1. Field of the Invention
The invention generally relates to marking instruments, and, more specifically, to free ink marking instruments that provide greater hydrostatic stability in response to changes in temperature and pressure, improved ink flow performance, improved design freedom, and ease of manufacture.
2. Brief Description of Related Technology
It is well known to provide a pen having free ink (i.e., liquid ink that can be stored in a cavity and that is free to move or flow in response to external forces such as motion, gravity, and pressure) that a user can selectively apply to a substrate such as paper, metal, or plastic. Such known pens typically include a reservoir for storing the ink and a channel for directing the ink from the reservoir to a marking tip. The ink of such known pens typically has a vapor pressure such that the ink, and any air in the reservoir, expands and contracts in response to changes in ambient temperature and pressure. Such expansion and contraction can cause the ink to leak from the writing tip of the pen, under certain conditions.
Other such known pens include a buffer for storing ink that would otherwise leak through the tip in response to changes in ambient temperature and pressure. The excess ink is typically stored in the front of the buffer, near the tip of the pen, due to gravity, when the pen is in the tip-down position. However, such known pens have several disadvantages: the ink capacity of the buffer is limited such that when the buffer is full the excess ink leaks from the pen, and the ink is often permanently stored in the buffer resulting in decreased buffer capacity and wasted ink. Another of such known pens provides for the clearing of ink from the buffer when the pressure inside the pen increases by venting air into the pen through an external vent. Such known pens, however, clear only a small portion of the buffer. Still other pens have achieved hydrostatic stability, but only with design restrictions that require stringent manufacturing tolerances and result in reduced ink flow rates.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide a hydrostatically stable pen that responds to repeated temperature and pressure changes without substantially leaking or dripping, and that permits greater design freedom and ink flow rates.
It is an objective of the invention to overcome one or more of the problems described above.
Accordingly, one aspect of the invention is a free ink marking instrument for dispensing an ink, including a housing, a reservoir for storing ink within the housing, a feed tube to convey ink communicating with the reservoir, a tip disposed within the feed tube for conveying ink to a substrate at a marking end of the tip, a porous buffer disposed within the housing adjacent the feed tube and configured for storing ink during periods of a decreasing pressure differential between the reservoir and the atmosphere, and a vent hole in the feed tube, wherein the vent hole is disposed at a distance greater than the length of the tip, measured from the marking end of the tip.
Another aspect of the invention is a free ink marking instrument for dispensing an ink including a housing, a reservoir for storing ink within the housing, a feed tube to convey ink communicating with the reservoir, wherein the feed tube has primary and secondary ends at one extremity, a tip disposed within the feed tube end for conveying ink to a substrate at a marking end of the tip, a porous buffer disposed within the housing adjacent the feed tube and configured for storing ink during periods of a decreasing pressure differential between the reservoir and the atmosphere, and a vent hole formed between a secondary end of the feed tube and a butt end of the tip.
Still another aspect of the invention is a free ink marking instrument for dispensing an ink including a housing, a reservoir for storing ink within the housing, a feed tube to convey ink communicating with the reservoir, a tip disposed within the feed tube for conveying ink to a substrate at a marking end of the tip, a porous buffer disposed within the housing adjacent the feed tube and configured for storing ink during periods of a decreasing pressure differential between the reservoir and the atmosphere, and a passage between the outside surface of the tip and the inside surface of the feed tube, wherein the passage has a mean thickness of about 0.010 inches (in.) to about 0.025 in. (about 0.254 mm to about 0.635 mm).
Further aspects and advantages of the invention may become apparent to those skilled in the art from a review of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the appended claims. While the invention is susceptible of embodiments in various forms, described hereinafter are specific embodiments of the invention with the understanding that the disclosure is illustrative, and is not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments described herein.
The invention is directed to a marking instrument of the free ink type that achieves improved ink flow and ease of manufacture, while maintaining hydrostatic stability over a range of temperature and pressure changes. The advantages of the invention are achieved, in part, by designing the writing instrument to have a bubble separation area that is near the writing end of the tip. Consistent with the teachings in U.S. Pat. No. 4,753,546 (Jun. 28, 1988), the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, the closer the bubble separation area is to the writing end of the tip, the greater the allowable mean radius of curvature of the bubble separation area, for a fluid of a given surface tension.
Thus, for example, by designing a writing instrument to have a bubble separation area close to the writing end of the tip, the writing instrument can be designed to incorporate a bubble separation area in the form of a vent hole or passage directly to the free ink (i.e., to the free ink reservoir or an extension thereof), wherein the vent hole or passage has a suitable mean radius of curvature.
One aspect of the invention is a free ink marking instrument for dispensing an ink, including a housing, a reservoir for storing ink within the housing, a feed tube to convey ink communicating with the reservoir, a tip disposed within the feed tube for conveying ink to a substrate at a marking end of the tip, a porous buffer disposed within the housing adjacent the feed tube and configured for storing ink during periods of a decreasing pressure differential between the reservoir and the atmosphere, and a vent hole in the feed tube, wherein the vent hole is disposed at a distance greater than the length of the tip, measured from the marking end of the tip.
Another aspect of the invention is a free ink marking instrument for dispensing an ink including a housing, a reservoir for storing ink within the housing, a feed tube to convey ink communicating with the reservoir, wherein the feed tube has primary and secondary ends at one extremity, a tip disposed within the feed tube end for conveying ink to a substrate at a marking end of the tip, a porous buffer disposed within the housing adjacent the feed tube and configured for storing ink during periods of a decreasing pressure differential between the reservoir and the atmosphere, and a vent hole formed between a secondary end of the feed tube and a butt end of the tip.
Still another aspect of the invention is a free ink marking instrument for dispensing an ink including a housing, a reservoir for storing ink within the housing, a feed tube to convey ink communicating with the reservoir, a tip disposed within the feed tube for conveying ink to a substrate at a marking end of the tip, a porous buffer disposed within the housing adjacent the feed tube and configured for storing ink during periods of a decreasing pressure differential between the reservoir and the atmosphere, and a passage between the outside surface of the tip and the inside surface of the feed tube, wherein the passage has a mean thickness of about 0.002 in. to about 0.020 in. (about 0.051 mm to about 0.508 mm). The thickness of the passage is measured as the distance between an outer surface of a tip and the adjacent surface of a feed tube (e.g., the outer surface of a tip and the inner surface of a feed tube, or a shoulder of a tip and an end of a feed tube).
Yet another aspect of the invention is a free ink writing instrument that conveys free ink from an ink reservoir (or an extension thereof) directly to the tip material.
Preferably, the marking instrument has a length of about 3 inches to about 7 inches (about 7.6 cm to about 18 cm), more preferably about 4 inches to about 5.5 inches (about 10 cm to about 14 cm). The housing preferably is about ⅜ in. to about 1 in. (about 0.95 cm to about 2.5 cm) wide at its narrowest point, and about ⅜ in. to about 1¼ in. (about 0.95 cm to about 3.2 cm) wide at its widest point.
The bubble separation area preferably is located at about 0.5 in. to about 1.5 in. (about 1.3 cm to about 3.8 cm) from the marking end of the tip, more preferably about 0.8 in. to about 1.2 in. (about 2 cm to about 3 cm), when the instrument is used with a fluid having a surface tension in the range of about 15 dyne/cm to 55 dyne/cm.
The mean radius of curvature of the bubble separation area is in a range of about 0.002 in. to about 0.012 in. (about 0.051 mm to about 0.305 mm), preferably about 0.004 in. to about 0.008 in. (about 0.102 mm to about 0.203 mm) when the instrument is used with a solvent-based ink and preferably about 0.006 in. to about 0.010 in. (about 0.152 mm to about 0.254 mm) when used with a water-based ink.
When the bubble separation area is a passage between the outside surface of the tip and the inside surface of the feed tube, the passage has a mean thickness of about 0.002 in. to about 0.020 in. (about 0.051 mm to about 0.508 mm), more preferably about 0.012 in. to about 0.016 in. (about 0.305 mm to about 0.406 mm) when the instrument is used with a solvent-based ink and about 0.014 in. to about 0.020 in. (about 0.356 mm to about 0.508 mm) when the pen is used with a water-based ink.
When the bubble separation area is a circular vent hole, the hole has a diameter of about 0.005 in. to about 0.025 in. (about 0.127 mm to about 0.635 mm) more preferably about 0.008 in. to about 0.012 in. (about 0.102 mm to about 0.305 mm) when the instrument is used with a solvent-based ink and about 0.014 in. to about 0.022 in. (about 0.356 mm to about 0.559 mm) when used with a water-based ink. One or more holes can be made in the feed tube by suitable means such as puncturing the feed tube with an object such as a needle, and by the use of a laser. One or more holes is provided on the feed tube, preferably two to four holes, most preferably two holes.
A non-porous feed tube 36 provides an open channel 38 in fluid communication with the reservoir 32 as an extension of the reservoir 32 for transferring ink 34 from the reservoir 32, through the tip 40 to its marking or writing end 42. A lower section 44 of the feed tube 36 is adapted to receive a butt end 46 of the tip 40, which extends a portion of the length of the feed tube 36. The feed tube 36 has an adapter 50 at a section 52 of the feed tube 36 nearest the reservoir. A plenum (show-n as a bead 54) of the adapter 44 separates the reservoir 32 from a lower section 56 of the marker 10 and secures the feed tube 36. A buffer 60 surrounds the feed tube 36 and at least a portion of the tip 40 (see
The reservoir 32 provides an area for storing ink 34 as shown in
According to alternative embodiments, the ink 34 can be water-based and can contain pigments, such as those inks used in MAJOR ACCENT brand highlighters and liquid paint felt-tip marking and coloring applicators commercially available from Sanford Corporation (Bellwood, Ill.). According to other embodiments, the ink 34 can be alcohol and dye-based, such as those inks used in SHARPIE brand marking and writing pens commercially available from Sanford Corporation. According to still other alternative embodiments, the ink 34 can be alcohol and pigment-based, such as those inks used in EXPO brand and EXPO2 brand white board marker pens and dry erase marking pens commercially available from Sanford Corporation of Bellwood, Ill. According to a preferred embodiment, the ink 34 is compatible with a plastic material such as polypropylene.
The head 54 of the adapter 50 can be held by interference fit within the housing 26 as shown in
In the embodiment of the invention depicted in
Referring to
The tip 40 preferably is comprised of synthetic resin fibers 102 oriented in a generally vertical direction as shown in
A tip holder 104 attaches the tip 40 to the housing 26, as shown in
For proper function of the marker 10, the capillarity of the tip 40 should be greater than the capillarity of the buffer 60 and the channel 38. Thus, the tip 40 (and, importantly, the marking end 42) remains wet with ink regardless of the ink distribution inside the marker 10, such that the marker 10 is always ready to make marks on the substrate during the act of writing. The term “capillarity” can be defined as the height to which a liquid (e.g., ink) ascends within a pore of a capillary having a given height and diameter, and includes the attractive capillary force (i.e., capillary pressure) of the liquid to the capillary. Without intending to be limited by any particular theory, it is believed that capillary force is inversely proportional to both the pore size of a capillary, the storage capacity of a capillary, and the fractional filling of the capillary.
The buffer 60 can be porous and includes a volume sufficient to retain ink and air in response to changes in temperature and/or pressure within the reservoir 32. If the ink-retaining capacity of the buffer 60 is not exceeded, then the capillary pressure of the buffer 60 will retain excess ink. An air intake (shown as an air entry hole 106) in the housing 26 can provide an air vent in communication with the atmosphere. (Air can also enter the marker 10 through capillary spaces surrounding the tip 40 at the tip holder 104.) A space for holding air (shown as a gap 108) surrounds an exterior surface 110 of the buffer 60. Air from hole 106 can enter the buffer 60 through the external surface 110. The size of the buffer 60 can be selected in accordance with the air volume of the marker 10 needed to hold the quantity of excess ink. According to a preferred embodiment, the buffer 60 has a capacity of about 40% relative to the size of the reservoir 32. According to a particularly preferred embodiment, the buffer 60 can retain or store about 2 ml to about 4 ml of ink.
The buffer 60 can be made of a material selected from a variety of fibrous or porous materials, and its porosity and capillary nature can be selected for compatibility with the particular ink used in the instrument. According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the buffer 60 is made from a hydrophilic (product no. D-2605) or a hydrophobic (product no. D-2611) linear polyolefin resin fiber commercially available from Filtrona Richmond, Inc. of Richmond, Va. A hydrophilic material is preferred for use with water-based inks. A hydrophobic material can be used for solvent-based inks, and can be modified for use with water-based inks. According to alternative embodiments, the buffer 60 can be made of a material selected from ceramics, porous plastics such as open cell foams, acrylics, sponges, etc., and combinations thereof. According to other alternative embodiments, the buffer 60 can be made of hydrophillic or hydrophobic foam, such as polyurethane.
The air and vapor in the reservoir 32 responds to changes in pressure and temperature. At equilibrium, the pressure of the air and vapor in the reservoir 32 is at a pressure slightly less than ambient pressure, due to the height of the ink in the reservoir 32 above the marking end 42. The term “ambient pressure” is defined as the pressure of the atmosphere outside of the marker. At such slightly lower pressure of air and vapor in the reservoir 32, the ink is retained in the marker 10. To begin the act of writing with the marker 10, ink travels from the channel 38 through the tip 40 to its marking end 42. If any ink is stored in the buffer 60 during writing, such stored ink is preferentially taken by the tip 40 because of the greater capillarity of the tip 40 relative to the buffer 60.
When the cap 20 is removed from the body 12, the marker 10 responds to changes in ambient pressure and ambient temperature (i.e., pressure and temperature differentials) to reach equilibrium (i.e., the pressure slightly less than ambient pressure). The term “pressure differential” is defined as the difference in pressure between the air and vapor inside the reservoir 32 (e.g., the headspace 62) and ambient pressure. The term “increasing pressure differential” is defined as the increase in pressure of the air and vapor inside the reservoir 32 in response to an increasing ambient pressure. The term “decreasing pressure differential” is defined as the decrease in pressure of the air and vapor inside the reservoir 32 in response to a decreasing ambient pressure. Without intending to be limited to any particular theory, it is believed that the air and vapor inside the marker 10 responds directly to changes in ambient pressure and temperature to reach equilibrium.
An increasing pressure differential situation occurs, for example, during a descent in a pressurized airplane. If the ink is stored in the buffer 60 during an increasing pressure differential situation, then the tip 40 seeks ink from the buffer 60 and the channel 38 seeks ink from the tip 40 and the buffer 60. If the buffer 60 is substantially free of ink during an increasing pressure differential situation, then the reservoir 32 could draw in air through the buffer 60 at the bubble separation area 68. Ink and air flow behaves similarly when a user writes with and discharges ink onto a substrate (e.g., paper, cloth, marker board, metal, plastic, etc.). Thus, the tip 40 draws ink preferentially from the buffer 60, if saturated, and then from the reservoir 32.
During an increasing pressure differential situation (or decreasing temperature differential situation) when the buffer 60 is near empty (i.e., substantially free of ink), the difference in pressure between the air and vapor in the reservoir 32 and ambient pressure may become so great that a bubble pressure of the marker 10 is reached. The term “bubble pressure” is defined as the pressure differential necessary to draw or vent external air through the hole 106, the buffer 60, the passage 66, the channel 38, and ultimately into the reservoir 32. Such venting of air adds to the volume of air in the reservoir 32 to maintain the pressure differential between the air in the reservoir 32 and ambient conditions outside of the marker 10 at a relatively constant level. The vented air is preferentially drawn through the bubble separation area 68, the passage 66, and the channel 38 into reservoir 32 (rather than through the tip 40) because the bubble separation area 68 has a larger capillary space and, thus, lower resistance, available for the air than does the tip 40. The increasing pressure differential transports ink and/or air, while the tip 40 remains wet with ink for quick writing and reduced leakage.
As the ambient pressure and temperature changes, the air inside the reservoir 32 will expand and contract and accordingly force the ink through the tip 40 and into (or out of) the buffer 60. If insufficient ink exists in the buffer during an increasing pressure differential situation, then air (shown in the ink phase as bubbles 114) enters the reservoir 32 through the passage 66 creates the desired equilibrium. During such increasing pressure differential situation, air will first urge ink out of the buffer 60, and then will follow the path of least resistance and will accordingly migrate toward the bubble separation area 68 (since the air would not substantially enter the tip 40 through the adapter 50 or feed tube 36).
The marker 10 can also experience a decreasing pressure differential situation. A decreasing pressure differential situation occurs, for example, during an ascent in a pressurized airplane, during which ambient pressure can decrease to about two-thirds that of normal atmospheric pressure (i.e., two-thirds of one atmosphere (one atmosphere is equal to 760 mm mercury)). As a result of a decreasing pressure differential, air in the reservoir 32 expands, forcing the ink toward the marking end 42 of the tip 40. If the buffer 60 is not fully saturated with ink during a decreasing pressure differential situation, then the buffer 60 (due to its capillary force) will absorb excess ink 34 from the reservoir 32. Because the marker 10 can compensate for both increasing and decreasing pressure and temperature differentials, the hydrostatic balancing of air in the marker 10 can be achieved to provide a constant flow of ink when in use, and to inhibit the ink from dripping or leaking from the marking end 42 when the marker 10 is oriented in any direction (e.g., horizontal, vertical, etc.).
The arrangement of the tip 40 and the feed tube 38 provides a bubble separation area 68, as shown in
The embodiment of
The butt end 346 of the tip 340 preferably is engaged in interference fit with the fingers 120 of the feed tube 236 at the lower extremity 144. The heel 126 of the tip 340 (indicated with phantom lines behind the fingers 120) is shown as being arranged to leave a vent hole 216, but this need not be the case. The heel 126 of the tip 340 can also be arranged with the feed tube 236 to provide no vent hole 216, either by the heel 126 coinciding with the secondary ends 124, or by the heel 126 being above the secondary ends 124. When the arrangement of the tip 340 and feed tube 236 does not provide a vent hole 216, preferably the feed tube will have a vent hole above the heel 126.
The butt end 446 of the tip 440 preferably is engaged in interference fit with the fingers 220 of the feed tube 336 at the lower extremity 244. In the arrangement shown, the butt end 446 of the tip 440 has a smaller diameter than the remainder of the tip 440, and forms a shoulder 450 which abuts against the primary ends 222 of the fingers 220 to prevent the tip 440 from traveling further into the feed tube 336.
Another embodiment of a marker according to the invention, marker 110, is shown in
Previous free ink marking instruments have employed an additional member, such as an additional fibrous member sometimes referred to as an ink feeder or capillary conveying line, to convey ink from the reservoir to the tip of the marker. Manufacturing procedures typical for such instruments contained inefficiencies and secondary problems that are eliminated in a manufacturing procedure for a marking instrument according to the invention.
Thus, for example, in a previous manufacturing procedure a butt end of a housing including a reservoir space was positioned with its open end up and filled with ink. Next, an adapter and, optionally, a tube were seated in the housing. When an adapter with tube was used, the insertion of the adapter and tube into the ink-filled housing caused ink to rise within the tube. Next, a feeder was placed at least partially in the tube, and the process was halted for sufficient time for the feeder to absorb ink from the tube, typically about 10 seconds. After the tip was substantially filled with ink, an additional force was applied to the feeder to complete insertion into the tube.
If the instrument was used with a dye-based ink, a buffer was inserted from the top, over the feeder, and pushed to about ½ the distance to its seated position in the completed instrument, then a second portion of the housing in the form of a ferrule that included a tip holder was inserted over the buffer and pressed down to seat the buffer and engage the ferrule with the butt end of the housing. Finally, a tip was inserted through the ferrule and brought into contact with the feeder.
If the instrument was used with a pigment-based ink, a cylindrical buffer, inserted from the top, was pushed down a distance such that the top of the feeder was about ¼ of an inch (about 6.4 mm) above the top of the feeder, and a small amount of ink (about 1 ml to about 2 ml) was placed on top of the feeder and buffer. The ink assisted in assuring that the tip was wetted with pigmented ink on its first use. Next, a second portion of the housing in the form of a ferrule that included a tip holder was inserted over the buffer and pressed down to seat the buffer and engage the ferrule with the butt end of the housing. In so doing, ink from the top of the buffer could come into contact with the lower end of the ferrule, and eventually spread to the outer surface of the marking instrument, which also caused ink to come into contact with the manufacturing equipment and, in some cases, pens that otherwise would have had a clean outer surface.
For marking instruments with either type of ink, the pens were subsequently inverted (i.e., placed in a tip-down orientation) for about four hours to ensure that the ink traveled to the marking end of the tip and the marking instrument “started” on its first use.
For a marking instrument according to the invention, several efficiencies of production are realized. In a manufacturing procedure for a marking instrument according to the invention, a butt end of a housing is positioned with an open end up, and an adapter with a feed tube is seated in the housing. The ink can be added to the reservoir either before insertion of the adapter and feed tube, or after insertion of the adapter and feed tube; in the latter case, the ink is filled through the feed tube. Next, a buffer is placed within the housing. A tip is then inserted into the adapter tube, and the tip and adapter tube guide the ferrule as it is inserted down over the tip to engage the butt end of the housing and, simultaneously, the ferrule guides the tip into the tip holding portion of the ferrule. In another expedient, the tip can be inserted before the buffer is placed in the housing, and can be used to guide the buffer into the housing. In still another expedient, the ferrule can be seated prior to insertion of the tip; in this case, the ferrule tube can guide the adapter tube towards the tip holder, and the tip is inserted from the top, through the ferrule. Finally, for any type of ink, the marking instruments need to be inverted for only a few minutes to ensure that the instrument starts upon its first use. Thus, a manufacturing process for an instrument according to the invention has the advantages of eliminating any process step for waiting for a feeder to absorb ink, eliminating the possibility that a pigment-based ink will reach the outer surface of the instrument, and allowing for fast-starting marking instruments.
The foregoing description is given for clearness of understanding only, and no unnecessary limitations should be understood therefrom, as modifications within the scope of the invention may be apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art.
This is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/106,552 filed Mar. 26, 2002 (now U.S. Pat. No. 6,695,517), which claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/278,716 filed Mar. 26, 2001.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040170465 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60278716 | Mar 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10106552 | Mar 2002 | US |
Child | 10730512 | US |