion in the later stage of the activation stroke thereby reducing the liquid internal volume of the liquid chamber in the later stage of the activation stroke.
The foaming element may include a sparging element, a foaming element air chamber in flow communication with the air chamber and a foaming chamber in flow communication with the liquid chamber and wherein air is pushed from the foaming element air chamber through the sparging element into the foaming chamber.
The foaming element may be a first foaming element and further including a second foaming element and wherein liquid from the liquid chamber is in flow communication with the first and second foaming element and air from the air chamber is in flow communication with the first and second foaming element and wherein the first and second foaming elements each have exit channels that may merge into a merged flow channel and into an exit nozzle.
The non-aerosol foam pump may include an activator and the shuttle liquid piston includes a shuttle portion and a main portion and activator slides along the shuttle portion at the beginning stage of the activation stroke and in the later stage of the activation stroke the activator engages the main portion whereby in the later stage of the activation stroke the liquid internal volume of the liquid chamber is reduced.
The non-aerosol foam pump may include a dispenser for housing the pump and liquid container.
The air pump portion may include an air piston.
The non-aerosol foam pump may further include an activator connected to the air piston and the shuttle portion of the shuttle liquid piston, whereby the air piston is operably connected to the shuttle liquid piston through the activator.
The shuttle portion of the shuttle liquid piston may be slidingly attached to the activator and the air piston may be rigidly attached to the activator.
The air piston may be operably connected to the liquid piston, such that the shuttling liquid piston is actuated upon actuating the air piston.
The liquid chamber may be co-axial with the air chamber.
The air piston may include a liquid piston portion that slidingly engages the shuttle liquid piston.
The non-aerosol foam pump may include a liquid outlet valve between the liquid chamber and the foaming element.
The shuttle liquid piston may extend coaxially within the air pump portion, and the air piston may be attached to the shuttle portion of the shuttle liquid piston.
The non-aerosol foam pump may include a liquid outlet valve between the liquid piston and the foaming element.
The foaming element may comprise a mixing chamber and a foaming portion, whereby a mixture of the air and liquid is pushed from the mixing chamber through the foaming portion.
The foaming element may include a foaming portion and the foaming portion is a porous member.
Further features will be described or will become apparent in the course of the following detailed description.
The embodiments will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
The pump 12 includes a liquid pump portion 16 and an air pump portion 18. The liquid pump portion 16 includes a liquid chamber 20 and a liquid piston 22. The liquid piston 22 is a shuttling liquid piston. The air pump portion 18 includes an air chamber 24 and an air piston 26. The shuttling liquid piston 22 and the air piston 26 are both operably connected to an activator 28. The shuttling liquid piston 22 includes a shuttle portion 21 and a main portion 23. The shuttle portion 21 of the liquid piston 22 is slidingly attached to the activator 28 and the air piston 26 is rigidly attached to the activator 28.
The liquid chamber 20 has a liquid inlet 30 and a liquid outlet 32. The liquid chamber 20 is operably connected to the unpressurized liquid container 14. A liquid inlet valve 34 is positioned between the liquid chamber 20 and the liquid container 14. The liquid chamber 20 is in flow communication with a foaming element 36. A liquid outlet valve 38 is positioned between the liquid chamber 20 and the foaming element 36.
The air chamber 24 has an air inlet 40 and an air outlet 42. An air inlet valve 44 is positioned between the air chamber 24 and the outside air. The air chamber 24 is in flow communication with the foaming element 36. An air outlet valve 46 is positioned between the air chamber 24 and the foaming element 36.
The foaming element 36 includes a sparging element 48 a foaming element air chamber 50 on one side thereof and a foaming chamber 52 on the other side thereof. The foaming element air chamber 50 is in flow communication with the air chamber 24 of the air pump portion 18. The foaming chamber 52 is in flow communication with the liquid chamber 20 of the liquid pump portion 16. Air is pushed under pressure through the sparging element 48 into the liquid in the foaming chamber 52 to create foam. The foam exits the foaming element 36 at the exit nozzle 54.
The end of the stroke or rest position of the pump 12 is shown in
It should be noted that in the schematic diagrams of
Referring to
The pump 112 includes a liquid piston pump portion 116 and an air pump portion 118. The liquid piston pump portion 116 includes a liquid chamber 120 and a liquid piston 122. The liquid piston 122 is a shuttling liquid piston. The air pump portion 118 includes an air chamber 124 and an air piston 126. The air chamber 124 surrounds the liquid chamber 120 and is co-axial with the liquid chamber 120. The shuttling liquid piston 122 and the air piston 126 are operably connected such that by actuating the air piston 126 the shuttling liquid piston in turn may be actuated. The air piston 126 includes a liquid piston portion 121 that slidingly engages the shuttling liquid piston 122. In the beginning part of the stroke the shuttling liquid piston 122 does not move relative to the air piston 126 and the volume of the liquid chamber 120 remains unchanged while the volume of the air chamber 124 begins to be reduced. This is the “priming” stage where the air chamber is “primed” before the liquid pump is engaged. At the transition point the liquid piston portion 121 of the air piston 126 engages the shuttling liquid piston 122 and thereafter the volume of both the air chamber 124 and the liquid chamber 120 are reduced.
The liquid chamber 120 has a liquid inlet 130 and a liquid outlet 132 as best seen in
The air chamber 124 has an air inlet 140 and an air outlet 142. An air inlet valve 144 is positioned between the air chamber 124 and the outside air. The air chamber 124 is in flow communication with the foaming element 136. In contrast to the embodiment described above with reference to
There are a number of advantages that are achieved by including a pair of foaming chambers 152. Specifically by providing a pair of foaming chambers 152 the effective dwell time of the air infusion process is increased. The use of the pair of foaming chambers 152 provides for double the volume of infusion over a shortened distance. The design shown herein with the pair of foaming chambers 152 provides a more balanced design than shown heretofore with a central activator or push point for the air piston 126 and liquid piston 122. Further the design shown herein provides for a more compact design than would be required if one large foaming chamber was used rather than the pair of foaming chambers 152 shown herein.
The air inlet path is shown at 162 in
The foaming element shown in
The pump 112 may be housed in a dispenser 170 as shown in
Referring to
The liquid chamber 220 has a liquid inlet 230 and a liquid outlet 232. The liquid chamber 220 is operably connected to the unpressurized liquid container (not shown). A liquid inlet valve 234 is positioned between the liquid chamber 220 and the liquid container. The liquid chamber 220 is in flow communication with a mixing chamber 236. A liquid outlet valve 238 is positioned between the liquid chamber 220 and the mixing chamber 236.
The air chamber 224 has an air inlet 240 and an air outlet 242. The air chamber 224 is in flow communication with a mixing chamber 236. In the mixing chamber 236 air from the air chamber 224 and liquid from the liquid chamber 220 are mixed together. The mixed air and liquid is then pushed through a foaming portion 248 and into the exit nozzle. The foaming portion 248 may be a gauze mesh, gauze, foam, sponge or other suitable porous material. The mixed air and liquid is pushed through the foaming portion 248 to create foam. The foaming element in this embodiment includes the mixing chamber 236 and a foaming portion 248.
It is clear from the prior art that a solution is needed to overcome the fundamental issue that air is compressible and liquids are not in order to maximize the efficiency of infusing the liquid with air in the pump to create a high quality foam.
The pumps described herein first build sufficient pressure on the air side of the pump so that when the liquid begins to be pumped it can be immediately infused with air thus maximizing the infusion process in order to optimize the quality of the foam being dispensed from the pump.
The foam pump described herein generate internal air pressure prior to the simultaneous pumping of the air and liquid. In simple terms, the dispensing action begins by pumping air for a portion of the dispensing stroke followed by the pumping of air and liquid together. The pressurising of the air side allows for the more efficient infusion of the liquid creating a higher quality of foam for the user.
Generally speaking, the systems described herein are directed to foaming pump. Various embodiments and aspects of the disclosure will be described with reference to details discussed below. The following description and drawings are illustrative of the disclosure and are not to be construed as limiting the disclosure. Numerous specific details are described to provide a thorough understanding of various embodiments of the present disclosure. However, in certain instances, well-known or conventional details are not described in order to provide a concise discussion of embodiments of the present disclosure.
As used herein, the terms, “comprises” and “comprising” are to be construed as being inclusive and open ended, and not exclusive. Specifically, when used in the specification and claims, the terms, “comprises” and “comprising” and variations thereof mean the specified features, steps or components are included. These terms are not to be interpreted to exclude the presence of other features, steps or components.
As used herein, the terms “operably connected” means that the two elements may be directly or indirectly connected.
As used herein, the term “substantially” refers to the complete or nearly complete extent or degree of an action, characteristic, property, state, structure, item, or result. For example, an object that is “substantially” enclosed would mean that the object is either completely enclosed or nearly completely enclosed. The exact allowable degree of deviation from absolute completeness may in some cases depend on the specific context. However, generally speaking the nearness of completion will be so as to have the same overall result as if absolute and total completion were obtained. The use of “substantially” is equally applicable when used in a negative connotation to refer to the complete or near complete lack of an action, characteristic, property, state, structure, item, or result.
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