Priority is claimed as a 371 of international of PCT/IL2009/000552, filed on Jun. 2, 2009, which claims priority to Israeli patent application serial number 193662, filed on Aug. 25, 2008.
The present invention relates to the field of modular elements. More particularly, the invention relates to a modular closure for occluding the mouth of a bottle, container, and the like.
Municipalities are faced with severe ecological challenges as a result of the vast number of disposable bottles, containers and closure caps that are discarded each year and are not biodegradable. The collection and recycling of bottles, containers, and bottle closures is an expensive, time consuming, logistically difficult and inconvenient process.
It would be desirable to provide a modular closure cap (hereinafter “closure”) for releasably engaging the mouth of a disposable container, including a bottle for containing a beverage, a ketchup container, a milk container, a mayonnaise container, a toothpaste container, and the like (hereinafter “bottle”) of sufficient interest to users to enable reuse thereof and to obviate the need of recycling.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,202,456 discloses a toy comprising a plurality of identical caps attachable one to another to construct a desired assembly. Each cap comprises a threaded body portion adapted for normal attachment to a threaded bottle top, an annular groove on the inside of the bottom portion of the cap, a snap ring at the top of the cap to snap into the annular groove of an identical cap, and a plurality of punch-outs positioned at spaced intervals around the periphery of the cap. A conventional bottle cap has to be modified in order to construct a desired assembly, and therefore a user would tend to discard a bottle cap rather than modifying it in order to employ the disclosed toy due to the time consuming process.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,361,919 discloses a combination bottle cap and stackable toy. The cap in the shape of a polygon is made of plastic by injection molding. Each side has three sets of surfaces having alternating detents and indents form a mating friction fit with corresponding indents and detents of a second cap of the same construction. Due to the presence of the detents and indents, the surfaces of the cap cannot readily display selected indicia, patterns or images.
WO 99/67151 discloses a connection system wherein a bottle cap is fitted with connectors to facilitate horizontal or vertical connection with identical caps. However, both horizontal and vertical connection with identical caps is not possible.
WO 00/40501 discloses a device for unscrewing screwtops that is configured as a toy building block that can be coupled horizontally with an identical device. However, this device cannot be coupled vertically with an identical device.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a ready to use bottle closure, for closing a bottle mouth upon purchase.
It is an additional object of the present invention to provide a modular bottle closure that captures the interest of users and thereby discourages the discarding of closure caps.
It is an additional object of the present invention to provide a modular bottle closure that can be coupled both horizontally and vertically to both identical and differently configured closure.
It is yet an additional object of the present invention to provide a modular bottle closure that is adapted to display portions of a puzzle, such as a three-dimensional puzzle.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds.
The present invention provides an intriguing modular bottle closure that captures the interest of both children and adults. As a desired construction system, which may be in the form of a two-dimensional or three-dimensional picture, game, and/or figure (hereinafter a “puzzle”), can be assembled from a plurality of closures, users will be encouraged not to discard the bottle closures, thereby providing an ecological benefit while reducing the load on recycling factories.
Since the use of the present invention will encourage users to discard only the bottle, and not the closure, a bottle may be compressed to a greater extent than when it would be discarded together with its closure, thereby saving valuable landfill space. Also, the bottle and closure are generally made from different types of plastic, and therefore cannot be recycled together. By encouraging the discarding of only the bottle, and not the closure, employees of a recycling factory are therefore saved the additional burden of removing a closure from a bottle. An added benefit of fewer closures being discarded is a reduction in the number of animals that die as a result of eating a bottle closure.
The closure comprises one or more exterior surfaces defining a hollow interior, a plurality of spaced engagement elements outwardly protruding from one or more of said exterior surfaces, a bottle cap interface element formed within said interior, and a coupling section coinciding with, or recessed from, a terminal edge of said closure, said coupling section adapted to frictionally engage engagement elements of another closure, whereby to couple together one or more closures. The bottle cap interface element may be an element to which a conventional bottle cap is attachable, or alternatively, may be an element that is formed integrally with means such as threading for releasably engaging the mouth of a bottle.
As the closure of the present invention is considerably greater in size than a conventional bottle cap, the risk that an infant will swallow the closure is therefore prevented.
The plurality of engagement elements are arranged by regions, different portions of the coupling section being selectively engageable with correspondingly different engagement element regions. A side of each engagement element of a region defines a locus of contact surfaces of substantially equal shape and length as the perimeter of a selected coupling section portion.
The inner face of the selected coupling section portion frictionally engages the contact surfaces of a first engagement element region. The outer face of the selected coupling section portion may also frictionally engage the contact surfaces of a second engagement element region, the first and second engagement element regions being separated by a common interspace.
As the coupling section provides wide area engagement, a first coupling section portion may frictionally engage an engagement element region of a first closure and a second coupling section portion may frictionally engage an engagement element region of a second closure.
In one aspect, the closure has a planar upper surface and at least one sidewall perpendicularly extending downwardly from said upper surface. The upper surface may have any desired shape, such as a cross section selected from the group consisting of square, rectangular, circular, semi-elliptical, and triangular.
As referred to herein, the terms “upper” and “lower” are associated with the relative location of a surface of a closure when the coupling section is facing downwardly.
In one aspect, a terminal edge of the at least one sidewall is coplanar with a terminal edge of the coupling section.
In one aspect, a terminal edge of the at least one sidewall is the coupling section.
In one aspect, the plurality of engagement elements protrude from the upper surface.
In one aspect, the bottle cap interface element is a cap receiving element substantially perpendicular to, and downwardly extending from, the upper surface. The bottle cap is fixedly attached to the receiving element by a suitable attachment means whereby the closure and bottle cap rotate in unison when a bottle mouth is opened or closed.
In one aspect, the attachment means comprise circumferentially spaced, vertically disposed elements inwardly protruding from the receiving element, said inwardly protruding elements being adapted to releasably engage corresponding interstices located between adjacent grip segments of the bottle cap.
In one aspect, the attachment means comprise circumferentially spaced, vertically disposed elements inwardly protruding from the receiving element, said inwardly protruding elements being adapted to frictionally engage corresponding indentations formed within the bottle cap.
In one aspect, the bottle cap is irremovably attached to the receiving element. The bottle cap may be configured with an outwardly sloping upper portion and a ring element below said upper portion, and the receiving element may be configured with an upper portion and a portion recessed from, and located below, said receiving element upper portion, said bottle cap upper portion being compressed by said receiving element upper portion and said ring element being received within said recessed portion during engagement between the bottle cap and receiving element, whereby to facilitate irremovable attachment.
In one aspect, the bottle cap is fixedly attached to the receiving element by means of fusion or adhesion.
In one aspect, the bottle cap interface element is formed with threading engageable with a bottle mouth.
In one aspect, a plurality of closures are stackable.
The coupling section may be configured in any desired fashion insofar as the locus of contact surfaces which the selected coupling section portion frictionally engages is similarly configured.
For example, the closure has a square cross section and a tubular coupling section. Corner engagement elements of an underlying closure are received in corresponding sockets of an overlying closure, each of said sockets being defined by two adjacent sidewalls and a corresponding coupling section portion connected to a portion of said two adjacent sidewalls.
When a tubular coupling section is employed, the common interspace between opposing contact surfaces is an arcuate interspace. A first contact surface of a first engagement element region may be convex and a second contact surface of a second engagement element region may be concave, or a first contact surface of a first engagement element region may be concave and a second contact surface of a second engagement element region may be convex, said first and second surfaces being separated by the arcuate interspace. The first contact surface is accordingly separated from the second contact surface by a distance substantially equal to the thickness of the selected coupling section portion
In one aspect, the common interspace is a linear interspace.
In one aspect, the plurality of engagement elements protrude from one of the sidewalls, whereby to laterally couple together one or more closures.
In one aspect, a plurality of engagement elements arranged by regions protrude from a first sidewall and a plurality of recessed portions complementary to said plurality of engagement elements are formed in a second sidewall, engagement elements of a first closure being received in the complementary recessed portions of a second closure.
In one aspect, the coupling section of a first closure frictionally engages the engagement elements protruding from the sidewall of a second closure.
The present invention is also directed to a construction system, which is assembled from a plurality of closures, whether two coupled closures that vertically extend from an underlying surface, a second closure that laterally extends from, and is coupled to, a first closure, said first and second closures being parallel to an underlying surface, or two coupled closures obliquely extend from an underlying surface.
A second closure may be suspended in cantilevered fashion when it is laterally coupled to a first closure. The cantilevered closure is sufficiently structurally strong to support a third closure coupled thereto.
In one aspect, a different marking is applied to a surface of each of the plurality of closures, each of said markings constituting a portion of a puzzle that is visible when the construction system is assembled according to a predetermined arrangement.
In one aspect, the puzzle is a three dimensional puzzle.
In the drawings
The present invention is a novel bottle cap closure to which a bottle cap is fixedly securable. One closure is releasably coupleable with one or more neighboring closures so that various construction systems can be assembled. Selected indicia, patterns or images (hereinafter “markings”) can be suitably applied to one wall of the closure so as to be a portion of a puzzle, whereby the entire puzzle may be viewed when the construction system is correctly assembled. In this fashion, users will be encouraged not to discard the bottle caps, thereby reducing the load on recycling factories.
Protruding elements 11 are adapted to engage corresponding interstices 17 located between adjacent grip segments 16 of conventional bottle cap 15. After cap 15 is introduced to interface element 8A, as shown in
In
In
In
In
Referring back to
The various engagement elements of an exemplary closure 10 are illustrated in
Four engagement elements 4a-d of closure 10 are indicated, being oriented in such a way and spaced from adjacent engagement elements so as to produce a plurality of arcuate insterspaces, e.g. interspaces 31-35, and a plurality of linear interspaces, e.g. interspaces 37 and 38. The width of an arcuate interspace is substantially equal to the thickness of coupling section 21, while the width of a linear interspace is significantly greater than that of an arcuate interspace to allow for the placement therein of a sidewall 6 of closure 10. A corner element 4d is positioned proximate to a corresponding corner 7 of closure 10 and radially outwardly from arcuate interspace 31.
The configuration of some of the engagement elements is shown in greater detail in
An arcuate insterspace 33 is shown to be formed by selectively positioning the engagement elements. Engagement element 4b is positioned such that its sides 41 and 42 are oblique to edge 3 of closure upper surface 2. Engagement element 4g is positioned such that its side 52 is slightly spaced from, and parallel to, side 42 of engagement element 4b. Engagement element 4f, which has a similar configuration as engagement element 4g but oppositely oriented therefrom, is positioned such that its side 52 is slightly spaced from, and parallel to, side 41 of engagement element 4b. Convex surface 53 of engagement element 4f, convex surface 44 of engagement element 4b, and side 51 of engagement element 4g trace an arcuate line. Engagement element 4e, which has a similar configuration as engagement element 4c, is positioned such that its concave surface 49 is spaced from, and concentric to, convex surface 44 of engagement element 4b. Thus arcuate insterspace 33 is formed by convex surface 53 of engagement element 4f, convex surface 44 of engagement element 4b, and side 51 of engagement element 4g, and by concave surface 49 of engagement element 4e. Coupling section 21 (
An arcuate interspace 31 is also formed between convex surface 43 of engagement element 4b and concave surface 49 of engagement element 4d, which is similarly configured as engagement element 4c, and by the arcuate line traced by side 51 of engagement element 4f, convex surface 43 of engagement element 4b, and by convex surface 53 of engagement element 4g.
The dimensions and proportions of the engagement elements illustrated in
The engagement elements protruding from closure upper surface 2 are advantageously arranged by regions wherein a region includes a plurality of engagement elements. As an interspace is provided between adjacent engagement elements, an engagement element may be associated with more than one region, to allow an overlying closure to be coupled with an underlying closure in many different ways. For example, the engagement elements of closure 10 are arranged by rectangular regions A and B (
One distinctive region is the centrally located curved region C shown in
After two closures are placed in side by side abutting relation, the coupling section of a third closure can secure the three closures together when contacting each of the semicircular surface loci 32A shown in
After four closures are placed in side by side abutting relation, the coupling section of a fifth closure can secure the five closures together when introduced into each of the quarter-circular interspaces 33 shown in
As shown in
An exemplary construction system 90 assembled from the closures of the present invention is illustrated. For example, two closures 60a and 60b are positioned in abutting end to end relation to provide a combined elliptical closure configuration, to the top of both is coupled an interfacing square closure 10a. A square closure 10b is coupled to a semi-elliptical closure 60c and to another underlying closure in abutment with closure 60c. Two stacked circular closures 70a and 70b are coupled to square closure 10b.
Since adjacent engagement elements of each closure are spaced by selected linear or arcuate interspaces, a closure can be coupled with one or more differently configured closures. As a construction system comprising a plurality of horizontally and vertically extending coupled closures can therefore be assembled, the closures of the present invention may be coupled together in such a way to provide a three-dimensional puzzle that may be viewed only when the closures are assembled in one unique fashion. As opposed to a two-dimensional puzzle wherein all the markings are applied to coplanar surfaces, a plurality of surfaces defining a three-dimensional puzzles and to each of which may be applied a marking are disposed on different planes.
In this embodiment, two types of engagement elements are employed: element 181 configured similarly to an equilateral triangle and having three convex sides 182-184, and element 185 having a convex side 186 facing a corresponding side 176 of guide element 175 and two concave sides 187 and 188 facing a side of an adjacent engagement element 181. Eight engagement elements 181 protruding from surface 172 are equidistantly and circumferentially spaced one from another, and are positioned such that each outer side 182 thereof is substantially concentric with, and slightly spaced from, periphery 174 of upper surface 172, thereby defining a circular locus 31A of contact surfaces adapted to be frictionally engaged with a coupling section 197 of another closure located at the terminal end of sidewall 195. By positioning each engagement element 181 such that a line 192 bisecting side 182 of an engagement element 181 coincides with apex 196 adjoining sides 183 and 184 thereof and with corresponding apex 197 adjoining two adjacent sides 176 of guide element 175, two arcuate interspaces X and Y can separate the sides 183 and 184, respectively, of each engagement element 181 from an adjacent engagement element 185.
To simplify the frictional engagement of a coupling section, an engagement element 181 is positioned such that it is common to two engagement element regions. As shown, region F comprises engagement elements 181A, 185A, and 181B, while region G comprises engagement elements 181C, 185B, and 181B. Quarter-circle locus 191B is therefore defined by contact surface 183 of element 181A, contact surface 186 of element 185A, and surface 184 of element 181B. Since an arcuate interspace Y separates locus 191B from locus 191D coinciding with contact surface 187 of element 185B and a side 176 of guide element 175, a coupling section portion to be frictionally engaged with loci 191B and 191D can be inserted within this arcuate interspace while being assisted by guide element 175.
If it is easier or more comfortable to a user, the coupling section portion may also be frictionally engaged with locus 191C, which is defined by contact surface 183 of element 181B, contact surface 186 of element 185B, and contact surface 184 of element 181C, and with locus 191E, which is defined by contact surface 187 of engagement element 185C, a side of guide element 175, and contact surface 188 of element 185A.
Any of the aforementioned closures can be provided with engagement elements laterally protruding from a sidewall, to increase the versatility of a construction system assembled from the closure and the complexity of a three dimensional puzzle.
While some embodiments of the invention have been described by way of illustration, it will be apparent that the invention can be carried out with many modifications, variations and adaptations, and with the use of numerous equivalents or alternative solutions that are within the scope of persons skilled in the art, without departing from the spirit of the invention or exceeding the scope of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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193662 | Aug 2008 | IL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL2009/000552 | 6/2/2009 | WO | 00 | 2/16/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/023652 | 3/4/2010 | WO | A |
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