This invention relates generally to a method of light-weighting hot fill containers by modifying the headspace for the removal of vacuum pressure and apparatus therefor. This is achieved by filling a container with a heated fluid; which term for the purposes of this specification including both liquids and gases unless specified otherwise, sealing the contents of the container from contamination from outside air, and adjusting the pressure of the headspace during the capping process to negate vacuum forces generated within the container following fluid cooling. The headspace modification process displaces the fluid below the headspace in the upper neck region of the container downwardly prior to allowing the fluid contents to cool, and labelling the container. This invention further relates to hot-filled and pasteurized products packaged in heat-set polyester containers and is particularly useful for packaging oxygen sensitive foods and beverages where a longer shelf life is desirable.
So called ‘hot fill’ containers are well known in prior art, whereby manufacturers supply PET containers for various liquids which are filled into the containers and the liquid product is at an elevated temperature, typically at or around 85 degrees C. (185 degrees F.).
The container is manufactured to withstand the thermal shock of holding a heated liquid, resulting in a ‘heat-set’ plastic container. This thermal shock is a result of either introducing the liquid hot at filling, or heating the liquid after it is introduced into the container.
Once the liquid cools down in a capped container, however, the volume of the liquid in the container reduces, creating a vacuum within the container. This liquid shrinkage results in vacuum pressures that pull inwardly on the side and end walls of the container. This in turn leads to deformation in the walls of plastic bottles if they are not constructed rigidly enough to resist such force.
Typically, vacuum pressures have been accommodated by the use of vacuum panels, which distort inwardly under vacuum pressure. Prior art reveals many vertically oriented vacuum panels that allow containers to withstand the rigors of a hot fill procedure. Such vertically oriented vacuum panels generally lie parallel to the longitudinal axis of a container and flex inwardly under vacuum pressure toward this longitudinal axis.
In addition to the vertically oriented vacuum panels, many prior art containers also have flexible base regions to provide additional vacuum compensation. Many prior art containers designed for hot-filling have various modifications to their end-walls, or base regions to allow for as much inward flexure as possible to accommodate at least some of the vacuum pressure generated within the container.
Even with such substantial displacement of vacuum panels, however, the container requires further strengthening to prevent distortion under the vacuum force.
The liquid shrinkage derived from liquid cooling, causes a build up of vacuum pressure. Vacuum panels deflect toward this negative pressure, to a degree lessening the vacuum force, by effectively creating a smaller container to better accommodate the smaller volume of contents. However, this smaller shape is held in place by the generating vacuum force. The more difficult the structure is to deflect inwardly, the more vacuum force will be generated. In prior art proposals, a substantial amount of vacuum may still be present in the container and this tends to distort the overall shape unless a large, annular strengthening ring is provided in horizontal, or transverse, orientation typically at least a ⅓ of the distance from an end to the container.
The present invention relates to hot-fill containers and may be used by way of example in conjunction with the hot fill containers described in international applications published under numbers WO 02/18213 and WO 2004/028910 (PCT specifications) which specifications are also incorporated herein in their entirety where appropriate.
The PCT specifications background the design of hot-fill containers and the problems with such designs that were to be overcome or at least ameliorated.
A problem exists when locating such transversely oriented panels in the container side-wall, or end-wall or base region, even after vacuum is removed completely from the container when the liquid cools down and the panel is inverted. The container exits the filling line just above a typical ambient temperature, and the panel is inverted to achieve an ambient pressure within the container, as opposed to negative pressure as found in prior art. The container is labelled and often refrigerated at point of sale.
This refrigeration provides further product contraction and in containers with very little sidewall structure, so-called ‘glass look-a-like’ bottles, there may therefore be some panelling that occurs on the containers that is unsightly. To overcome this, an attempt is made to provide the base transverse panel with more extraction potential than is required, so that it may be forced into inversion against the force of the small headspace present during filling. This creates a small positive pressure at fill time, and this positive pressure provides some relief to the situation. As further cool down occurs, for example during refrigeration, the positive pressure may drop and may provide for an ambient pressure at refrigerated temperatures, and so avoid panelling in the container.
This situation is very hard to engineer successfully, however, as it depends on utilising a larger headspace in order to compress at base inversion time, and it is less desirable to introduce a larger headspace to the container than is necessary in order to retain product quality.
While it is desirable to have the liquid level in the container drop, to avoid spill when opened by the consumer, it has been found that providing too much positive pressure potential within the base may cause some product spill when the container is opened, particularly if at ambient temperatures.
In most filling operations, containers are generally filled to a level just below the container's highest level, at the top of the neck finish.
Maintaining as small a container headspace as possible is desirable in order to provide a tolerance for subtle differences in product density or container capacity, to minimize waste from spillage and overflow of liquids on a high-speed package filling line, and to reduce container contraction from cooling contents after hot fill.
Headspace contains gases that in time can damage some products or place extra demands on container structural integrity. Examples include products sensitive to oxygen and products filled and sealed at elevated temperatures.
Filling and sealing a rigid container at elevated temperatures can create significant vacuum forces when excessive headspace gas is also present.
Accordingly, less headspace gas is desirable with containers filled at elevated temperatures, to reduce vacuum forces acting on the container that could compromise structural integrity, induce container stresses, or significantly distort container shape. This is also true during pasteurization and retort processes, which involve filling the container first, sealing, and then subjecting the package to elevated temperatures for a sustained period.
Those skilled in the art are aware of several container manufacturing heat-set processes for improving package heat-resistant performance. In the case of the polyester, polyethylene terephthalate, for example, the heat-setting process generally involves relieving stresses created in the container during its manufacture and to improve crystalline structure.
Typically, a polyethylene terephthalate container intended for a cold-fill carbonated beverage has higher internal stresses and less crystalline molecular structure than a container intended for a hot-fill, pasteurized, or retort product application. However, even with containers such as described in the abovementioned PCT specifications where there is little residual vacuum pressure, the neck finish of the container is still required to be very thick in order to withstand the temperature of fill.
My PCT patent specification WO 2005/085082 describes a previous proposal for a headspace displacement method which is incorporated herein in its entirety where appropriate by way of reference.
Where reference in this specification is made to any prior art this is not an acknowledgment that it forms part of the common general knowledge in any country or region.
In view of the above, it is an object of one possible embodiment of the present invention to provide a headspace sealing and modification method that can provide for removal of vacuum pressure such that there is substantially no remaining force within the container.
It is a further object of one possible embodiment of the present invention to provide a headspace compression method whereby air, or some other gas or liquid or combination thereof, is charged into the headspace under sealed pressure to create an increased pressure in order to negate the effect of vacuum pressure created during cooling of the product.
It is a further object of one possible embodiment of the present invention to provide a headspace modification method whereby sterile or heated liquid, or air, or some other gas or combination thereof, is charged into the headspace under sterile conditions to create a positive pressure in order to negate the effect of vacuum pressure created during cooling of the product.
It is a further object of one possible embodiment of the present invention to provide a headspace modification method whereby sterile air, or some other gas or liquid or combination thereof, is charged into the headspace under sealed pressure to negate the effect of vacuum pressure created during cooling of the product.
It is a further object of one possible embodiment of the present invention to provide a headspace modification method whereby a compressive seal is applied to the neck finish of the container.
It is a further object of one possible embodiment of the present invention to provide a headspace displacement method whereby a compressive seal is applied to the neck finish that is forcibly displaceable into the container prior to cooling the liquid contents, such that a positive pressure may be induced into the container.
A further and alternative object of the present invention in all its embodiments, all the objects to be read disjunctively, is to at least provide the public with a useful choice.
According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a container having a seal or cap including, or adapted to provide, an opening or aperture into said container, said aperture providing for the introduction under pressure of at least one fluid, said opening or aperture also being sealable to provide a controlled raising of internal pressure within the container prior to cooling of heated contents within the container.
According to a further aspect of the present invention there is provided a container having a seal or cap temporarily applied such that an opening or aperture into said container is provided by an incomplete seal being formed between the cap and a neck finish of the container, said opening or aperture providing for the introduction under pressure of at least one fluid, said opening or aperture also being sealable under compression to provide a controlled raising of internal pressure within the container prior to cooling of heated contents within the container.
According to a further aspect of the present invention there is provided a container having a seal or cap providing a temporary seal immediately post-filling and having an aperture or opening, said aperture or opening being accessible under substantially sterile conditions to provide for the introduction of at least one heated and/or sterile fluid, said aperture or opening also further being sealable under substantially sterile conditions to provide a controlled raising of internal pressure within the container following cooling of heated contents within the container.
According to a further aspect of the invention a method of filling a container with a fluid includes introducing the fluid through an open end of the container so that it, at least substantially, fills the container, heating the fluid before or after its introduction into the container, providing a seal or cap having an opening or aperture, providing a method of providing at least one fluid through the opening or aperture and sealing the opening or aperture, so as to compensate for subsequent pressure reduction in a headspace of the container under the seal or cap following the cooling of the heated contents.
According to a further aspect of the invention a method of filling a container with a fluid includes introducing the fluid through an open end of the container so that it, at least substantially, fills the container, heating the fluid before or after its introduction into the container, providing a seal or cap having an opening or aperture, said opening or aperture being initially sealed, providing for the heated contents to cool, further providing a method of subsequently accessing the opening or aperture and injecting at least one fluid through the opening or aperture and sealing the aperture, so as to compensate for the pressure reduction in the headspace of the container following the cooling of the heated contents.
According to a further aspect of the present invention there is provided a container having an upper portion with an opening into said container, said upper portion having a neck finish adapted to include, subsequent to the introduction of a heated or heatable liquid into the container, a seal, said seal being inwardly compressible or mechanically moveable before or after the liquid is heated, so as to increase the pressure of the headspace.
According to a further aspect of the invention a method of filling a container with a fluid includes introducing the fluid through an open end of the container so that it, at least substantially, fills the container, heating the fluid before or after its introduction into the container, providing a moveable seal for the open end to cover and contain the fluid, said seal being adapted to compress a headspace of the container so as to compensate for subsequent pressure reduction in the headspace of the container under the seal as the heated contents cool.
According to a further aspect of the invention there is provided a container filling apparatus for filling a container or performing a filling method as defined in the above seven paragraphs.
According to a further aspect there is provided a seal or cap for a container configured for use: with any one of embodiments of the container of the invention or in any one of the embodiments of the method of the invention or with any one of the embodiments of the container filling apparatus of the invention.
According to a further aspect, there is provided a seal or cap for a container including the features of the seal or cap set out in any one of the first three aspects above to the container of the invention.
Further aspects of the invention which should be considered in all its novel aspects will become apparent from the following description.
The following description of preferred embodiments is merely exemplary in nature, and is in no way intended to limit the invention or its application or uses.
As discussed above, to accommodate vacuum forces during cooling of the contents within a heat set container, containers have typically been provided with a series of vacuum panels around their sidewalls and an optimized base portion. The vacuum panels deform inwardly, and the base deforms upwardly, under the influence of the vacuum forces. This prevents unwanted distortion elsewhere in the container. However, the container is still subjected to internal vacuum force. The panels and base merely provide a suitably resistant structure against that force. The more resistant the structure the more vacuum force will be present. Additionally, end users can feel the vacuum panels when holding the containers.
Typically at a bottling plant the containers will be filled with a hot liquid and then capped before being subjected to a cold-water spray resulting in the formation of a vacuum within the container that the container structure needs to be able to cope with. The present invention relates to hot-fill containers and a method that provides for the substantial removal or substantial negation of vacuum pressure. This allows much greater design freedom and light weighting opportunity as there is no longer any requirement for the structure to be resistant to vacuum forces that would otherwise mechanically distort the container.
As seen in a Prior Art solution in
Referring to
However, as disclosed in the Prior Art, as illustrated in
In this way mechanical compression can achieve a positive pressure while the contents of the container are in a heated state, and to subsequently enable the container to be cooled without panelling. The cap components that enter the container headspace under compression will be sterilised therefore by the heated contents prior to cooling. It will be appreciated that many different structures are envisaged for providing a primary sealing structure that is forcible downwards to displace the liquid contents to a large degree. Containers of the 600 ml size for example will require displacement to the order of 20-30 cc of liquid. Containers of the 2000 ml range of size will require displacement to the order of 70 cc of liquid.
It is envisaged that the cap may be of metal or plastics and could in alternative embodiments be pushed into the neck of the container rather than screwed and could be lockable in a required position.
The cap may be controllably displaced downwardly by any suitable mechanical or electrical or other means, or manually.
The method of the present invention allows many variables in mechanical compression to be accounted for, but for larger containers where significant downward displacement would be required it is envisaged that only some of the compressive force would be obtained from a compressive cap and, more significantly, the remainder would be obtained by the methods discussed in the following disclosure.
Referring to
According to a further aspect of the present invention, and referring to
As seen in
As an alternative to the injection of gas, a heated liquid could be injected, for example heated water. This would provide further advantage, in that the liquid injected would not be subject to the expansion that would normally occur when injecting gas into a heated environment. Thus less force would be ultimately applied to the sidewalls of the container during the early hot-fill stages.
Even further, the injected liquid would contract less than a gas when subsequently cooled. For this reason less liquid is necessarily required to be injected into the headspace to provide compensation for the anticipated vacuum forces that would otherwise occur.
Now referring to
As can be seen in
At this point, and as can be seen in
As shown in
Importantly, however, once the contents are cooled there is no residual vacuum in the container.
As an alternative, and as shown in
A further example of such an alternative is provided in
With reference to
As an alternative, the headspace modification unit 102 could also perform the usual function of a typical capping machine. The unit could receive empty containers, apply caps containing the plugs and subsequently torque the caps into position as well as pressurise the container prior to ultimately sealing the container through advancing the plug or some other sealing method.
Still further examples of alternative embodiments of the present invention are illustrated in
A further alternative for a suitable plug mechanism within a cap 80 is illustrated in
The same method procedure may occur using a more typical ‘push-pull’ type sport closure as illustrated in similar manner in
As a further alternative to the present invention, and to remove the need for a hole or plug mechanism within the cap itself, and with reference to
It will be appreciated that the present invention offers multiple choices in carrying out a headspace modification procedure by way of modifying a typical capping machine. Such a piece of machinery could easily be employed to also provide the function of capping the container in addition to modifying the headspace during the procedure.
In facilitating the present invention, the complete or substantial removal of vacuum pressure by displacing the headspace prior to the liquid contraction now results in being able to remove a substantial amount of weight from the sidewalls due to the removal of mechanically distorting forces.
According to a further aspect of the present invention, and referring to
As seen in
As seen in this preferred embodiment of the present invention, in order to remove the vacuum pressure a sealing chamber (84) is applied over the neck finish and cap combination to seal the communicating seal (91) from the outside air (the upper, closed end of the structure 84 is not shown).
Following the introduction of a sterilising medium (66), for example by way of injecting heated water, preferably above 95 degrees C., or a mixture of heated water and steam, the sterilising medium provides for the sterilisation of the internal surfaces of the sealing chamber (84) and the communicating seal (91).
Now referring to
As can be seen in
The integrity of the product volume within the container is not compromised as the environment above the cap has been sterilised prior to communicating with the headspace, and the additional liquid supplied into the container replaces the volume ‘lost’ due to shrinkage of heated liquid within the container prior to the method of headspace replacement described.
Following the pressure equalization, and now referring to
At this point, the headspace (23f) is under a controlled pressure dependent on the volume of liquid having been delivered to compensate for previous liquid contraction, as described above.
The sealing chamber may now provide for withdrawal of the delivery device (83) which may now be done following a release of sterilising medium and/or pressure within the chamber as the container is ejected and returned to the filling line.
Thus a method of compensating vacuum pressure within a container is described. Referring to
With reference to
Unlike as described in prior art, the present invention provides for the hot liquid within the container to sterilize the underside of the internally presented surface of the inner chamber (9) as it has been compressed into the hot liquid contents.
Ordinarily, as the product cools, a vacuum will build up within the container in the primary headspace (23b) under the cap. This vacuum may distort the container (1) to a degree if the walls are not rigid enough to withstand the force.
However, as the internal pressure has been adjusted upwardly prior to product cooling, the net effect may be a temporary raised level of pressure during product cooling and substantially no pressure once product cooling has finished, or perhaps even advantageously a small amount of positive pressure.
Referring to
Referring to
Where in the foregoing description, reference has been made to specific components or integers of the invention having known equivalents then such equivalents are herein incorporated as if individually set forth.
Although this invention has been described by way of example and with reference to possible embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that modifications or improvements may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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568439 | May 2008 | NZ | national |
573865 | Dec 2008 | NZ | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 12/993,253, filed Nov. 17, 2010, published as US2011/0094618 on Apr. 28, 2011, which is a PCT National Stage Section 371 of PCT/NZ 2009/000079, filed May 18, 2009, published Nov. 26, 2009 as WO 2009/142510, which claims priority to NZ568439 filed May 19, 2008, and to NZ573865 filed Dec. 19, 2008. The entire contents of all of the foregoing applications and their publications are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12993253 | Nov 2010 | US |
Child | 15345306 | US |