The invention relates generally to paper containers and in particular to a container having an insulating wall of corrugated paper.
Disposable cups for holding hot beverages may be constructed of expanded polystyrene which provides a cup of relatively low cost with walls having good thermal insulation. The insulating properties of the outer walls of the cup allow the cup to be comfortably held despite the high temperature of its contents. The disadvantages of polystyrene are that it is not biodegradable, readily recycled or microwavable.
In contrast, paper cups are both recyclable and biodegradable, but such cups, using a single sheet of paper for their outer walls, provide little thermal insulation. It has therefore been proposed to construct the outer wall of a paper cup of multi-ply corrugated paper material. The air trapped between the flutes of the corrugation and the other plies provides sufficient thermal insulation to allow the cup to be comfortably held. Separately cutting and handling the multiple plies needed to form a multi-ply cup with a corrugated inner layer and assembling the plies into a single corrugated container requires specialized machinery, limiting the commercial feasibility of this approach.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,839,653, entitled: “Container with Corrugated Wall” and U.S. Pat. No. 6,126,584, entitled: “Method for Forming a Container with Corrugated Wall,” assigned to the same assignee as the present invention and hereby incorporated by reference, teach a simplified method of manufacturing a multi-ply cup with a corrugated inner layer by premanufacturing a special corrugated paperboard that can be subsequently rolled into a cup without tearing, greatly simplifying the manufacture of insulated wall cups.
In a first embodiment described in the above patents, the premanufactured corrugated paperboard has an outside layer on one side of fluted center layer made from special paper that may expand to accommodate the distortion inherent in rolling the corrugated board into a cup. The direction of expansion of the paper is horizontal with respect to the normal orientation of the completed cup. The special paper may be creped paper (having small folds that may unfold under tension to provide expansion) or so-called “extensible Kraft” a specially prepared Kraft paper that stretches slightly under tension and is often used for manufacturing bags for bulk packaged materials such as cement, where the extension can forestall ripping of the bags under stress.
One process capable of producing extensible Kraft paper is described in the “Handbook For Pulp & Paper Technologists” by G. A. Smook, 1982, page 291, herein incorporated by reference. Smook describes at page 291, a Clupak compactor that forcibly shrinks standard Kraft paper along one direction thereby creating an extensible paper. The Clupak compactor consists of a continuous rubber belt moving against a heated, chromium-plated and polished drying cylinder. The web (Kraft) is pressed against the cylinder at the first point of contact by a non-rotating clamping bar. The rubber belt is compacted lengthwise (in the machine direction), which affects the web between it and the cylinder in the same way thus causing compacting and crimping of the fibers in the web longitudinally. The compacting is fixed by drying.
In a second embodiment described in the above patents, the premanufactured corrugated paperboard has an inside layer on one side of fluted center layer made from special paper that may contract to accommodate the distortion inherent in rolling the corrugated board into a cup. The special paper may be creped paper or embossed paper having small or large folds that accommodate compression of the paper. Again, the direction of compression of the paper is horizontal with respect to the normal orientation of the completed cup.
Once the specially manufactured corrugated paperboard is complete, it is formed into a frusto-conical shape and the edges of the corrugated board crimped and/or sealed to aid in the rolling of the upper edge of the cup into a rim and the rolling the lower edge of the cup about a flange extending downward from a cup bottom. The rolling to create the rim and to attach the cup bottom is along an direction perpendicular to the direction of the rolling of the cup body into a frusto-conical shape and vertical with respect to the normal orientation of the cup.
In order that the special corrugated paperboard described in these patents be readily manufactured on standard equipment in which the outer and center plies are fed continuously from rolls, the machine direction of the paper of each ply must be horizontal in the finished cup when the cup is in a normal orientation. Correspondingly, the cross direction of the paper of the plies of each layer will be vertical in the finished cup when the cup is in a normal orientation
Despite the generally high extensibility of standard paper in the cross direction, small tears can form in the rim of the cup when the cup is formed on standard cup machinery.
The present inventor has determined that the use of a paper with a high degree of extension in machine direction on the inside of the cup reduces tearing in the rim even though the rim is rolled along the cross direction. This solution appears to work because the dominant factor in tearing is not the stretching the paper in a radial direction about the rim, as one might expect, but the stretching of the paper along the circumference of the rim. Use of an expandable material for the center corrugated layer appears to provide additional benefits in this regard. A combination of an outer creped ply and an inner ply of extensible Kraft appears to be particularly advantageous.
Specifically, the present invention provides a method of manufacturing a paper container using a premanufactured, substantially planar corrugated paperboard with a first outside paper layer providing at least four percent extensibility along a machine direction, and a second outside paper layer providing at least four percent extensibility along a machine direction, each outside paper layer glued respectively face toward face, with aligned machine directions, on either side of a center corrugated paper layer having flutes extending along a vertical direction. A blank is cut from this premanufactured corrugated paperboard and then curved along a circumferential direction crossing the vertical direction and generally aligned with the machine directions of the first and second paper layers. A bottom wall is then attached to a lower curved edge corrugated paperboard blank and an upper edge is curved outward into a lip.
Thus, it is one object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a corrugated paperboard for the manufacture of containers that allows for the improved formation of a rolled lip.
It is another object of least one embodiment of the invention to provide an improved corrugated paperboard for the manufacture of containers that can be manufactured with normal corrugation equipment in which plies have aligned machine directions and the flutes must run in the cross direction.
It is yet another object of least one embodiment of the invention to provide a material that can be used on standard cup making equipment while resisting tearing of the lip.
The first outer layer may be creped paper.
Thus it is one object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide an extensible material particularly suited for a large degree of expansion and appropriate for an outside of a cup.
The second outer layer may be extensible Kraft paper.
Thus, it is one object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide an inner extensible material appropriate for an inside of a cup where it can be coated to resist saturation by a beverage.
The center corrugated paper layer may also provides at least four percent extensibility along a machine direction aligned with the machine directions of the first outer paper layer and second outer paper layer.
It is an object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide an extensible intermediate layer between the outer paper plies that is believed to moderate stress between the plies to provide tear resistance.
The center corrugated paper layer may be extensible Kraft paper.
Thus it is one object of at least one embodiment of the invention to an extensible material that can be fluted by standard equipment.
One or more of the paper layers may also provide at least four percent extensibility along a cross direction.
Thus, it is one object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide addition cross direction extension to promote the rolling of the lip and bottom
The foregoing and other objects and advantages of the invention will appear from the following description. In this description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof and in which there is shown by way of illustration, a preferred embodiment of the invention. Such embodiment does not necessarily represent the full scope of the invention, however, and reference must be made therefore to the claims for interpreting the scope of the invention.
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The upstanding wall 12 is composed of a corrugated paperboard material having an inside paper layer 18 immediately adjacent to the beverage containing volume 16 which is surrounded by a middle corrugated paper layer 20 having vertically extending flutes 22. This, corrugated paper layer is in turn, surrounded by an outside paper layer 24 which sandwiches the middle corrugated paper layer 20 between itself and the inside paper layer 18. An adhesive (not shown) connects the middle corrugated paper layer 20 to the inside paper layer 18 and the outside paper layer 24 according to methods well known in the art. The inside paper layer 18 is coated with a thin water resistant coating 26 to provide protection of the inside paper layer 18 from hot liquid that may be held within the volume 16. In the preferred embodiment, the coating 26 is a pulpable acrylic permitting the cup to be easily recycled. Such coatings are well known in the art and include a variety of moisture resistant materials including wax and acrylics.
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The ability of the paper layers to change circumferential dimension, either by expansion or compression, as the cup is rolled by the requisite amount will be termed circumferential plasticity. It will be recognized that both the inner and outer paper layers may be constructed of paper exhibiting circumferential plasticity and in this case the amount of plasticity for each layer may be reduced from that required when only a single layer having circumferential plasticity is used.
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Although the inventor does not wish to be bound by a particular theory, it is believed that, in both the cases of the lip 48 and the seal 49, the crushed middle corrugated paper layer 20 facilitates a displacement, upon rolling, between the layers 18 and 24. Referring to
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In another embodiment of the invention, shown generally in
Adhesives 50 suitable for this purpose and the control of the setting time of the adhesives are well understood in the art.
Normally moisture protection is required for the outside paper layer 24 when the cup will be used for cold beverages as a result of condensation forming on the outer surfaces. However, in the present cup, the thermal insulating properties of the corrugated blank greatly reduces such condensation. Nevertheless, the outer surface of outside paper layer 24 may also be coated with a water resistant material.
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Each paper layer 18, 20, and 24 will have aligned machine directions 62 being the direction from which the materials of the paper layers 18, 20, and 24 are removed from the rolls 60 and reflecting the fabrication of the paper layers 18, 20, and 24 using conventional papermaking machines. As will be understood in the art, the machine direction 62 generally defines a direction in which the fibers in the paper are aligned and strongly affects the ability to stretch the paper. Normal papers provide one to three percent stretch in the machine direction and three to five percent stretch in the cross-direction perpendicular to the machine direction.
Paper removed from roll 60 holding middle corrugated paper layer 20 is received by corrugating rollers 64 which provide for fluting extending along the cross-direction. Paper removed from rolls 60 holding paper layers 18 and 24 are received by adhesive application rollers 66 that apply adhesive to the inner surfaces of the paper layers 18 and 24 which are then adhered to the opposite sides of middle corrugated paper layer 20 as they pass through combiner rollers 68. The completed paperboard 29 may then be cut into blanks 28 as has been described above by a die cutter 70.
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Accordingly in the present invention, the inside paper layer 18 may be constructed from an extensible Kraft having a substantially greater machine direction extension than that found in normal paper. Preferably, the extensible Kraft provides a machine direction extension greater than the three percent stretch found in standard paper and greater than the four percent stretch normally found in the cross-direction of such paper. Suitable paper may be obtained from Thilmany under the trade name XKL as has been described above and provides greater than five percent extension in both the cross and machine directions and typically extension values ranging from six to twelve percent.
Additional resistance against tears 74 may be obtained by also making the middle corrugated paper layer 20 as shown in
The above description has been that of a preferred embodiment of the present invention. It will occur to those that practice the art that many modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. In order to apprise the public of the various embodiments that may fall within the scope of the invention, the following claims are made: