This application claims benefit of European Patent Application Number 05425810.8, filed Nov. 16, 2005, which is herein incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to a machine and a process for closing containers, in particular for the corking of bottles.
The present invention is applicable to closing systems using caps of any type, such as for example corks, crown caps, screw caps, etc.
The present invention has been particularly developed for corking bottles of sparkling wines. The invention, however, is not limited to this specific application field and can be generally used for corking bottles and containers containing any kind of product.
In the field of the corking of wines, there is the problem of the oxygen of the air existing in the head portion of the bottles. The oxygen which remains trapped to the top of the bottleneck after the application of the cork causes an oxidation process which involves a loss of the organoleptic characteristics of the wine. This oxidation process is especially harmful in case of wines particularly valuable which should preferably maintain intact their characteristics also for many years.
To the wines intended for the bottling, in order to reduce the problems resulting from the oxidations and the development of aerobic bacteria caused by the oxygen existing in the head space of the bottle, it is a current practice to add sulfur dioxide or other chemical additives. Recently, the effects on the human health by the use of these sulfur-based compounds have been especially discussed. The regulations of some countries impose to show on the label of the product the presence of sulfur derivatives, and a possible evolution of the regulation in defense of the consumer in the near future could foresee the obligation of showing the quantity of sulfur compounds existing in the wine.
In view of the above, the producers of high quality wines have a great interest in developing corking processes which allow to reduce the use of the above chemical additives.
Corking systems which foresee the suction of the air existing in the head portions of the bottles before the application of the cork are already known.
Such systems can not be used, however, for the corking of sparkling wines as the suction of the air from the bottle would inevitably cause a loss of effervescence, which is one of the most important qualities of a valuable sparkling wine.
Therefore, for the sparkling wines the suction of air before the corking is not carried out, but sometimes the injection of an inert gas, typically nitrogen, is used before the corking. The injection systems of inert gas of the known type have however a very reduced efficiency concerning the reduction of the oxygen contained in the bottles after the corking.
The poor efficiency of the injection systems of inert gas of the known type does not allow a substantial reduction of the quantity of sulfur-based additives which must be added on bottling.
The aim of the present invention is to provide a corking machine and a process which allow to overcome the drawbacks above stated. In particular, the aim of the present invention is to provide a corking machine and a process which allow to obtain a substantial reduction of the oxygen existing in the bottles and which, in the particular case of corking of sparkling wines, do not involve a loss of carbon dioxide and therefore of the effervescence.
According to the present invention, such aim is attained by a machine and a corking process having the features forming the object of the claims.
The present invention will now be described in further detail with reference to the enclosed drawings, which are given by mere way of not limitative example, wherein:
Referring to
The structure and the functioning of the automatic corking unit 12 are not described in detail since, as previously said, the corking unit can be of any known type and its features are well known to a skilled in the art.
The bottling machine 10 includes a conveyor having an inlet section 18 for the feeding of bottles to be corked 20 towards the corking unit 12 and an outlet section 22 for the exit of the corked bottles 24. The conveyor 18, 22 is of the belt-type, usually employed in the bottling sector, which transports continuous arrays of bottles 20, 24 vertically oriented.
In correspondence with the end part of the inlet section 18 of the conveyor, a screw-conveyor device 26 is placed, which spaces apart the bottles to be corked 20 and feeds them to a first transfer wheel 28 (
The bottling machine 10 includes an injection unit 34 arranged upstream of the corking unit 12. The injection unit 34, which can also be mono-head, picks up the bottles to be corked 20 from the wheel 28 and, after an injection of inert gas, sends the bottles to be corked to the corking unit 12 through a second transfer wheel 36.
Referring to the
The rotating support 38 carries a plurality of bottle supports 50, each of which is placed in correspondence with a respective injection head 46. Each bottle support 50 includes a small plate 52 vertically moving, on which, in use, a respective bottle to be corked 20 is abutting.
Always referring to the
Referring to the
Each injection head 46 includes an injection tube 72 fixed with respect to the outer body 60 and extending within the sliding sleeve 62. The injection tube 72 has an upper end connected to a feeding tube 74 of inert gas. The injection tube 72 ends with a cannula 76 whose lower end fits into the head portion of a bottle 20. The lower end of the cannula 76, in use, is arranged at a distance of about 20 mm from the upper level of the liquid contained in the bottle 20.
Always referring to
In
The injection of inert gas in the head portion of the bottle causes a substantial removal of the air (and therefore the oxygen) present in the head portion of the bottle. At the same time, a reduction of the oxygen dissolved in the liquid contained in the bottle is obtained as well. It is estimated that in a bottle of sparkling wine of 750 ml, whose headspace is equal to 25 ml (total capacity of the bottle of 775 ml) the enrichment in the total oxygen after the corking is about 3,0 mg/l. After the injection of inert gas in the injection unit according to the present invention, the quantity of total oxygen existing in the bottle is reduced on average to about 0,5 mg/l.
The distribution manifold 54 includes a rotating body 94 integral with the rotating structure 48 and to which the tubes 74 for the feeding of the gas flow to the distribution heads 46 and the tubes 82 for the return gas flow are connected. The annular channel 92 is connected to the various tubes 74 through a first annular manifold 96 defined between the rotating body 94 and the element 90. The tubes 82 of the return flow are connected to a second annular manifold 98. The second annular manifold 98 is connected to the conduit 86 formed within the steady hub 84, which serves for the exit of the return flow. The conduit 86 is connected through a joint 100 to a tube 102 (
Referring to the
The casing 104 is associated with a feeding system of inert gas suitable for maintaining in the chamber 106 an inert gas atmosphere. In the example shown in the figures, the feeding system of inert gas includes a tube 150 extending within the casing 104 and which is connected to the source of inert gas 58 through a conduit 152. Preferably, in the casing 104 a device for measuring the oxygen concentration 154 is arranged, which controls the flow rate of inert gas introduced in the casing 104 through a solenoid valve 156.
A second meter of the oxygen concentration 158 is preferably placed outside the casing 104. The second meter 158 is foreseen as a security for the workers and switches on an alarm if the oxygen concentration falls below a pre-established threshold.
Preferably, the casing 104 is associated with a thermoregulation unit 160, for the regulation of the gas temperature contained in the chamber 106. The thermoregulation unit communicates with the chamber 106 through openings formed in the upper wall of the casing 104.
The thermoregulation unit 160 includes a heat exchanger (cooler) 162 and a plurality of fans 164,166. In the example shown in
The inert gas flow is introduced in the cabin, through the tube 150, at a pressure of about 300 mmH2O, with a varying flow rate, on average in the order of 50 m3/h.
In the chamber 106 there is therefore an inert gas atmosphere with a minimum oxygen residue which can vary from 4% to 7%. This allows that, between the outlet from the injection unit 34 and the time in which the corking in the corking unit 12 is performed, an inlet of oxygen in the bottles to be corked is prevented. At the time in which the corking is performed, in the head portions of the bottles there is an inert gas atmosphere substantially free of oxygen.
The operations of inert gas injection and corking occur without ever performing a suction within the bottles. Therefore, the system according the present invention is particularly suitable for the corking of bottles of sparkling wines, wherein the corking in depression conditions would be particularly harmful as it would cause the emission of foam with a consequent loss of CO2 and reduction of the effervescence.
The system according to the present invention allows a considerable reduction of the oxygen content existing in the bottles after the corking until the value of 80% (from 3 mg/l to 0,5 mg/l). Thanks to this, it is possible to remarkably reduce or eliminate at all the addition of sulfur dioxide or other chemical additives during the bottling step. From the qualitative point of view, it has been shown that the wines with a lower addition of additives are more healthy and, thanks to the decreasing of the total oxygen content in the bottle, more long-lived and softer sparkling wines could be obtained for their lower content of compounds with a bitter taste (phenolic compounds resulting from the oxidation).
Referring to
In case the transport of caps is carried out through an aspirator (for example for corks or the like), as the corking unit 12 is placed in an environment saturated with inert gas, also the flow produced by the aspirator can be used for making the screens of inert gas in correspondence with the openings 112, 114. The exhaust flow of the aspirator (not shown) is sent through a conduit 136 to a fan 138 feeds the nozzles 132 through conduits 170. In this case, the exhaust flow of the injection unit 34 is fed to one or both the nozzles 132 together with the exhaust flow of the aspirator.
In the variant shown in
While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the present invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
05425810 | Nov 2005 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2798842 | Rampino | Jul 1957 | A |
2876787 | Gibson | Mar 1959 | A |
3477192 | Brown et al. | Nov 1969 | A |
5114670 | Duffey | May 1992 | A |
5299408 | Dupont | Apr 1994 | A |
5896727 | Egli et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
6351924 | Gustafsson et al. | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6457299 | Schwenke et al. | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6964197 | Davis et al. | Nov 2005 | B2 |
20050028487 | Winters et al. | Feb 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
199 11 517 | Sep 2000 | DE |
0 457 747 | Nov 1991 | EP |
1 375 412 | Jan 2004 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070107384 A1 | May 2007 | US |