The present invention relates to manually actuated pump type fluid dispensers including those operated by a trigger or handle.
Manually actuated pump type fluid dispensers are commonly used to provide a means by which fluids can be dispensed from a non-pressurised container. Typically, dispensers of this kind have a pump arrangement which is located above the container when in use. The pump includes a pump chamber connected with the container by means of an inlet having an inlet valve and with a dispensing outlet via an outlet valve. To actuate the dispenser, a user manually applies a force to an actuator to reduce the volume of the pump chamber and pressurise the fluid inside. Once the pressure in the chamber reaches a pre-determined value, the outlet valve opens and the fluid is expelled through the outlet. When the user removes the actuating force, the volume of the chamber increases and the pressure in the chamber falls. This closes the outlet valve and draws a further charge of fluid up into the chamber through the inlet. A range of fluids can be dispensed this way this way including pastes, gels, liquid foams and liquids. In certain applications, the fluid is dispensed in the form of an atomised spray, in which case the outlet will comprise an atomising nozzle. The actuator may be push button or cap, though in some applications the actuator arrangement includes a trigger that can be pulled by a user's fingers.
A large number of commercial products are presented to consumers in a manual pump type dispenser, including, for example, tooth paste, antiperspirant, de-odorant, perfumes, air fresheners, antiseptics, paints, insecticides, polish, hair care products, pharmaceuticals, shaving gels and foams, water and lubricants.
There are a number of drawbacks associated with conventional pump-action dispensers. Firstly, many of the conventional devices tend to be extremely complex in design and typically comprise numerous different component parts. In some designs there are between 6 and 8 individual components, with 8 to 12 individual components being used in dispensers having a trigger actuator. As a consequence, these devices can be costly to manufacture due to the amount of material required to form the individual components and the assembly processes involved. Secondly, many of the conventional devices tend to be bulky (which again increases the raw material costs) and a proportion of this bulk is invariably disposed inside the container to which the device is attached. This creates a drawback in that the nozzle device takes up a proportion of the internal volume of the container, which can be a particular problem in small containers where the available space inside the container is limited. Finally, the size of the pump is also dictated to certain extent by the size of the container to which it is attached. Thus, the size of the pump is usually restricted in small containers, and especially small containers with narrow necks, and this limits the amount of pressure that can be generated by the pump as well as the volume of fluid that can be dispensed, and, for this reason, can be detrimental to the performance of the device.
Conventional pumps tend to use a plunger in a cylinder to drive the liquor out through a precompression valve, a piston and through a swirl chamber and spray orifice. These work well because there is an acceptable amount of dead space in the system and you can deliver an accurate dose at a high pressure. The biggest problem is that they use a lot of components which is expensive in terms of the part costs and assembly. Other cheaper pumps have been developed using fewer components because they make use of flexible parts. The problem with these is that they tend to have a lot of dead space especially in the pump chamber and this makes it difficult to get a consistent dose as some of the liquor and air tends to be left in the pump chamber.
There are some pumps made with flexible inserts but these tend to have a considerable amount of dead space in the system including the pump chamber and the area between it and the spray orifice. This creates a lot of problems when the discharge is only 0.05-0.3 mls and usually around 0.15 mls. The dose tends to be very inaccurate, there is a lot of air in system which wastes energy and adversely affects the spray and the spray is inconsistent.
Another problem with all the small pump designs is that there are losses in the system caused by dead space in the flow path from the pump chamber to the outlet such as in the piston and turning the liquor through 90 degrees and even the swirl chamber itself. All pumps have these losses but they aren't that much of a problem when you are dealing with larger volumes but the losses are important with small volumes. For example, the liquor dispensed at the start and end of the spray has less momentum and this means that larger droplets are produced but where only small volumes are being dispensed the entire volume is less than that at the start or end of the cycle of higher volume dispensers so the problem is more acute.
Dispensers activated by a handle are referred to as triggers and these usually have up to 13 components making them very expensive to tool, make and assemble. They also suffer from all of the problems associated with dispensers as outlined above with even more dead space after the pump chamber.
Many of the products which are supplied in a manual pump action dispenser are high volume products that are very cost sensitive and there is constant pressure on the manufactures of dispensers to reduce manufacturing costs without adversely affecting the performance of the dispenser.
There is a desire for a manually actuated pump dispenser which is:
simpler in design;
utilises fewer components;
is easy to operate and functions effectively;
has little dead space.
In accordance with a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a manually actuated pump type fluid dispenser comprising a casing defining an internal cavity and a pump member at least partly located in the cavity, the pump member having a central core and first and second seal members projecting radially outwardly of the core and spaced in an axial direction of the core for contact with the casing to define a pump chamber within the cavity in an area bounded by the first and second seal members, in which a region of the core between the first and second seal members is resiliently deformable from an initial resiliently biased configuration in which the first and second seal members are axially spaced by a first amount and an axially compressed configuration in which the seal members are spaced by a second amount which is less than the first amount to reduce the volume of the pump chamber.
The region of the core between the first and second seal members may be configured to deform radially outwardly when it is axially compressed so as to reduce the volume of the pump chamber.
The first and second seal members may be configured to engage closely about opposing sides of the resiliently deformable region of the core when it is in the axially compressed configuration.
The resiliently deformable region of the core may substantially fill the entire volume inside the cavity between the first and second seal members when it is axially compressed. The resiliently deformable region of the core may fill 80%, or more preferably 85%, or more preferably again 90%, even more preferably 95%, of the entire volume inside the cavity between the first and second seal members when it is axially compressed.
The region of the core between the first and second seal members may comprise at least one hole, cavity, recess or void. The dispenser may be configured so that the at least one hole, cavity, recess or void is substantially closed when the resiliently deformable region is compressed.
In one embodiment, the resiliently deformable region of the core between the first and second seal members comprises a hole extending through the core, the core having resiliently deformable wall portions surrounding the through hole. In this embodiment, the wall portions of the core surrounding the through hole may curve radially outwardly about the hole. The first and second seal members may have concave surfaces which face inwardly of the chamber for location about the curved wall portions when the resiliently deformable region of the core is axially compressed.
More than one region of the core between the first and second seal members may be axially compressible. Each axially compressible region of the core may comprise a through hole surrounded by resiliently deformable wall portions or other void.
The casing and the pump member may be moveable relative to one another to actuate the dispenser. The casing and the pump member may be moveable relative to one another between a rest position in which the resiliently deformable region of the core between the first and second seal members is in its initial resiliently biased configuration and an actuated position in which the resiliently deformable region of the core between the first and second seal members is axially compressed.
The first seal member may be located at the downstream end of the pump chamber and may be operative as a pre-compression pump chamber release valve, allowing fluid to exit the pump chamber only when the fluid is at or above a pre-determined dispensing pressure.
Where the casing and the pump member are moveable relative to one another between a rest position in which the resiliently deformable region of the core between the first and second seal members is in its initial resiliently biased configuration and an actuated position in which the resiliently deformable region of the core between the first and second seal members is axially compressed, the first seal member may comprise a seal portion for engagement with the casing, and the casing may have formations which are positioned so as to deflect the seal portion and open a flow path from the pump chamber to an outlet orifice of the dispenser when the casing and pump member have moved by a predetermined distance from the rest position towards the actuated position. In this embodiment, the core may comprise a further resiliently deformable region compressible in an axial direction and which is axially spaced from the pump chamber, the further resiliently deformable portion being configured to deform from an initial resilient biased configuration to an axially compressed configuration to enable relative movement between the casing and the pump member from the rest position by the predetermined amount required to open the flow path during actuation of the dispenser in use.
The second seal member may be located at the upstream end of the pump chamber and may be configured to act as an inlet valve member to enable a fluid to be dispensed to be drawn into the pump chamber. The second seal member may comprise two axially spaced flexible seal portions defining an inlet chamber between themselves and the casing, a downstream one of the flexible seal portions being resiliently biased into contact with the casing but moveable in downstream direction away from the casing to allow fluid to flow from the inlet chamber into the pump chamber but not in the reverse direction. The other flexible sealing portion may be resiliently biased into contact with the casing to prevent fluid flowing between itself and the casing from the inlet chamber. One or more fluid passages may be defined within the core to fluidly connect the inlet chamber with a source of fluid to be dispensed.
Part of the core may comprise an inlet portion extending in an upstream direction from the second seal member, the inlet portion having one or more inlet passages defined therein for directing fluid to the pump chamber. The inlet portion may be configured for mounting in passage defined in a body which forms an outlet from a container for holding a fluid (liquid) to be dispensed. The inlet portion may be adapted for mounting directly in an outlet opening in a neck region of a container for a fluid to be dispensed. The inlet portion may include at least one seal member for contact with a surface of body defining the passage or the neck of the container to prevent liquid in the container from leaking out. The seal may be resiliently deformable in a direction away from the surface to allow air to enter the container when the pressure in the container is lower than the ambient air pressure.
The casing may be adapted to be mounted about the neck region of an associated container for movement relative thereto to actuate the dispenser.
The dispenser may have at least one final outlet orifice and an outlet fluid flow path fluidly connecting the pump chamber to the outlet. In one embodiment, the at least one final outlet orifice is provided in a wall of the casing, an outlet end portion of the core being received in a recess in an inner side of the wall adjacent the outlet orifice, at least part of the outlet fluid pathway formed between the surface of the casing defining the recess and the outlet end portion of the pump member. A swirl chamber may be formed between the pump member and casing adjacent the outlet orifice, the swirl chamber being configured to cause fluid flowing into it from the pump chamber to rotate about an axis of the orifice. Features defining the swirl chamber may be integrally formed on the outlet end portion of the core of the pump member and/or on the casing.
The pump member may be a single integral component manufactured from polymeric materials using injection moulding techniques.
The dispenser may comprise a trigger actuator. Alternatively, the casing may be an actuator to which a user can directly apply a force to actuate the dispenser or an alternative actuation arrangement can be used.
The cavity and pump member may be aligned vertically or horizontally when the dispenser is in an upright position. The pump chamber may be located immediately adjacent the outlet to keep the dead space in outlet fluid passageways from the pump chamber to the outlet low.
In an embodiment, the dispenser comprises a collar for mounting about the neck of a container for holding a liquid to be dispensed, the collar having a tube member extending axially from the collar for insertion into the neck of a container to which the collar is mounted, the tube portion having an inner concentric tube portion attached to an end distal from the collar, the dispenser having an actuator including an annular skirt defining the cavity, part of the skirt being located between the tube member and the inner concentric tube portion, part of the pump member comprising the first and second seal members being received within the annular skirt portion to define the pump chamber, an inlet portion of the core being received within the inner concentric tube portion and having one or more fluid passage therein to define an inlet to the pump chamber.
The dispenser may be configured to dispense a liquid as a bolus, or as a spray, or as a foam.
In accordance with a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a manually actuated pump type fluid dispenser comprising a casing defining an internal cavity and an outlet orifice, the dispenser further comprising a pump member at least partly located in the cavity to define a pump chamber, the pump member having an outlet post portion having an axial end which is positioned adjacent a wall portion of the casing in which the outlet orifice is defined, the axial end of the post portion having features defining a swirl chamber between itself and the wall portion.
The post portion may be received in a recess defined by the casing.
The pump member may be a moulded component and the features defining the swirl chamber may be formed integrally with the post portion and/or on the casing.
The outlet post portion may be cylindrical and may be received in a cylindrical recess in the casing, the recess being closed at one end by means of the wall portion containing the outlet orifice, one or more fluid passageways being defined between a side wall region of the recess and a side wall region of the outlet post portion through which fluid (liquid) can pass to reach the outlet orifice from the pump chamber.
In accordance with a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a combination of a manually actuated pump type fluid dispenser in accordance with either one of the first and second aspects of the invention and a container for a fluid to be dispensed, the dispenser being mounted to the container to dispense a fluid from the container.
Several embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The container 200 has a main body 201 for receiving a fluid to be dispensed and a shaped open neck region 100 which in effect forms a first or base part of the dispenser pump. The cap 118 defines an internal cavity 118a and is mounted around the neck region 100 so as to be moveable relative to the container. The pump member insert 101 is primarily mounted inside the internal cavity of the cap 118 to define a pump chamber 110 and, in this embodiment, all of the valves of the pump dispenser. An inlet portion 101d of the pump member is located within and seals the outlet neck region 100 of the container 200.
The container 200 and cap 118 are preferably formed from a polymeric material such as polyethylene, polythene, polypropylene, polyurethane or the like using injection and/or blow moulding and can be considered to form a casing of the dispenser. The pump member insert 101 may also be formed by injection moulding from a polymeric material. Typically, the pump member insert 101 is made from a material which once moulded remains resiliently flexible such as TPV, TPE, PP, flexible polypropylene, silicon or the like. However, the flexible insert could also be manufactured using bi-injection techniques so as to have an inner structure or framework of a more rigid material onto which the flexible portions are over moulded. This would provide for additional strength but isn't the optimal configuration. The cap 118 and at least the neck 100 of the container are typically formed from a material which is substantially rigid once moulded, or at least substantially rigid when compared with the flexible portions of the pump member 101. The main body 201 of the container may also be substantially rigid after moulding or it may be flexible.
The cap 118 has an annular main body portion which is received over the neck region 100 of the container to define the inner cavity which in the present embodiment is in the form of a generally cylindrical bore. In normal use, downward movement of the cap 118 relative to the neck 100 is limited by contact between the cap shoulder 206 and the container shoulder 205.
In this example as shown in
An outlet orifice 117 is formed at an upper region of the cap 118. In the embodiment as shown in
Where the outlet 117 is in the form of a spray nozzle, a swirl chamber or other arrangement may be provided just prior to the final outlet orifice 117 to encourage the fluid to spin about the axis of the orifice in a manner known in the art. This can be any type of swirl or a backspinner.
In the present embodiment, the dispenser would normally be used upright or substantially upright and there would be a diptube (not shown) in a recess 122 in the pump member insert and this would extend to the bottom of the container 200. A lower end of the dip tube has an opening through which fluid can flow into a central bore. The dip tube would normally be a separate component but could be formed integrally as part of the flexible pump member insert 101 itself. The device could be used inverted so that no diptube is necessary.
The pump member 101 is effectively the pump engine and incorporates all of the key elements. The pump member insert 101 has a central core 101a which extends in an axial direction of the spout. Two axially spaced seal members 101b, 101c project radially from the core and contact the inner surface of the cap 118 to define the pump chamber 110 between themselves and the cap within the inner cavity 118a. A region of the core between the first and second seal members 101b, 101c is resiliently deformable (axially compressible) between an initial resiliently biased configuration as shown in
The resiliently deformable region of the core 101a in the present embodiment comprises a hole 111 which extends through the core and which is surrounded on two sides by resiliently deformable wall portions 112. The wall portions 112 curve radially outwardly about the hole, so that they tend to collapse outwardly closing the hole 111 when the core is axially compressed. The first and second seal members 101b, 101c have concave surfaces which face inwardly of the chamber for location about the curved wall portions 112 when the core is compressed. Since the through hole 111 extends through the core, it is in fluid communication with and forms part of the pump chamber 110 so that collapsing the hole also reduces the volume of the pump chamber when the dispenser is actuated. As can be seen in
The resiliently deformable region of the core is shaped and configured to deform radially outwardly when it is axially compressed so as to reduce the volume of the pump chamber. As shown in
The first seal member 101b includes two flexible seal portions 113 and 114 which close the downstream side of the pump chamber 110 whilst the second seal member 101c includes three flexible seal portions 106, 107, 109 which close the upstream side of the pump chamber. These seal portions butt up against the inner wall of the spout 120 to form seals and a number also form valves for controlling the flow of fluid into and out of the pump chamber 110.
Two of the upstream seal portions 107, 109 are axially spaced apart and define an inlet chamber 108 between themselves and the wall of the cap 118. The inlet chamber is 108 is fluidly connected with an inner fluid chamber 104 formed inside the core which in turn is fluidly connected with an axial inlet fluid passage 103 in the core and a larger diameter inlet passage 122 formed in an inlet portion 101d of the core. The inlet portion extends in an upstream direction beyond the second seal member 101c and fixes into the neck 100 of the container. The inlet portion 101d forms a seal at 208 inside the neck region which prevents liquor from escaping from the container when inverted. As liquor is dispensed, a vacuum is created inside the container and this causes the seal 208 to distort inwards which in turn allows air to be drawn past it and into the container equalising the pressure and allowing the seal to return to its original shape. Only a very small gap is created and this prevents the liquor from escaping. The air is drawn from between the cap and container and then down inside the neck of the container between it and the flexible insert.
The seal portion 109 is located at the downstream side of the inlet chamber 108 and is in the form of an annular sealing skirt which faces in a downstream direction. The seal portion 109 forms a valve which deforms inwardly in a downstream direction parting from the wall of the spout 120 to allow liquor from the inlet chamber 108 to pass into the pump chamber 110 when the pressure in the pump chamber 110 is lower than that in the inlet chamber 108 as the pump recovers after each actuation. The seal portion 109 prevents liquor escaping upstream from the pump chamber 110 into the inlet chamber 108 when the pump is actuated and the pressure in the pump chamber 110 is higher than that in the inlet chamber 108. Accordingly, when the dispenser is actuated the seal 109 is pressed outwardly in an upstream direction (downward as shown) by the liquid in the pump chamber 110 thus increasing the seal on the spout wall. The seal portion 107 on the upstream side of the inlet chamber 108 is also in the form of an annular sealing skirt facing downstream and this prevents liquor from the input chamber 108 escaping between the cap and flexible pump member insert, particularly when the pressure in the inlet chamber 108 is higher than the ambient air pressure. The final seal portion 106 on the second seal member 101c, is located upstream from the inlet chamber 108 and is in the form of an annular sealing skirt which faces upstream. Seal portion 106 is operative to prevent air from entering the inlet chamber 108 when the pressure in the inlet chamber is lower than the ambient air pressure.
The seal portions 113, 114 on the first seal member 101b include a first annular sealing skirt 113 adjacent the pump chamber which faces upstream to prevent fluid from exiting the pump chamber 110. This is followed by the seal portion 114 which is in the form of an annular sealing skirt which faces downstream. The outer sealing skirt 114 is designed to prevent air getting back from the outlet nozzle 117 to the pump chamber 110 when the pump recovers after each actuation. The seal portions 113, 114 also form part of a pump chamber outlet valve which allows fluid in the pump chamber to pass to the outlet nozzle 117.
Seal portions 113, 114 form a pre-compression valve because they have been designed to allow the liquor through from the pump chamber to the outlet but only when it has reached a set pressure level, usually somewhere between 0.5-5 bars with 3-4 bars being typical. The two valves 113 and 114 are fixed on the outside of a cylindrical plate 123 forming part of the seal member 101b that extends outwards from the core 101a of the flexible pump member insert 101. Part of the extended plate 123 close to the core 101a butts up against a raised annular section 119 of the spout 120 when the pump is actuated. This causes the second seal member 101b to deform, breaking the seal between the seal portion 113 and the wall of the spout to open a flow path from the pump chamber 110 to the outlet orifice 117. The shape of the raised section 119 determines how much butts up against the plate portion 123 and so determines the amount of force needed to deform the seal member and to open the valve.
When the dispenser is initially actuated, the resiliently deformable region of the core between the first and second seam members is unable to axially compress as the pump chamber 110 is full of liquid and the inlet and outlet valves 109, 119 are closed. However, the pressure of the liquid in the pump chamber causes the plate region 123 of the first seal member 101b to bend about the raised annular section 119. This tries to draw the seal portion 113 away from the surface of the casing but the seal portion 113 is biased outwardly in a downstream direction against its internal resilience by the pressure of the liquid in the chamber and so maintains sealing contact with the casing. Eventually the distortion of the plate 123 becomes sufficient that the seal portion 113 can no longer maintains sealing contact with the casing and liquid is able to flow past seal portion and the valve opens. When the valve opens and the pressure differential across the seal portion 113 is removed, the resilience of the material causes the seal portion 113 to reform in a direction away from the surface of the spout so that the flow path is opened quickly and fully. To ensure the valve opens properly small ramps are provided on the inner surface the spout between seal portions 113 and 114 so that as seal portion 113 is distorted by the liquor pressure in the pump chamber and is pushed downstream, it rides up the ramps pushing it away from the spout wall letting the liquor pass to the outlet nozzle. Instead of ramps there could be one or more indents so once the seal portion 113 is pushed towards the indents it can no longer form a seal and the liquor can escape. Once the liquid is able to pass the seal portion 113, it is easily able to deflect the downstream facing seal portion 114 inwardly so that the fluid can pass along passageways to the outlet orifice 117. Any type of pre-compression valve could be used but this integral valve arrangement is preferable.
This valve is a version of our pre-compression valve which is described and claimed in International patent application No. PCT/GB2010/050780 and is a great improvement over previously known pre-compression valves. The contents of PCT/GB2010/050780 are incorporated by reference. Conventional pre-compression valves will open a minimum amount to let liquor pass but with this valve arrangement the first seal member 101b is progressively pushed downstream as the pressure in the pump chamber 110 increases and is bent inwards at 124 around the feature 119 but the sealing skirt 113 is forced outwards by the fluid pressure in the pump chamber maintaining the seal against the spout wall. Eventually, the sealing skirt 113 meets the ramps or groves and this allows the liquor to escape reducing the pressure in the pump chamber 110 and allowing the sealing skirt 113 to reform to its original shape taking it further away from the wall increasing the gap for the liquor to escape. This means there are few losses to friction at this point. It would work without the ramps or grooves but this is even more efficient.
Once past the seal portion valve 113 the liquor easily deforms the seal portion valve 114 downstream as it has no strength in that direction and then the liquor goes between the raised section 119 and an outlet post portion 115 of the core through one or more grooves or through an annular gap and then onto a swirl or backspinner at 121 and through the orifice 117 where it is emitted as an atomised spray. The swirl is formed at the downstream end of the flexible pump member insert 101 between it and the end of the spout 120 at 121 either on the output post portion 115 or on the spout. This version shows a swirl insert 116 which the outlet post portion 115 sits inside and it also butts up against the upstream wall of the swirl insert creating a swirl chamber into which the liquor flows and which then causes the liquor to spin before exiting through the spray orifice 117 as an atomised spray. A small gap, gaps or grooves in either the swirl insert or the post allow the liquor to flow between them. Normally though, there would be no separate insert and the outlet post portion 115 would locate in a recess formed directly in the in spout and the swirl would be made either on the end of the flexible post 115 or more commonly on the inside face of the spout 120 saving a component. Where the dispenser is not required to form an atomised spray, the swirl chamber or backspinner can be omitted.
The sequence of working of the device is as follows. The user press down on the shoulder of the cap at 106 and this pushes the cap towards the container and causes the central core 101a of flexible pump member insert to deform at the axially compressible spring portion 112. As it does so, the first seal member 101b is deformed downstream and the sealing skirt 113 is also pushed downstream and onto the ramps lifting it away from the spout wall and allowing the fluid in the pump chamber to exit the chamber. The sealing skirt 114 is then deformed downstream and away from the spout wall by the fluid allowing the fluid to flow through an outlet fluid passageway to the swirl chamber at 121 and then the final orifice 117. As the cap moves towards the container so the first and second seal members 101b, 101c move closer together and the axially compressible part of the core 112 flattens taking up more and more of the space in the pump chamber 110 and forcing out any fluid until there is none left inside the chamber and the space in the chamber is minimal. Once all of the fluid has been expelled from the pump chamber 110, the seal portion valves 113 and 114 reform and seal against the spout wall. Some of the fluid will remain around the outlet post 115 and upstream of the final seal portion valve 114 but this is minimal because the dead space in that area has been minimised. Next time the pump is activated this liquor will be expelled at the start of the spray and will be replaced at the end of it. The volume of it is very small and typically around 5-10 micro litres. When the cap is depressed and the core 112 compresses, liquor exerts pressure on the pump chamber input valve, seal member 109 and this is pushed harder against the spout wall 120 preventing the liquor getting back to the input chamber 108.
Once the fingers release the pressure on the cap, the resiliently deformable part of the core 112 will reform in the manner of a spring and will move the cap 118 away from the container until it reaches its original position. As it does so, the volume in the pump chamber 110 is increased which creates a vacuum in the pump chamber and this causes the seal portion 109 to distort in a downstream direction to allow fluid to be drawn into the pump chamber from the input chamber 108 via a diptube or through the channel 122. This continues until the pump chamber has refilled, at which point the seal member valve 109 reforms sealing against the tube wall. The vacuum in the pump chamber will also try to pull air from outside of the bottle between the spout and the bottle but it cannot as seal 106 is sucked harder against the spout wall 120 sealing it even more. Liquor will also try to get out of the bottle between the flexible insert 101 and the container neck 100 but is prevented from doing so by the upstream end of the flexible insert which forms a valve at 208 between it and the neck of the container 200. The liquor pushes against it causing the flexible part to seal ever tighter against the neck. But air must be drawn into the container to replace the used liquor and this is drawn between the cap and the outside of the neck past 105 where there is a groove or gap and down to the valve 208. The valve 208 easily deforms in this direction allowing a tiny gap that is large enough for the air to pass but too small for the liquor to exit.
Dispensers in accordance with the invention usually deliver a fixed dose and this varies according to the requirement. The dose in this case is determined by the size of the chamber 110. So to vary the dose we simply need to vary the size of the chamber and this can be done by varying the chamber length or diameter or both. Varying the diameter means varying the internal diameter of the spout accordingly. Another way would be to vary the axial amount of the chamber that is depressed and this can be done by altering the distance that the cap can move relative to the container. This is a fairly simple job and can be done with protrusions on the inside or outside of the cap or the container.
Prior art dispensers have used a flexible insert but in most prior art arrangements the liquor is contained inside a flexible tube or part tube or bellows using the actuator as a lid or base. These side walls take up space and they have to be deformed which then takes up more space and valves have to be constructed inside the tubes which is difficult when they are small. In the dispenser according to the invention, the pump member insert has no side walls or part side walls and has a top and base which also form the inlet and outlet valves and the actuator cap makes up the side walls of the chamber. The central core part 101a of the flexible pump member insert forms the return spring for the dispenser and the valves are integrally formed from the flexible insert making contact with the actuator cap. This way, minimum space is used and dead space is also minimised ensuring a more accurate dose. Pump dispensers in accordance with the invention are particularly well adapted for use as small pumps with discharges of up to 0.5 mls and particularly up to 0.3 mls or thereabouts although they could be used on larger pumps.
The basic dispenser pump arrangement as described above can be modified for use with a range of different types of covers and vessels including any of the versions shown in the accompanying drawings. In
The raised rim 304 on the outside of the container 300 is used in conjunction with 4 raised sections 600 shown in
The spout 100 is protected at the end by a simple tubular cover 320 that is pushed onto the spout and held in place by friction to keep the end of the spout clean and to seal off the orifice 117.
This device would normally have a diptube but the container 300 could be deformable instead or the base could be a follower instead that moves upwards as the liquor is emptied. For small bottles the diptube could be made out of the flexible insert itself with the base of it simply being extended downwards in a tubular shape but still keeping the bottom valve. It could also be converted into a tilt device as per our patent PCT/GB03/003852 “Improvements in or relating to dip tubes” by sealing the bottom of the extended tube and putting a small hole or slit in it so the tube refills slowly after use when the vessel is stood vertical and the tube is immersed in the liquor so little air is drawn up into the pump chamber ensuring a more consistent dose.
With a commonly used spray pumps such as perfume or hairspray it isn't really desirable to spray vertically as in the embodiments shown in
One of the problems with making pumps is the enormous capital required for the tooling and assembly equipment yet the margins on the devices are really low with prices falling year on year. The fact that we use fewer parts obviously brings these costs down but it is also very advantageous if we can make them in such a way that most of the device can be made by converting existing tools and using the same assembly equipment. This design is an example of just that. We take a standard actuator and add an internal tube 727 onto the underside of it and this is designed to take the flexible pump member 101 previously shown. This can be done by modifying the actuator tool and the spray insert is identical to those already available. At the top of the new tube we add the conical upstand 729 which forms part of the pre-compression valve in place of the raised section 119 in the
The next step is to modify the collar 700 of standard pumps. In order to make pumps fit a range of different bottle neck sizes, shapes and threads a range of collars 700 are made with the appropriate thread or fixing and diameter. These have differing hole sizes with ledges 701 inside so that different sized pumps can be used with them but the actuators fit all of them. This way the various pumps can be fitted with various collars and this considerably reduces the number of pumps required. So we alter the collar tools so they include the tubular section 704 which the actuator tube 727 goes into and the connected lower inner tube 703 that goes inside the actuator tube 727 and that the flexible insert 101 sits astride and inside. For bottle necks that aren't very well made you often use a small flexible sealing pad or ring 740 that goes around the collar shoulder edge and sits on top of the bottle neck. This could be used here or a small ring could be over moulded onto the collar. An alternative method would be to leave the threaded collar 700 as it is and to make the features added to the collar 704 as a separate part that also acts as the sealing pad 740. This could be a bi-injection moulding to get the seal required and to give the strength needed for the inner tubes. This arrangement reduces the part count of a standard pump by 7 and considerably reduces the assembly costs yet the pump looks and feels the same and performs better.
The device works in a very similar way to the previous embodiments as described above. The actuator 720 is pressed down by a finger onto the gap between it and the collar 700 until it nearly meets the ledge 701 of the collar 700. As it moves downwards the flexible pump member insert 101 is compressed to actuate the dispenser.
In earlier International patent applications WO 2009/130461 and WO 2009/130462, the contents of which are incorporated by reference, we have described how to alter a standard pump dispenser so it also delivers air at the same time as the liquor and this is by creating a flexible plunger in the collar that seals against the inside of the outer wall of the actuator. A similar arrangement can be incorporated into the present dispenser in
Many pumps that spray horizontally are pushed over a plain bottle neck and held in place by friction and perfume pumps are an excellent example of this. They tend to deliver a very low discharge of around 0.05-0.1 mls so they are very small but they still have a similar number of components. We illustrate in
The flexible pump member 101 can be the same design as in
The previous embodiments have focussed on rigid vessels but these pumps could also be used with flexible or deformable vessels including sachets, bags, blister packs, capsules etc. They could produce a spray, bolus or foam. An outlet tube from the container would be equivalent to the tube 900 in the embodiment shown in
All the configurations shown and especially
Liquor cannot escape through the valve 1133 as it is a one way valve that seals against the tube 1106 wall in that direction. Simultaneously, the diaphragm at 1131 moves inwards as does the prodder 1124 until all of the liquor has been discharged and this is shown in
The flexible insert 1130 could be arranged vertically instead of horizontally with the trigger handle hinged on the body or cap and going over the body or cap instead of under or around it. The beauty of all of these versions is that the device is very small and simple so it is very cheap to make and assemble yet its performance will be amongst the best possible as there is so little dead space and the pump chamber is so close to the outlet nozzle. Another modification is to make the nozzle moveable and to have the handle connected to it so that as the handle is pulled inwards so is the downstream end of the flexible insert which is mounted horizontally as in
Trigger dispensers in accordance with the present invention can be used in many configurations including as a dispenser, foamer and a spray pump. Having a small spout on the cap following the spray orifice would also produce a foam instead and a mesh in the spout could further enhance this. So different interchangeable pins on the cap tool could produce a wide range of products.
One of the big problems with pump dispensers, including trigger dispensers, is the range of discharge volumes and types of discharge required as this means different tools and assembly equipment has to be made which is very expensive. A wide range of discharge volumes could be produced with a dispenser in accordance with the present invention simply by varying the distance that the pump chamber or actuator is allowed to move or by compressing part of the chamber in its rest position. This could be done in a number of ways including having an upstream length of the flexible insert made variable on the tool, or by making the trigger prodder 1124 length variable on the tool, or by restricting the movement of the handle. The pump chamber 1106 diameter could also be made variable on the tool so a different flexible insert with a different diameter is used instead. But, this way the same body or cap and handle can be used and maybe one to three flexible inserts could cover a large range of discharges. The profile of the raised section on the inside of the cap for the precompression valve could also be made with interchangeable pins on the cap tool to achieve a range of different precompression levels.
Another problem with trigger dispensers is that they can easily be loosened by being knocked in transport by the user allowing the liquor to leak between the collar and bottle. Also, the bottles themselves are usually made for price so the bottle neck is often imperfect making the seal between the bottle and collar unreliable. For these reasons flexible sealing pads such as 1200 are often used and these are usually separate components but could be an over moulding. Unfortunately, these often don't actually maintain the seal if the cap has been accidentally loosened so we also seal inside the bottle neck by adding the annular plunger skirt 1201 to the pad 1200 and this will seal the bottle even if the collar is loose. As liquor is pumped from the bottle or vessel it needs to be replaced by air from outside and we then we would add fine grooves onto the underside of the sealing pad 1200 which let air past but little to no liquor. The sealing skirt 1201 will also allow the outside air in by deforming the sealing skirt 1201 away from the wall of the bottle neck yet will prevent the liquor from escaping there by sealing against the bottle neck as the liquor pressurises it. Sometimes, air will be allowed to refill the bottle through the flexible insert 101 and then the sealing skirt 1201 won't need to deform so it could be designed so it doesn't allow fluid through in either direction and an O ring shape would be an obvious example. These sealing ideas could just as easily be used on separate collars and could be used with any pump or trigger device.
Dual pumps or triggers are used to deliver two or more different fluids as a spray, foam or bolus of liquor and this could easily be achieved with this device by using a cap with two parallel chambers and one joined pair or two separate flexible inserts. For vertical pumps such as in
Air could be delivered by the same flexible pump member insert that delivers the liquor and it could be mixed with that liquor before, after or inside the pump chamber. There could be two different pump chambers on one flexible insert with one for the air and this could be used to mix them at some point before the outlet.
As the flexible pump member insert is so simple and small, the pump can be very small and cheap and can be made in many different shapes, sizes and ways. It can be made as a spray pump or as a dispenser. It could be built into the neck or top of any squeezy container or a flexible bag, capsule, sachet or even a blister pack. This opens up the possibility of throw away pumps after one or several uses so could be used for products like glue and paint that would normally block up the nozzle after use. Or for pharmaceutical applications such as in hospitals where ideally it would only be used one or more times and then disposed of.
One of the many advantages of this pump design is that there is very little if any dead space either in the pump chamber or downstream of it. Normally, pumps use a hollow piston following the precompression valve and pump chamber and the piston is connected to an actuator which holds the swirl chamber. So the fluid travels from the chamber through the valve through the piston through the actuator into the swirl chamber and through the final orifice. After use, fluid is trapped in the piston, actuator and swirl chamber and the next time the pump is activated this is ejected first followed by the contents of the chamber less the retained fluid. The trapped fluid takes energy out of the system and has an adverse affect on the spray quality. Because our pump chamber is so close to the spray orifice and there is so little dead space, we have a very small amount of trapped fluid and consequently it has much less adverse affect on the spray quality. Also, the pumped fluid travels a much shorter distance which also normally takes a lot of energy out of the system.
The concept of having a pump adjacent to or substantially adjacent to the final outlet may be claimed independently of any other concepts disclosed in the present application.
The body 1300 is normally moulded in a cheap plastic such as polypropylene and is also shown in
The trigger handle 1380 is used to activate the device and it is held in place at 1305 by two integral pins 1503, 1503′ inside its two arms 1502 shown in
The nozzle 1370 goes inside of the outer tube 1303 and outside of the middle tube 1304 and it has two locating pegs 1412, 1412′ on opposite sides of its body that go into the two opposing slots in the body 1300 at 1401 and 1401′. The shape of the nozzle 1370 that is between the two tubes is tubular and it has two opposing ribs 1415 and 1415′ on the opposite face to reduce friction between it and the tubes. The nozzle 1370 forms a casing defining a cavity which houses the flexible pump member 1324 and the pump chamber is made between pump member 1324 and the nozzle 1370. The nozzle 1370 is moved inside the two tubes by the handle 1380 being pulled. The nozzle normally has an integral spray nozzle at the front at 1414 plus a swirl formed on the inside front face but it could also have a spray insert that is inserted at 1414 instead. It can also be used as a foamer when there would be an additional open tube downstream of the nozzle and sometimes superior foam would be produced by having two filters inside that tube. It could also be used as a dispenser where there would just be an open orifice at 1414 with no spray insert.
The flexible inset 1324 shown on
In use, the handle 1380 is pulled inwards and this pulls the nozzle 1370 inwards putting pressure on the flexible part 1324 to collapse at the two springs 1344 and 1604. The spring 1344 cannot collapse because the valve 1343 is sealing against the nozzle wall with 1352 so the spring 1604 collapses and pushes 1352 and 1343 away from the wall as it does so opening it and allowing the pump chamber 1327 to empty. On first operation all of the chambers are full of air so air is expelled initially and then replaced with liquor until they are all full of liquor and the pump is primed. Since the action of the device is the same we will assume that they are all full of liquor.
Once valve 1343 is open the spring 1344 starts to collapse as the hole 1345 closes and this forces liquor past the valve 1343 through to valve 1355 past the post 1351 and through the final orifice. The entire chamber empties as the hole 1345 collapses and virtually all of the liquor is discharged. Then the handle is released and the springs 1344 and 1604 try to reform and to push the nozzle and handle back to their rest positions. Because nothing can get upstream past valve 1355 liquor is sucked past valve 1346 from chamber 1324 then from chamber 1323 and then from the diptube in 1311 and then from the bottle itself. As it is drawn into the pump chamber so the springs both reform and a little is also drawn into chamber 1603 but not very much as it always contains some liquor as do the passages between it and the final orifice because there is nothing to eject these small volumes. Indeed one of the attractions of this device is how small a volume is retained. Soon, all chambers are again full of liquor. Any liquor drawn into the spring hole 1340 will be ejected each time and this will refill with liquor afterwards so it effectively becomes an auxiliary pump chamber although it is very small.
Other precompression designs could have been used instead of 1343 including some of those shown in the previous embodiments. The keys to this design are moving the nozzle inwards, having the flexible part do so many different jobs and using a low number of components and making them small and cheap whilst still delivering large doses and producing a quality performance.
In
Its normal configuration would use a rigid or semi rigid body or casing 1801 and a single flexible pump member 1816 although each could be made bi-injection mouldings if preferred and they could even be made as one hinged part. If the flexible part is made as two parts it would probably be with the central part 1815 as one and the base part 1814 as another joined at 1821.
It would be activated by pressing the thumb or finger at 1817 with the fingers around the nozzle 1819 and those fingers or part of the hand on the top of the curved base around 1822 and 1822′. The flexible pump works as in all of the previous examples except the liquor is drawn from the holding reservoir 1813 to the pump chamber via the valve 1808 which is a one way valve that allows liquor to pass downstream but nothing passes upstream. It also forms the upstream wall of the pump chamber 1804.
The user presses on the base at 1817 which causes the flexible part to move inwards causing the chamber 1805 to empty and the core to collapse at emptying the pump chamber 1804 and driving any liquor to the final spray orifice 1802. Once the base is released at 1817 the resiliently deformable part of the core 1823 reforms as usual and the chamber is refilled via the valve 1808. As the reservoir 1813 empties the base is drawn in and this is enabled by the pleats 1818 so no air is needed to replace the liquor and it can be used through 360 degrees as liquor is always next to the valve 1808. Of course, it could be designed without a deformable base where you would allow air into the reservoir to replace the liquor. The dispenser could also be designed so that the inlet portion 1814 of the core is hollow and liquor is drawn up through it as normal.
The base could be welded onto the top using a flange 1812 or it could be designed to snap fit over the flange 1812 so no welding is needed. For cheap versions we envisage holding the device in a blister pack arrangement but others would need something on the spout 1819 to cover it and prevent the device being activated accidentally. You could used a hinged rigid cover that is hinged anywhere on the top 1801 or a separate part that is pushed onto the spout 1819 or you could extend the flexible base at 1820 and have a flexible top connected by a lanyard that is pushed over the spout and simultaneously protects and seals the orifice preventing actuation.
This device could be used to produce a spray or a bolus of liquor and could be used with any product. It could be made from very cheap materials such as polythene or expensive materials such as glass. It could even be used as part of a package such as a sandwich pack and could be used to pump out the air. The liquor could be discharged from the side of the spout rather than the top or even from the base. The reservoir could be sized to contain any volume from 0.1-50 mls and it could contain just liquor or liquor and air.
In
One of the problems with pumps is that you really want a fast return so people can use the pump quickly and the fast return means you have to use a strong spring but this means the actuation force is high. If you also have a high discharge or a high precompression valve setting then these also require a high actuation force so the total actuation force becomes a problem. This is normally sorted out by using a long pump stroke combined with a smaller diameter pump plunger as the actuation force is proportional to the plunger diameter but so is the discharge. This is easy enough with a metal spring but is very difficult with these types of pumps where flexible plastic is used both as the spring and as the pump plunger. Our solution is to use a collapsible central core 2001 with more than one hole 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2006 where all or most of them are designed to collapse when force is applied to the actuator 2020 and then to reform when the force is released. The plastic in this core 2001 has to be minimised to reduce the cost of the plastic and the cycle time to mould it so this often means using ribs and small holes to produce the required spring action. As the core 2001 collapses it is designed to fill out the pump chamber 2022 in such a way that none of it pushes hard or jams against the side wall of the chamber 2022 and yet at the end of the pump stroke there is very little open or dead space left in the chamber 2022. This is essential as if the core pushes hard against the chamber wall the actuation force greatly increases and if there is a lot of dead space at the end of the stroke, the pump becomes very inefficient and the discharge volume is reduced. If only a small discharge is required then there may only need to be one collapsible hole in the flexible core 2001 inside the pump chamber 2022 as in previous examples.
This version also uses the precompression valve described in the trigger as shown in
The inlet valve arrangement is also different and it uses either a side valve as previously described or a new poppet valve or a valve that combines both in one valve for maximum opening area. The poppet valve has a flexible concave collar 2032 that sits on a closed end rigid post 2032 made from one of parts of the rigid component 2030 and in this case from the collar part. The liquor flows into the post 2032 and out of the sides through one or more holes including 2033 into the chamber 2027 made between the core 2001 and the outside of the post 2032 and the meets the flexible concave collar 2012 which it pushes downstream away from the post 2032 creating a gap between the collar 2012 and the top of the post 2032 and flows through to the chamber 2006 and into the pump chamber 2022. If liquor or air tries to flow from the pump 2022 chamber back through to inside the post 2032 it simply causes the flexible collar 2012 to seal more tightly against the post 2032. The side valve works as before with the liquor flowing through the post 2032 into the chamber 2027 as with the poppet valve and then through holes in the wall of the core 2001 at 2008 (not shown) into the chamber 2028 between valves 2010 and 2011. Valve 2010 is designed not to give way so the liquor flows into the pump chamber 2022 on the return by valve 2011 giving way as before. Both the side valve and the poppet valve can be used simultaneously and this creates two gaps for the liquor to flow through making it ideal for larger flows or viscose liquors. Each valve could be used alone instead.
In previous embodiment such as those shown in
The single seal, poppet valve, poppet valve and combined side valve, shaped core spring could all be used on any of the previous versions or could be used in a number of different devices.
Whereas the invention has been described in relation to what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed arrangements but rather is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent constructions included within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0922580.6 | Dec 2009 | GB | national |
1006152.1 | Apr 2010 | GB | national |
2010/050780 | May 2010 | GB | national |
1017662.6 | Oct 2010 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2010/052141 | 12/17/2010 | WO | 00 | 11/27/2012 |