The present invention relates to a method and unit for filling a disposable electronic-cigarette cartridge with a liquid substance.
Disposable electronic-cigarette cartridges have recently been proposed containing a hygroscopic (e.g. cotton-wool) wad impregnated with a viscous liquid substance containing nicotine and possibly also aromas. In actual use, the electronic cigarette heats the disposable cartridge to slowly volatilize (vapourize) the viscous liquid substance impregnating the hygroscopic wad.
Disposable cartridges of this sort are manufactured by producing a disposable cartridge with an open top end; inserting a dry hygroscopic wad inside the disposable cartridge; filling the disposable cartridge with a calibrated amount of liquid substance; and then plugging the open top end of the disposable cartridge with a plug permeable to vapour (i.e. that keeps in the liquid substance, but lets out the vapours produced by heating the liquid substance).
The most critical stage in the manufacture of disposable cartridges is filling them with the liquid substance. This is an extremely time-consuming job, partly on account of the liquid substance fed into the disposable cartridge having to impregnate the hygroscopic wad (a relatively slow process), and partly on account of the viscous nature of the liquid substance itself (i.e. its high density, which slows down its movement). As a result, currently used disposable cartridge manufacturing methods are extremely slow (i.e. have a low output rate) on account of the time taken to fill the disposable cartridges with the liquid substance.
To speed up the filling process, it has been proposed to pressure-feed the liquid substance into the disposable cartridges, so as to ‘force-fill’ the cartridges. Pressure-feeding the liquid substance into the disposable cartridges, however, has several drawbacks. Firstly, the pressure of the liquid substance may deform the hygroscopic wad and/or the disposable cartridge itself; which deformation may be destructive and at the very least is almost always permanent, i.e. with no springback recovery once the cartridge is filled and the pressure removed. Secondly, when pressure-feeding the liquid substance into the disposable cartridges, it is almost impossible to prevent some of the liquid substance from leaking from the cartridge and so fouling both the cartridge and the filling unit.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and unit for filling a disposable electronic-cigarette cartridge with a liquid substance, which method and unit are designed to eliminate the above drawbacks while at the same time being cheap and easy to implement.
According to the present invention, there are provided a method and unit for filling a disposable electronic-cigarette cartridge with a liquid substance, as claimed in the accompanying Claims.
A non-limiting embodiment of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
Unit 1 comprises a conveyor 4, which feeds disposable cartridges 2 intermittently, i.e. in cyclically alternating stop-go steps, along a straight, horizontal filling path P. In the
Upstream from conveyor 4, a group of disposable cartridges 2 is inserted inside a cartridge holder 5 having a number of cylindrical seats 6 (one of which is shown in cross section in
Conveyor 4 feeds along filling path P a succession of cartridge holders 5, each housing an orderly group of disposable cartridges 2 arranged in a row perpendicular to filling path P. The disposable cartridges 2 in each cartridge holder 5 are thus filled in parallel, i.e. simultaneously.
As shown in
As shown in
At a coupling station S1 at the start of conveyor 4, i.e. at the start of filling path P, a coupling device 9 fits each cartridge holder 5 with a metering body 10. Normally, each metering body 10 is simply placed on top of cartridge holder 5. Preferably, metering body 10 and cartridge holder 5 have respective locators (e.g. truncated-cone-shaped pins projecting upwards from the top wall of cartridge holder 5, and which fit and centre automatically inside corresponding truncated-cone-shaped dead holes in the bottom wall of metering body 10) to accurately position metering body 10 and cartridge holder 5 with respect to each other. The locators also serve to maintain the correct relative position of each cartridge holder 5 and corresponding metering body 10, i.e. to prevent them from moving horizontally with respect to each other, as they are fed along filling path P.
Each metering body 10 has a number of metering chambers 11, each of which is positioned over a corresponding disposable cartridge 2, is of sufficient volume to contain a full measure of liquid substance 3 (i.e. the full amount of liquid substance 3 to be fed into disposable cartridge 2), and has a bottom outlet conduit 12 (
As shown in
As shown in
Downstream from feed station S2, a succession of hold stations S3 is located along filling path P; and cartridge holders 5, containing disposable cartridges 2 into which liquid substance 3 is flowing by gravity from metering chambers 11 above, are fed through hold stations S3 until all the liquid substance 3 has fallen by gravity from each metering chamber 11, along outlet conduit 12, into disposable cartridge 2 underneath.
At a removal station S4 at the end of, i.e. downstream from, the succession of hold stations S3 along filling path P, a removing device 14 removes metering body 10 from each cartridge holder 5 once all the liquid substance 3 has fallen by gravity from each metering chamber 11, along outlet conduit 12, into disposable cartridge 2 underneath.
As shown in
The removed metering bodies 10 are transferred (‘recycled’) from removing device 14 to coupling device 9 for use again. Between removing device 14 and coupling device 9, a store may be provided in which to store metering bodies 10 pending further use. In one possible embodiment, as they are being transferred from removing device 14 to coupling device 9, the removed metering bodies 10 may undergo a wash cycle (e.g. be fed through a water-jet or pressurized-steam wash chamber). One function of the wash cycle is to prevent any liquid substance 3 dripping off the removed metering bodies 10 (i.e. from removal station S4) from fouling filling unit 1 and/or the empty disposable cartridges 2. Another is to provide clean metering bodies 10 that can be used indifferently in different filling processes employing different liquid substances 3.
In one possible embodiment shown in
In one possible embodiment not shown, filling unit comprises at least one blower located over metering bodies 10 at a hold station S3 or between two adjacent hold stations S3, and which directs a constant jet of compressed air downwards onto metering chambers 11 to force liquid substance 3 downwards (i.e. into disposable cartridge 2 underneath). The function of the compressed-air jet is to assist downflow of liquid substance 3 into disposable cartridge 2 underneath, and especially to accelerate downflow of the last drops of liquid substance 3 when metering chambers 11 are almost completely empty or when working with particularly viscous liquid substances 3.
As shown in
Obviously, feed device 13 must feed each metering chamber 11 with slightly more than the amount of liquid substance 3 to be fed into disposable cartridge 2, since a small portion of liquid substance 3 (which may be minimized, for example, using the blowers) invariably clings to the inner walls of metering chamber 11 and outlet conduit 12, and so never reaches disposable cartridge 2. This problem is encountered, in particular, when working with viscous or high-surface-tension liquid substances 3.
Filling unit 1 described has numerous advantages.
Firstly, filling unit 1 provides for filling disposable cartridges 2 at a very high output rate, by virtue of the required amount of liquid substance 3 being fed rapidly into each metering chamber 11 at feed station S2, and the liquid substance 3 then having all the time it needs to fall by gravity from metering chamber 11, along outlet conduit 12, into disposable cartridge 2 underneath as disposable cartridge 2 is fed, inside corresponding cartridge holder 5 and together with other disposable cartridges 2, through hold stations S3. In other words, thanks to metering chambers 11, the step in which feed device 13 dispenses the required amount of liquid substance 3 is separated temporally from, and may therefore be performed much faster than, the step in which liquid substance 3 flows into disposable cartridges 2, which normally takes longer.
Secondly, in filling unit 1 described, liquid substance 3 flows into disposable cartridges 2 by gravity (i.e. at atmospheric pressure, with no overpressure applied), thus ensuring optimum filling of disposable cartridges 2 in terms of thorough impregnation of hygroscopic wads 7, preventing deformation of disposable cartridges 2 and/or hygroscopic wads 7, and preventing leakage of liquid substance 3 from disposable cartridges 2.
Finally, filling unit 1 described is also cheap and easy to implement by comprising structurally simple parts with few, easy to operate, movements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2013A000504 | Sep 2013 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2014/064636 | 9/18/2014 | WO | 00 |