The present invention relates generally to containers, and in particular to a container formed of a thermoplastic material having an interlocking rim structure defined about the periphery thereof. The interlocking rim structure has at least one undercut male ridge section and at least one undercut female groove section defined therein; these respective sections are configured such that male and female sections on a food container having a substantially identical interlocking rim structure will seal in interpenetrating engagement therewith. In one particularly preferred embodiment, the sealing portions of upper and lower sections of the container are identical.
Conventional food service containers for serving or storing food are well known. The prior art is replete with such containers; one preferred container being disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,377,860 to Littlejohn el al. In the '860 patent there is disclosed a food container which is a combination of a base portion and a lid portion made of a resilient polymeric material. The base is a unitary component including an upwardly projecting, peripherally extending sealing rim having inner and outer sealing areas. The lid is also a unitary component including a peripherally extending sealing channel correspondingly shaped to receive the sealing rim of the base and particularly, to engage the rim at the inner and outer sealing areas. Because both the base and lid are made from a resilient material, the inner and outer sealing materials are shaped to provide a self-reinforcing seal configuration wherein the initial engagement of either the inner or the outer seals urges the other seal into engagement. This feature is reported to permit a wide tolerance of variations in the size of the lid and the base.
Various designs have also been proposed for nestable food containers which are reversible to define a lower portion and an upper portion. There is disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,036,980 to Vigue et al. a nestable food container which is reversible to define a dish or a cover in a composite container. A male and female locking arrangement is provided on the container together with a stabilizing system of protrusions and depressions to stabilize the locked container engagement.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,974,738 to Kidd et al. there is shown a container provided with a tray component and an independent cover component which is adapted to assume open and closed modes with respect to the tray component. The components are interchangeable and each is provided with a recessed center portion having a base delimited by an angularly extending wall. An edge of the wall defines an open side. Each component also includes a laterally extending rim protruding outwardly from the wall edge. A predetermined first portion of the rim is provided with a first lock member and a predetermined second portion of the rim is provided with a second lock member. When the components are in the closed mode the first lock member of the tray component is in interlocking engagement with the second lock member of the cover component and vice versa.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,360,118 to Stern there is disclosed a self-mating pizza pie container. The container includes a pair of circular, shallow container lower and upper half sections, integrally molded of a lightweight, thermally insulating material. Formed along their peripheral sidewalls are mutually interfitting and interlocking means which are configured to be readily releasable for uncovering a contained pizza. Each half section has in its peripheral rim a diagonally opposed locating pin and locating recess for the interfitting reception of the complemental locating and pin recess of the companion half section for relative rotational locating of the two half sections.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,195,746 to Cottrel discloses a food container for the storage and transport of food; especially a hot food such as pizza. The container includes identical upper and lower portions each portion having a flat base surface, outwardly extending sidewalls and a circumferential lip thereabout. A locking portion is carried on the lip to releasably lock the upper and lower portions together. A plurality of vertical honeycombs on the interior of the base surface and a plurality of buttresses are formed in the interior sidewalls.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,294,371 to Davis discloses a food container; in particular, a sundae dish having a bottom dish and a cover that are identical. The rim structure of each part is part male and part female. Each dish is provided with a locking element. The two parts of the container are self-aligned by virtue of the rim structures so that when one is inverted on the other the locking elements are aligned for convenient locking of the container.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,704,779 to Nigg discloses a food tray made of a plastic material with integral break off cutlery. The device includes a substantially rectangular receptacle portion for containing food items and free cutlery pieces protected by a surrounding reinforced frame and arranged so they can be easily broken off by a user. Moreover, the tray maybe detachably secured to another tray to form a closed container as is noted in Column 2, line 38 and following.
In U.S. Pat. No. 3,664,538 to Fioretti there is disclosed a nestable food receptacle including a bottom and plurality of upstanding ear members on the periphery of the bottom member. First ear members alternate in position on the periphery with the second ear members. The receptacles when engaged to one another form a container having a cavity between the bottom members of the receptacles defined by the vertical dimension of the walls of the ear members.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,620,403 to Rump discloses a thin wall thermoplastic container which includes identical dish and cover portions. Each portion has a peripherally extending flange for supporting the other when one is placed on the other to form the assembled container.
The male sealing regions used in the practice of the present invention may take the form of a U-shaped ridge which is undercut along at least one leg of the U. Typically containers of the present invention will be thermoformed from lightweight thermoplastic material giving the U-shaped ridge considerable flexibility. The female sealing regions used in the practice of the present invention take the form of an undercut channel adapted to receive the undercut U-shaped ridges found in the male portion of the container wherein the walls and base of the channel are sufficiently flexible that the undercut portions of the U-shaped ridge are urged into engagement with the undercut portions of the channel and the crest of the ridge is urged into the channel. Preferably, the crest of the ridge is urged into engagement with the bottom of the channel and more preferably both a medial portion of the crest of the U-shaped ridge and a mating medial portion of the bottom of the corresponding channel take the form of substantially mating surfaces so that as the undercut portions of the channel and the undercut portions of the U-shaped ridge are urged into engagement, substantial surface-to-surface contact between the medial portions of the crest of the U-shaped ridge and the bottom of the channel will form an additional seal, although this is not required for all applications. In preferred embodiments, both legs of the U's will be undercut.
There is provided in accordance with the present invention a thermoplastic container having an interlocking rim structure defined about the periphery thereof, the interlocking rim structure having at least one undercut male ridge section and at least one undercut female groove section defined therein. The male and female sections are configured such that male and female sections on substantially identical food containers will seal with interpenetrating resilient engagement about the periphery of the container. The undercuts on the ridges and grooves are configured to urge the rim structures on substantially identical containers into sealing engagement. There is typically provided terminal portions of the ridge sections which transition into the groove sections, defining male transition surfaces on the ridge sections and female transition surfaces on the groove sections. The male transition surfaces and the female transition surfaces are configured to be urged into sealing surface to surface engagement with like transition surfaces upon interpenetration of male and female sections of said container with male and female sections of a substantially identical thermoplastic food container. Alternatively, the transition surfaces may be of any substantially mating geometry, including planar, lobed or arcuate.
More generally, in another aspect of the present invention there is provided a thermoplastic container having an interlocking rim structure defined about the periphery thereof, the interlocking rim structure having at least one undercut male ridge section and at least one undercut female groove section defined therein. The male and female sections are configured such that the male and female sections on a food container having a substantially identical interlocking rim structure will seal with interpenetrating resilient engagement about the periphery of the container. The undercuts on the ridges and grooves are configured to urge the rim structures on containers having substantially identical interlocking rim structures into sealing engagement. Here again, the terminal portions of the ridge sections transition into the groove sections, defining male transition surfaces on the ridge sections and female transition surfaces within the groove section. The male transition surfaces and the female transition surfaces are configured to be urged into sealing surface to surface engagement upon interpenetration of male and female sections of the thermoplastic food container having a substantially identical interlocking rim structure.
There is provided in another aspect of the present invention, a container integrally formed of a thermoplastic material having an interlocking rim structure about a rim plane defined about the periphery thereof, the interlocking rim structure including: (a) at least one male ridge section projecting upwardly from the rim plane extending circumferentially over at least a portion of the periphery of the container having at its terminal portions declivitous sealing surfaces projecting downwardly toward the rim plane; (b) at least one female groove section adjacent the male ridge section extending circumferentially over at least a portion of the periphery of the container having at its terminal portions acclivitous sealing surfaces projecting upwardly toward the rim plane, wherein the acclivitous surfaces are abutting the declivitous surfaces. The interlocking rim structure is configured to seal with a substantially identical rim structure rotated 180° about an axis of rotation such that when the male ridge sections disposed in sealing engagement with corresponding female groove sections the ridges and grooves are urged into surface-to-surface engagement and corresponding acclivitous and declivitous surfaces are urged into surface-to-surface sealing contact.
A typical container is integrally formed of a thermoplastic material having an interlocking rim structure about a rim plane defined about the periphery thereof, the interlocking rim structure including:
The invention is described in detail below with reference to the various figures wherein:
In the various embodiments, like numbers indicate identical parts.
Referring to
As used herein, the terminology “male” generally refers to a part projecting away from planar container portion 12 (i.e. the bottom or dome of a container) whereas the terminology “female” generally refers to a part projecting toward the planar container portion such as portion 12. In the case of the transition portions the female inclined surfaces may be offset towards the container bottom, whereas the inclined male transition surfaces may be offset away from the container bottom or dome. This terminology is perhaps better understood by reference to
In this respect, FIG. 2A and
The operation of the inventive design of the transition regions is further appreciated by reference to FIG. 2B. In
The U-shaped radial profile of the main portions of the rim is perhaps better appreciated by reference to
The containers of the invention may be made by any suitable technique, that is, techniques employed for forming plastics. The products may thus be made from thermoplastic sheet thermoformed by the application of vacuum or thermoformed by a combination of vacuum and pressure into the products of the invention. Alternatively, the inventive containers may be made from a plastic material by injection molding, injection blow molding, compression molding, injection stretch blow molding, composite injection molding and so forth. Thermoforming from plastic sheet is particularly preferred.
Generally speaking, thermoforming is the pressing and/or stretching of heated deformable material into final shape. In the simplest form, thermoforming is the draping of a softened sheet over a shaped mold. In the more advanced form, thermoforming is the automatic high speed positioning of a heated sheet having an accurately controlled temperature into a pneumatically actuated forming station whereby the article's shape is defined by the mold, followed by trimming and regrind collection as is well known in the art. Still other alternative arrangements include the use of drape, vacuum, pressure, free blowing, matched die, billow drape, vacuum snap-back, billow vacuum, plug assist vacuum, reverse draw with plug assist, pressure bubble immersion, trapped sheet, slip, diaphragm, twin-sheet cut sheet, twin-sheet rollfed forming any suitable combinations of the above. Details are provided in J. L. Throne's book, Thermoforming, published in 1987 by Coulthard. Pages 21 through 29 of that book are incorporated herein by reference. Suitable alternate arrangements also include a pillow forming technique which creates a positive air pressure between two heat softened sheets to inflate them against a clamped male/female mold system to produce a hollow product. Metal molds are etched with patterns ranging from fine to coarse in order to simulate a natural or grain like texturized look. Suitable formed articles are trimmed in line with a cutting die and regrind is optionally reused since the material is thermoplastic in nature. Other arrangements for productivity enhancements include the simultaneous forming of multiple articles with multiple dies in order to maximize throughput and minimize scrap.
It will be appreciated from the foregoing discussion that the male sealing regions used in the practice of the present invention may take the form of a U-shaped ridge such as ridge 40, which is undercut along at least one leg of the U for example at 72. Typically containers of the present invention will be thermoformed from lightweight thermoplastic material giving the U-shaped ridge considerable flexibility. Particularly preferred materials include polystyrenes such as impact modified polystyrene or oriented polystyrene or polyolefins such as polyethylene or polypropylene. Filled polypropylenes, particularly mineral-filled including mica-filled polypropylenes such as are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,211,501 to McCarthy et al.(incorporated herein by reference) are likewise suitable. The female sealing regions used in the practice of the present invention may take the form of an undercut channel 18 undercut at 68 adapted to receive the undercut U-shaped ridges 40 found in the male portion of a container wherein the walls and base of the channel are sufficiently flexible that the undercut portions of the U-shaped ridge are urged into engagement with the undercut portions of the channel. Preferably, the crest of the ridge is urged into engagement with the bottom of the channel, and more preferably, both a medial portion 70 of the crest of the U-shaped ridge and a mating medial portion 66 of the bottom of the corresponding channel form mating surfaces so that as the undercut portions 68 of the channel and the undercut portions 72 of the U-shaped ridge are urged into engagement, substantial surface to surface contact between the medial portions of the crest of the U-shaped ridge and the bottom of the channel will form an additional seal. The transition sections between the male ridge sections and the female grooves preferably form a circumferential interlock as is perhaps best appreciated from FIG. 2B. The interlocks include a first mating region where inclined planar declivitous surface 28 of container 10 is urged into surface to surface engagement with inclined planar acclivitous surface 48 of container 36, a second sealing region where transition ridge 42 of container 10 is urged into engagement with a valley 53 (the back of ridge 52) of container 36 and a third sealing region where inclined planar acclivitous surface 29 of container 10 is urged into surface to surface engagement with inclined planar declivitous surface 50 of container 36. There is thus shown in the various figures a thermoplastic food container having an interlocking rim structure defined about the periphery thereof, the interlocking rim structure having at least one undercut male ridge section and at least one undercut female groove section defined therein, the male and female sections being configured such that male and female sections on a food container having a substantially identical interlocking rim structure will seal with interpenetrating resilient engagement about the periphery of said food service container, the undercuts on the ridges and grooves being configured to urge the rim structure on containers having a substantially identical interlocking rim structure into sealing engagement. Typically terminal portions of the ridge sections transition into the groove sections, defining male transition surfaces on the ridge sections and female transition surfaces within the groove sections, the male transition surfaces and the female transition surfaces being configured to be urged into sealing surface to surface engagement upon interpenetration of male and female sections of a thermoplastic food container having a substantially identical interlocking rim structure. In some preferred embodiments, two identical containers are sealingly engaged to form an enclosed container. In some cases, the rim includes a peripheral tab asymmetrically disposed about an axis of rotation of the interlocking rim structure such that the peripheral tab will be offset with respect to a substantially identical tab on a substantially identical interlocking rim structure when engaged thereto in sealing engagement. In still yet other embodiments to be discussed below, tabs will be located away from the transition regions and will substantially overlap each other. When tabs are not located adjacent to the axis of rotation, it is normally preferable to use at least two overlapping tabs. The tabs are typically offset by a distance of from about 10 to about 40% of their circumferential length if they are located adjacent the axis of rotation. The containers of the invention may be made of any suitable thermoplastic material, preferably (for reasons of cost) by way of thermoforming a sheet of material into a container of substantially uniform wall thickness or caliper. The sheet of thermoplastic material may be a polymeric material selected from the group consisting of: polyesters, polystyrenes, polypropylenes, polyethylenes and mixtures thereof and the container may have a wall thickness of from about 5 or 10 to about 50 mils. A wall thickness of from about 15 mils to about 25 mils is typical for some applications, or slightly less depending on the draw ratio. One particularly preferred type of thermoplastic sheet is mica-filled polypropylene sheet including from about 40 to about 90% by weight polypropylene and from about 10 to about 50% by weight mica. Calcium carbonate is optionally included in the polypropylene mica material. In some instances it may be desirable to add one or more adjuvants to the polymer such as impact modifiers, UV stabilizers, antioxidants or thermal stabilizers as are known in the art in addition to mineral fillers.
It will be appreciated from the discussion which follows that the transition sections between the male ridge sections and female groove sections typically include a declivitous male section extending downwardly from the top, typically medial position, of the ridge to abut the acclivitous transition surface extending upwardly from the bottom of the groove. The acclivitous surfaces may be circumferentially offset with respect to declivitous surfaces or coplanar with them or take any suitable shape. In one embodiment, the surfaces have matched, spherically lobed portions.
An alternate embodiment of the present invention is shown in
In
It is likewise possible to make larger containers having the features of the present invention. There is shown, for example, in
There is further provided in accordance with the embodiment
The container of
Yet another container of the present invention is illustrated in
Rim portion 216 includes a U-shaped male ridge section 220 as well as a U-shaped female groove section 222. In between ridge section 220 and groove section 222 are a pair of transition sections 224 and 226 which transition between the groove and ridge of rim portion 216 of container 210. Container 210 has about the transition section an axis of rotation 228 generally in rim plane 218.
On either side of axis 228 are a first tab 230 and a second tab 232 which may be identical in size or may be slightly different in size. For example, tab 232 may extend a distance r232 from the inner edge of rim 216 as shown whereas tab 230 may extend a distance r230 from a location spaced outwardly from the inner edge of the rim as shown. In a particular embodiment, the container of
It will be appreciated from
While many suitable rim profiles may be employed, various portions of rim 216 of container 210 are shown schematically in
Groove 222 includes a downwardly extending sidewall 260 having an inner undercut portion 261, a medial planar portion 262, an outer undercut sidewall 264 with undercut portion 266. In general, groove 222 may be symmetrical about a central line 263 shown in the diagram. Groove 222 transitions to a second outwardly extending rim portion 268 which optionally transitions to a downwardly extending lip 270 through a fourth transition 272. Details of ridge section 220 are further illustrated in FIG. 11.
Ridge 220 transitions outwardly to second outwardly extending rim portion 268 which transitions through portion 272 to optional downwardly extending lip 270 as noted in connection with FIG. 10.
There is shown in
Male U-shaped ridge portion 318 connects to ring 326 and includes a sidewall 328 provided with an inner undercut portion 330, as well as a planar medial portion 331. The views of
Ridge 318 further includes an outer sidewall 334 provided with an undercut portion 336. The ridge connects to an outer ring 338. The embodiment of
The details of the transition sections are perhaps better appreciated by reference to
Transition section 344 includes an upper declivitous surface 332 extending downwardly to a lower acclivitous surface 350. Surface 332 extends generally downwardly from ridge 318 to the rim plane whereas surface 350 extends generally upwardly from the bottom of groove 342 to the rim plane generally indicated at 348.
Surface 332 has a lobed or rounded structure 352 generally bowed toward planar portion 312 of container 310 whereas surface 350 has a lobed structure 356 generally bowed away of planar portion 312 of container 310. So also, transition section 346 has a declivitous surface 333 of like geometry to surface 332 and an acclivitous lower surface 354 of like geometry to acclivitous surface 350. Thus, an identical container rotated 180° about an axis of rotation defined thereby will fit into engagement with container 310 wherein the acclivitous surfaces will engage into surface-to-surface sealing contact with the declivitous surfaces as noted in connection with
While the present invention has been described in detail with reference to particular embodiments, modifications within the spirit and scope of the present invention to those embodiments will be readily apparent to those of skill in the art. For example, while transition sections having a plurality of discreet surface portions have been illustrated in connection with
This application is based upon United States Provisional Application No. 60/293,796, of the same title, filed on May 25, 2001, the priority of which is hereby claimed.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2999611 | Paulson | Sep 1961 | A |
3565146 | Arnolds | Feb 1971 | A |
3620403 | Rujmp | Nov 1971 | A |
3664538 | Fioretti | May 1972 | A |
3704779 | Nigg | Dec 1972 | A |
3933295 | Congleton | Jan 1976 | A |
4195746 | Cottrell | Apr 1980 | A |
4294371 | Davis | Oct 1981 | A |
4360118 | Stern | Nov 1982 | A |
4838444 | Bitel | Jun 1989 | A |
4974738 | Kidd et al. | Dec 1990 | A |
5036980 | VIgue et al. | Aug 1991 | A |
5046659 | Warburton | Sep 1991 | A |
5377860 | Littlejohn et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20020175164 A1 | Nov 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60293796 | May 2001 | US |