The present invention is generically directed on a technique for leak testing closed and filled containers, whereby the filling material comprises at least one liquid component.
Leak testing techniques according to which closed containers are introduced in a test cavity which, after having sealingly been closed, is lowered in pressure by a suctioning pump are known. If the container is not leaking, then once a predetermined pressure has been reached in the test cavity and thus in the surrounding of a container to be tested; this pressure will be kept substantially constant. If a leak is provided in an area of the container, wherein air is entrapped, a flow of air out of the container will lead to a rise of the surrounding pressure. If a leak is present in the area of the container where filling good is entrapped, the question whether such leak will lead to a significant rise of the surrounding pressure is largely dependent on the kind of filling good as of its viscosity, whether solid particles are present in the filling good and, obviously, on the largeness of the leak.
Different approaches have become known to accurately detect leaks at such product-filled containers, irrespective whether the leak is present in an air entrapping container area or in a container area covered with filling good. One such approach which is the topic of the co-pending European patent application EP-A-0 791 814 and the aforementioned related U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/862,993, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,907,093, proposes to provide an impedance measurement, specifically a resistance measurement, just adjacent to the outer wall of the container by means of an electrode arrangement: As soon as liquid emerges from a leak it will contact a respective pair of impedance measuring electrodes and lead to a significant change of impedance measured between such electrodes.
Nevertheless, such an approach necessitates considerable additional expenditure with respect to provision of the impedance measuring arrangement in each test cavity, especially of a multi-cavity in-line inspection machine and does not enable detection of very small leaks far below of one micron and largely independent from container shape and kind of filling good.
It is a primary object of the present invention to provide a leakage test method and apparatus, which may be applied to a very large scale of different containers and of different filling goods, provided at least one component thereof being liquid.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide such method and apparatus which are rather inexpensive with respect to electronic and further equipment, and which thus allow for very economic testing.
It is still further an object of the present invention to provide such method and apparatus which have a short measuring cycle and nevertheless a very high measuring accuracy.
These objects are realised by the testing method for leak testing at least one closed and filled container, whereby the content of the container comprises at least one liquid component and wherein a pressure difference is applied across at least a part of the wall of the container which part is to be leak tested and wherein the applied pressure difference is directed towards the surrounding of the container and wherein further the pressure in the surrounding of the container is monitored as a leak indicative signal which is characterised by the fact that the pressure difference is established by lowering the pressure in the surrounding of the container at least to a value which accords to the vapour pressure of the at least one liquid component of the filling product of the container to be tested.
The present invention departs from the recognition that if a container is leaking and liquid is drawn by the lower surrounding pressure to its outside this will—at a constant volume of the surrounding—lead to evaporation of the liquid as soon as the surrounding pressure reaches its vapour pressure. This leads to a significant change in surrounding pressure compared with the surrounding pressure which would establish at the same measuring conditions but with an unleaking container.
Monitoring the pressure in a test cavity containing the container, once vapour pressure of the possibly leaking liquid is reached reveals as being a very accurate technique for leak testing. It has been noted that by such a technique leak detection of containers with a very large spectrum of filling products may accurately be performed and that leaks at present moment down to 0.02 μm are accurately detectable.
Further, it has been noted that the volume of the test cavity is uncritical, so that by the inventive technique it becomes possible to simultaneously test batches of containers, thereby accurately detecting if one container of such a container batch is leaking.
As soon as the pressure surrounding a leaking container is lowered with respect to its interior pressure, some of the liquid is suctioned out of the container and as soon as the surrounding pressure reaches vapour pressure it starts to evaporate. As at a constant volume of the surrounding area of the container evaporation of the liquid leads to increase of pressure and the pump lowering the surrounding pressure must now remove vapour of the liquid too, significant measurements may be done especially after the surrounding pressure of the container becomes lower than the said vapour pressure. Nevertheless, it is preferred to provide pumping abilities which may evacuate the surrounding of the container to be tested to a significantly lower value than said vapour pressure, namely by at least two, preferably even by at least three decades.
As a leak-significant pressure change may be detected as soon as one of possibly several liquid components of the filling good starts to evaporate—in the case the content of the container contains more than one liquid component—it is recommended to select the vapour pressure of that component of the several liquid components which is the higher and to lower the pressure of the surrounding of the container at least to that vapour pressure value.
Although and as well known vapour pressure is a function of temperature and thus it might be advantageous in some cases e.g. to heat the surrounding of the container to a predetermined temperature so as to settle the relevant vapour pressure for a predetermined liquid, the inventive method and apparatus becomes significantly less complex if the test is performed at room temperature, and thus the vapour pressure to be at least reached is considered at room temperature, i.e. around 20° C.
Further, a very accurate leak detection becomes possible if the surrounding pressure of the container is measured at two subsequent points in time, whereby we understand under “point” that interval of time necessary for accurately measuring the prevailing pressure. Although it is absolutely possible to realise leak detection by applying the pumping action of the evacuating pump to the surrounding of the container and then by measuring the resulting surrounding absolute pressure after a predetermined time span, the said measuring of the surrounding pressure at two specific points in time allows to use the first value measured as a reference value and then to form the difference of the second value measured with respect to the reference value. There is thereby realised a pressure difference measurement instead of an absolute pressure measurement. More specifically, the first pressure signal which is measured at the first point in time is stored as an electric signal, then, after having measured the second pressure value, a difference is formed between the first value (still stored) and the second value.
The PCT patent application No. W094/05991 with its US counterpart No. U.S. Pat. No. 5,239,859, assigned to the same applicant as the present invention, describes a method and apparatus for very accurate offset-compensated pressure difference measurement. In a preferred mode of operating the method according to the present invention as well as of realising the inventive apparatus, that pressure difference measuring technique and apparatus are used. Therefore, the W094/05991 or the respective U.S. Pat. No. 5,239,859 are fully incorporated by reference in this present disclosure, although, and as will be seen most important features are specifically described also in this present application.
Because it is largely uncritical how big the surrounding volume of a test cavity for the container is, with respect to the volume of the container to be tested, the inventive method and apparatus reveals to have a further significant advantage:
If the wall of the at least one container to be tested withstands the pressure difference between container internal pressure (normally ambient pressure) and lowered surrounding pressure, such a container may simply be introduced in the test cavity forming the surrounding, largely irrespective how big such container is with respect to the test cavity. Nevertheless, a highly accurate indication of leakage will inventively be gained. Therefore, one and the same test cavity may be used for a large number of differently sized and different-volume containers. This results in a further advantage in that batches of more than one, even of a multitude of containers, may be introduced in one test cavity forming the surrounding and although one single container occupying only a small percentage of the overall cavity volume, an accurate leak indication will be detected if even only one of the batch-containers is leaking into the surrounding atmosphere.
A further significant advantage of the present invention is the following:
Sometimes the filled containers are not completely filled, but there is some amount of air entrapped in the closed container. If a leak is present in that area of such a container, which is adjacent to entrapped air or gas, by lowering the surrounding pressure, such air will be suctioned through the leak out of the container. With the pressure of the entrapped air in the container becoming progressively lower, there will also start vaporisation of the liquid component within the container and such vapour will also leave through the leak. Both, namely first the air leaving through the leak, then vapour leaving through the leak, will enlarge the surrounding pressure so that a leak in an entrapped air region of the container will lead to a change in the surrounding pressure, i.e. to rising of said pressure, as if the leak was in the liquid content covered area of the container wall. Thus, by properly setting a threshold value for leak detection according to the smallest still tolerated pressure change in the surrounding, it becomes uncritical whether such leak is present at an air-covered container area or at a content-covered container area.
If one and the same leak at an air-entrapped area of the container leads to a smaller pressure change in the surrounding, than the same leak would generate if situated at a liquid-covered container area, it is such a pressure change which will govern setting of a threshold value to detect whether a container is leaky or not. If, inversely, one and the same leak in a liquid-covered area would result in a smaller pressure change in the surrounding than such leak in an air-contacted wall area, then it is again that smaller pressure change which governs the threshold setting for detecting leaking/not leaking containers.
If a container under test is largely leaky, lowering of the surrounding pressure should be stopped as soon as such leaking is detected so as to prevent the content of the container to spoil the interior of the test cavity or, generally spoken, the surrounding of the container and possibly even the pumping arrangement more than absolutely necessary. This is realised either by monitoring whether the pumping action results in a predetermined lowering of surrounding pressure or not or one may detect spreading of content of the container into its surrounding by means of an impedance, thereby preferably a DC resistance measurement in the surrounding of the container just adjacent to the wall of the container which is to be tested. This is realised by providing an electrode arrangement in said adjacent surrounding and all around at least that part of the container to be tested. As soon as filling content of the container is suctioned to its outer wall, the electrode arrangement will be bridged by such content, leading abruptly to an indicative impedance change which, after having been detected, is used to stop further pressure lowering at the surrounding of the container.
This latter technique of rapidly detecting large leaks is applied especially to containers where it is necessary to snugly encapsulate them in the test cavity because their walls would not stand the pressure difference applied. In such a case the electrode arrangement for impedance measurement may be incorporated along the inner wall of the test cavity, which snugly fits with the at least one container. If such container is to be tested and therefore the test cavity snugly fits its shape, nevertheless a continuous volume is maintained between the outer wall of the container and the wall of the test cavity for defining the surrounding of the container by providing a sustaining grid or mesh inlay or preferably by roughening the interior wall of the test cavity so that a multitude of micro-embossments of the test cavity wall sustain the container wall and prevent it from further outward bowing due to the applied pressure difference. Thereby, the intercommunicating space between such embossments defines for the surrounding space of the container.
Once the container in a test cavity, defining for its surrounding, has been detected as being leaky, it is probable that such test cavity will be contaminated by some of the container's content. Then, such cavity is cleaned after the leaky container has been removed, be it by evacuation and/or flushing with a flushing gas, preferably nitrogen, be it by heating or by combining these techniques, e.g. by a heated flushing gas.
If the inventive method or apparatus is applied for in-line testing containers and thus two or more of the inventive methods and of the respective apparatus are operated in parallel on a set of containers and one of such containers is detected to be leaky, then the respective test cavity defining for its surrounding is not anymore filled with a container at the next measuring cycle, but is kept empty, using that cycle during which the other cavities are in testing condition for cleaning and reconditioning the probably contaminated cavity. Further, it is proposed in some cases to accelerate squeezing-out of liquid, if a leak is present, by mechanically biasing the wall of the container inwardly, thus rising its interior pressure over atmospheric pressure.
To fulfill the object, the present invention proposes a leak testing apparatus for leak testing at least one closed and filled container, whereby the content of the container comprises at least one liquid component, which comprises at least one sealingly closable test cavity and at least one evacuation pump operationally connected to the test cavity and further at least one pressure sensor operationally connected to the test cavity, whereby the evacuation pump is selected so as to be able to pump the test cavity to at least vapour pressure of the liquid component of the container content, approx. at room temperature and the pressure sensor is a vacuum pressure sensor, preferably comprising at least a Pirani sensor stage.
Preferred embodiments of the inventive method and inventive apparatus are disclosed hereinafter. The inventive method and apparatus may preferably be used for leak testing blisters, vials, medical application containers, foodstuff or beverage containers, and tanks. Thereby, it must be pointed out that besides leak testing of smaller containers, the present invention makes it possible to permanently monitor tightness of the tanks of huge tank plants, as for gasoline, gases, etc., e.g., on train or street transports, thereby generating an alarm signal as soon as a leak is detected.
The present invention will now additionally be described with the help of figures showing specific and today preferred examples of realising the present invention. Such figures show:
a to 11c: show the pressure courses on testing cycles, whereat the containers or medical application blisters are either largely or even very largely leaking (
In
According to
According to
The test is preferably performed at room temperature, i.e. at a temperature T of about 20° C. If the liquid content is water then the vapour pressure pv of water at room temperature is about 20 mbar and it then is preferred to provide an evacuation pump 5 which is able to evacuate the test cavity to about 10−2 mbar.
If the container provided in the test cavity 1 having a relatively rigid wall 11 is not leaky, then qualitatively the pressure in volume V will follow the course (a) according to
By means of the vacuum sensor 7 the course of pressure in the volume V is monitored. Experiments have shown that largely independent of the amount of volume V in a test cavity a significant difference of pressure according to the courses (a) and (b) of
Although it is absolutely possible to measure the absolute pressure in volume V, e.g. after the time span
Back to
According to
A further, most preferred realisation of the evaluation electronic is shown in
This allows a very accurate measurement of pressure difference Δp according to
If the container under test has a large leak, then, and according to
As was mentioned, the proposed method accurately functions largely independently from the volume V between test cavity 1 and the at least one container to be tested. This allows, according to
If the wall of a container to be tested may not mechanically withstand the pressure loading of approx. 1 bar, then, and as schematically shown in
As shown in dashed line in
According to
In
Once a test cavity has been spoiled by outpouring filling good of a leaking container it is cleaned, either by cleaning evacuation and/or pouring with a gas, preferably with nitrogen, and/or by heating. In
Two cavity halves, 1a according to
If in-line testing of containers shall be performed, for which the present invention is especially suited due to its short measuring cycle, more than one, namely a set of several test cavities is provided, e.g. on a carousel, which are automatically loaded with containers to be tested (not shown) from a conveyor and which perform simultaneously the described testing technique. If one of the containers tested in such cavity is detected to be leaky, then the respective cavity is not reloaded with a further container afterwards, but this cavity is maintained empty during the measuring cycle on a next set of containers. Meanwhile, the cavity kept unloaded is cleaned, as was described, either by evacuation and/or gas flushing and/or heating.
Obviously, there must be realised a good vacuum-tight sealing between a cover 3 or 3′ of the test cavity and the main body of the test cavity 1 or between the two halves 1a of test cavity according to
Pressure versus time courses as measured according to the inventive method and with an inventive apparatus, both in preferred mode, are shown for containers with large leaks in
These figures shall be discussed in connection with
According to
After a fixed predetermined amount of time ΔT of e.g. 0.75 sec. the output signal of the pressure sensor within test cavity 103 (not shown in
If after time span ΔT the actual monitored pressure according to electric signal A5 of
As will be explained later, occurrence of the VGL signal preferably stops the evacuation cycle because contamination of the vacuum pump 105 may have occurred or might occur due to the very large leak of the container under test.
As shown by the course II of
If either the signals VGL or GL are initiated by the respective comparators 109, 111, the timer unit 201 is principally reset because the testing has been completed and the quality of the instantaneously tested container established has been identified. This is schematically shown in
If DP at time t13+TT is larger than the reference value DPREF, then a signal FL is generated at unit 125, indicating presence of a fine leak FL in the container under test.
This according to the situation as shown in
If the VGL signal is generated according to
In a multiple chamber in-line testing system, as e.g. in a carousel testing plant with a multitude of testing chambers, occurrence of the signal GL indicating a large leak and possibly also the occurrence of the signal FL indicating for a fine leak leads preferably to disabling or “bypassing” that chamber with the leaky container from further being supplied with containers to be tested, whereas the other chambers are still operating and performing tests on newly supplied containers. This bypass of a testing chamber, whereat a container has been identified as heavily or even slightly leaking, is performed so as not to influence further testing results at that chamber which wouldn't thus be representative anymore due to content of the leaky container having possibly contaminated that chamber.
This bypassed chamber is reconditioned during further testing cycles at the other chambers.
Reconditioning may be done by heating that chamber, flushing it by a liquid and/or a gas, especially by a heater gas. Whether or not that chamber has been properly reconditioned is checked by having it tested as if it was filled with a container to be tested. Thereby, the condition of proper reconditioning is indicated if DP according to
Such ECDP-REV may be provided by measuring DPe at the clean, empty test chambers and by storing these measuring values DPe as respective reference values for testing the chambers on proper reconditioning.
When looking to the
In
Every time during multiple or in-line testing, be it subsequently with a single test cavity or consecutively with a multitude or at least more than one test cavity, at the respective time t13, up to which the respective container has been identified as not heavily leaky, the actual output signal of the pressure sensor is entered into an averaging unit 113, wherein the last m values of actual pressure of not heavily leaky containers are averaged. The output average result signal accords with (RFGL)m of
As may clearly be seen now from
An even further improvement of accuracy is reached as will now be described, which may be realised separately or additionally to realising a dynamic RFGL and based thereon a dynamic upper limit of DPREF. Thereby and according to
Looking back on
It is clear that provision of a dynamically varying (DPREF)t signal according to that representation in
It is evident that preferably the evaluations of the output signal A5 of the one or more than one test cavities is performed digitally, i.e. after analogue to digital conversion of the output signal of the respective sensor or sensors.
In
Further, whenever the test of a container within a specific test cavity results in a leak-indication for a predetermined number of subsequent tests, as e.g. three times subsequently, such test cavity is also bypassed for further testing and is considered as contaminated or as leaky itself, thus being reconditioned. Such a test cavity is likely to have been contaminated during succeeding testings at leaky containers or is likely not to be tight, which will be recognised during reconditioning and testing on proper reconditioning too, as was described above.
Further, and as was already mentioned, for some containers to be tested and especially for some filling products it is advisable to heat the test cavities to a predetermined temperature which is preferably controlled at each test cavity, e.g. by a negative feedback temperature control. Thereby, the temperature-dependent evaporation pressure of the filling product is set within a predetermined pressure range. Such heating is thereby preferably accomplished in a pre-heating cycle before the actual testing cycle according the
As was mentioned above, a leak in a container will be identified irrespective of the fact whether such leak is in an area of container's wall exposed to entrapped air within the container or to the filling product. Nevertheless, for some filling goods as e.g. with particulate content in liquid, there might occur differences with respect to time a respective pressure difference develops in the surrounding of the container under test.
Therefore, and as schematically shown in
Proper functioning of the testing apparatus and calibration of the evaluation unit, be it a one-chamber tester or a at multiple-chamber testing plant as for in-line testing, is further preferably accomplished with the help of a standard leakage arrangement which is preferably mounted on the test plant, so that recalibration and/or overall testing of the plant may be accomplished whenever desired. The arrangement of such a standard or calibration leak arrangement is shown in
According to
It has been recognised that by applying the described technique of leak testing by lowering the surrounding pressure of a container under test below vapour pressure of a liquid component of its content, it is mostly not necessary to additionally provide resistance measurements, as was explained with the help of
With the inventive method and apparatus as for blisters the entire testing cycle, i.e. from t10 to the end of TT according to the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
97108430.6 | May 1997 | EP | regional |
This application is a divisional of pending U.S. application Ser. No. 12/815,952 filed Jun. 15, 2010, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/239,000, filed Sep. 26, 2008, and now abandoned, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/172,585, filed Jul. 14, 2008, and now abandoned, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/828,495, filed Jul. 26, 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,454,957 issued Nov. 25, 2008, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/267,190, filed Nov. 7, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,260,981 issued Aug. 28, 2007, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/950,512, filed Sep. 28, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,000,456 issued Feb. 21, 2006, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/434,111, filed May 9, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,829,936 issued Dec. 14, 2004, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/193,914, filed Jul. 15, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,575,016, issued Jun. 10, 2003, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/944,407, filed Sep. 4, 2001, and now U.S. Pat. No. 6,439,033, issued Aug. 27, 2002, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/785,261, filed Feb. 20, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,305,215, issued Oct. 23, 2001, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/568,288, filed May 10, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,202,477, issued Mar. 20, 2001, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/073,852, filed May 7, 1998 (claiming priority under 35 USC §119 to PCT/IB98/00309, filed Mar. 10, 1998 and claiming priority to Europe 97108430.6 filed May 26, 1997), now U.S. Pat. No. 6,082,184, issued Jul. 4, 2000, which is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/862,993, filed May 27, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,907,093, issued May 25, 1999.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12815952 | Jun 2010 | US |
Child | 13913885 | US | |
Parent | 12239000 | Sep 2008 | US |
Child | 12815952 | US | |
Parent | 12172585 | Jul 2008 | US |
Child | 12239000 | US | |
Parent | 11828495 | Jul 2007 | US |
Child | 12172585 | US | |
Parent | 11267190 | Nov 2005 | US |
Child | 11828495 | US | |
Parent | 10950512 | Sep 2004 | US |
Child | 11267190 | US | |
Parent | 10434111 | May 2003 | US |
Child | 10950512 | US | |
Parent | 10193914 | Jul 2002 | US |
Child | 10434111 | US | |
Parent | 09944407 | Sep 2001 | US |
Child | 10193914 | US | |
Parent | 09785261 | Feb 2001 | US |
Child | 09944407 | US | |
Parent | 09568288 | May 2000 | US |
Child | 09785261 | US | |
Parent | 09073852 | May 1998 | US |
Child | 09568288 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13913885 | Jun 2013 | US |
Child | 14477074 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 08862993 | May 1997 | US |
Child | 09073852 | US |