This invention relates to lids for containers, such as “take-away” hot and cold beverage cups.
Conventionally, various types of lids are used for disposable containers, e.g., disposable plastics or paper cups hot or cold beverages, such as are used by “fast food” and “take-away” outlets. Such lids are intended to provide a degree of retention of the beverage in the container when that container is accidentally knocked, shaken or tilted, whilst also allowing the beverage to be consumed as required. Such containers and lids, being single-use disposable items, must be capable of being produced at a low cost.
A typical disposable lid for such a beverage container is formed from think plastics sheet material, for example by vacuum forming, and comprises a top panel with a downwardly depending peripheral rim. The plastics material of the lid is resiliently flexible so that the lid can be fitted over the open top of a suitably sized beverage container so that the rim of the lid grips the rim of the open end of the container, whereby the beverage is retained within the container.
In a known development of the basic plastic lid described above, a lid is provided with an aperture positioned at a point near to the rim of the lid. The aperture is chosen so that it is sufficiently enlarged to allow a user to drink from the container without having to remove the lid itself, but sufficiently small to reduce the risk of spillage of the beverage if the container is tilted or shaken. In addition, the aperture may be initially blocked by a press out tab or flap which can be pushed into the container when initial discharge of the beverage is required. However, such press-out tabs or flaps can be difficult to press out without a suitable instrument, which the purchaser of a beverage in a container fitted with the lid may not have hand.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a lid which can be fitted to a container to prevent spillage of the contents while allowing an opening of restricted size to be produced readily in the lid for access to the contents of the container.
According to the present invention there is provided a lid for a beverage cup, the lid being moulded from resiliently flexible sheet material and comprising a projecting portion having a base connected with the remainder of the lid along a boundary formed in part by a living hinge and in the remaining part by a line of weakness such that by applying pressure to one side of said projection, the base of said projecting portion can be caused to break off from the material of the remainder of the lid along said line of weakness and the projection caused to pivot with respect to the remainder of the lid about said living hinge, and wherein, furthermore, said remainder of the lid includes catch means capable of co-operating with a free end of the projection when the latter is so pivoted beyond a predetermined extent, to retain the projection in its pivoted position until forcefully displaced back towards its initial position.
Preferably, the lid has a generally planar rim and said base of said projecting portion, and in particular said living hinge, is further from said plane than said catch means, and wherein said catch means is afforded by a shoulder defined by a first wall portion meeting a top wall portion, said first wall portion having a lower edge nearer to said plane of said rim than is said top wall portion and said shoulder being nearer said projecting portion than said lower edge, said shoulder being so located and the lid structure being so resiliently flexible that, in the course of pivoting the projecting portion, about said living hinge, away from its initial position, the tip of said projecting portion can engage said top wall portion adjacent said shoulder and such that further pivoting forcefully in the same direction allows the tip of said projecting portion to be forced past said shoulder to be retained by engagement with said first wall portion.
The lid may, as with conventional disposable lids for the same purpose, be formed by a vacuum forming or similar process carried out on an initially flat, thin sheet of plastics material deformable or mouldable when sufficiently heated, and may thus have, as with conventional lids, a peripheral edge or rim lying substantially in a plane which is substantially that of the original sheet plastics material before moulding.
In manufacture of the preferred form of lid in accordance with the invention, by a vacuum forming or similar process, know per se, a large number of such lids is formed simultaneously from an initially flat thin sheet of thermoplastics material heated to a temperature at which it is plastically deformable, and which process displaces, out of the plane of the sheet, portions defining the top and a surrounding rim of each lid. The line of weakness around the base of said projecting portion may be formed at this stage by a punching operation or an operation in which a cut is made through only part, e.g., half, the thickness of the plastics material.
Embodiments of the invention are described below by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The lids shown in the drawings are made, as lids of this general sort commonly are, by subjecting a thin, initially flat, planar sheet of thermoplastics material to a forming process, such as a vacuum forming or pressing process, whilst it is at a temperature at which it is readily plastically deformable, the effect of the process being to displace some of the material of the sheet to predetermined extents out of the original plane of the sheet material. After such deformation, the plastics material is severed around the moulded regions which define the lids, to free the lids from the remainder of the sheet material. The plastics material used is of a resiliently flexible character at temperatures below its softening point or range.
The figures show a lid 1 having a circular body portion 2 which includes a central region 4, surrounded by an elevated, generally planar circumferential annular region 5 from which a projecting portion 18 is upstanding at one circumferential position on the lid. The circular annular region 5 is bounded, at its outer edge, by a circumferential wall 6, sloping downwards and outwardly from the edge of circular region 5 to a level below that of the central region 4. The lower edge of wall 6 merges with a region of arcuate vertical cross-section, which defines a resilient rib 7 which projects outwardly from the bottom of the wall 6. Extending from the base of the rib 7, on the side opposite the wall 6, is a generally frusto-conical, resilient skirt 8, defining a peripheral edge 9 lying in a plane which corresponds to the plane of the undeformed sheet material from which the lid was formed as described above. A major part 4a of the central region 4 surrounded by the elevated, generally planar circular annular region 5, is generally planar, but a segment, (in the geometrical sense), 4a of this central region is recessed below the plane of part 4, and significantly below the level of annual region 5 with the projecting portion 18 being disposed centrally with respect to the circular arc defined by this segment.
The projecting portion 18 has a base, in the plane of the annular planar region 5, which is approximately rectangular in plan (see
In use, a cup containing a beverage and fitted with the lid illustrate will be provided to a customer sealed at the point of sale—that is to say the projection 18 will be in its initial position shown in
Referring to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1030619.0 | Dec 2001 | GB | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/165,190 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,874,649, filed Jun. 7, 2002, which is incorporated herein by reference and made a part hereof, and upon which a claim of priority is based. Parent U.S. application Ser. No. 10/165,190 is a U.S. national filing claiming priority from pending United Kingdom Application No. 0130619.0 filed Dec. 20, 2001.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10165190 | Jun 2002 | US |
Child | 11080579 | US |