1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to one-a piece, non-contaminating milk or food container seal and a seal removal system.
2. Description of the Related Art
Presently many containers, cardboard and plastic milk containers in particular, have a sealing system which requires the user to insert a finger down “inside” the neck of the entrance channel or pouring spout and hook onto a loop for traction, to break a container seal. The seal is then discarded and the cap reapplied.
The damage, however, has already been done. The same fingers used the bathroom, wiped the nose, shook hands or handled money. Those contaminated fingers have now touched the “inner” surface of the milk or food container entrance channel or pouring spout.
A contaminated finger must reach down into the entrance channel, neck, or pouring spout to hook and pull the ring attached to the seal in order to break the seal and open the container. The seal is critical to protecting the previous sterility and continuing safety of the contained milk or food substance, i.e. orange or apple juice. The inner surface of the neck, entrance channel or pouring spout you reach into, is an interior surface part of a container compartment space to be contacted by the milk or other food.
The contaminated finger tip drags up the inner surface of this internal space as it hooks and recovers the ring to pull, break, and remove the seal.
This simple unprotected act deposits bacteria and other contamination within the neck compartment, entrance channel or pouring spout, which is enclosed under the sealing cap, a contiguous and continuous part of the milk or food containing space.
The present milk or food container seal and seal removal system makes the deposit and trapping of bacteria or other types of contamination within the milk or food containment area “unavoidable”. The bacteria are transported and left inside the container, violating all rules of sterile technique. To make it worse, the cap is then reapplied, trapping the bacteria and milk within the same compartment.
As milk or other foodstuffs drip back down the entrance channel or pouring spout, bacteria and other contamination drip into, and mix with the residual stored milk or food. Milk is specially treated because of its susceptibility to bacterial growth. There are precise laws governing sterilizing temperatures, heat duration, rapid cooling and finally sterile, sealed, packaging under acute tolerances. The reason again, for all of the special preparation and sterile technique is because milk is especially susceptible to multiple bacterial growths.
Milk is a biological substance with fat, sugar, and water. Milk is a nutrient media and a natural culture media. Almost all bacteria thrive in milk. Refrigeration only slows or delays bacterial growth, it does not prevent the growth, nor kill bacteria. Milk spoils slowly in spite of refrigeration, and as bacteria further adapt, refrigeration will be even less helpful at preventing food contamination and food poisoning. It is inconceivable after all of these protective safety steps of processing to protect the consumer, that the milk or other foodstuffs are still packaged in a container system that almost “guarantees” contamination from the instant of opening. The prior art, seems not only disinterested in consumer safety, but actually sets up a sequence of actions and designs that “cause” rather than prevent, contamination. The prior art actually sets a “booby trap” for the unsuspecting consumer. The presently used construction is clearly negligent.
Prior art container closures have two or more parts, making them complicated and expensive to construct and assemble. In addition, they often have seals with pull tabs which extend above the upper edge of the container neck, thus increasing the height of the assembled container and closure. Such closures also permit contamination since a person's fingers will inevitably touch the lip and/or other parts of the container neck when grasping and lifting the tab and seal disc.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,887,738 to Bietzer et al. provides such a closure, in which a container neck 22 has a lip 24 with an upper edge and a seal disc 78 with a pull tab 80. The seal disc 78 and the pull tab 80 are completely disposed above the upper edge of the lip 24 of the container neck 22. This occurs because the seal disc 78 is placed in a cap 21 and glued to the lip 24 when the cap is screwed on the container neck 22. When two fingers are used to lift the tab, which is at the outer edge of the lip, they will touch the lip leading to contamination which will grow when the cap is replaced. A similar system in which a tab and seal are carried by a cap before assembly and therefore must extend above an upper edge of a neck after assembly, is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,121,845 to Blanchard.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a one-piece non-contaminating milk or food container seal and seal removal system, which overcome the hereinafore-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices of this general type that cause contamination of the milk or other food in a container when opening the seal, in such a way that a one-piece seal does not extend above an upper edge of a pour spout.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a one-piece non-contaminating milk or food container seal and seal removal system, comprising a channel or pouring spout to be connected to a food container. The channel or pouring spout has an inner surface to be contacted by contents of the container and the inner surface has a top edge. A seal prevents human contact with the inner surface of the channel or pouring spout. The seal has an outer periphery disposed and frangibly formed at the top edge. A tab permits unbroken, intact manual removal of the seal with one finger. A removable closure for the channel or pouring spout contacts the top edge before removal of the seal and after replacement of the removable closure. The tab does not extend above the top edge before removal of the closure and the seal. The channel or pouring spout, the seal and part of the tab are formed in one piece at the top edge. Thus, the seal according to the invention renders it impossible for there to be any contact between the finger of the user and any surfaces to be contacted by food. A closure is not necessary for single-use containers, such as a personal size milk container. The seal is a primary enclosure and the cap is a secondary enclosure.
The placement of the seal at the very top of the channel or pouring spout means that the entire inner surface of the channel or pouring spout is inaccessible.
In accordance with an added feature of the invention, the tab is an extraction ring attached to the seal. Such a ring is quite easy to be hooked by a finger for removal.
In accordance with an additional feature of the invention, the seal is cup-shaped. The concave shape of the seal facilitates grasping and extraction of the tab or ring.
In accordance with yet another feature of the invention, the seal completely covers the inner surface before removal of the seal. In this way, no surfaces which come into contact with food can be contacted by a non-sterile object such as a human finger.
In accordance with yet a further feature of the invention, the outer periphery of the seal is “thin link” fused to or cast with the top edge of the channel or pouring spout. This line of weakness extends circumferentially of the receptacle mouth or spout. This separation line facilitates tearing of the seal from the channel or pouring spout.
In accordance with yet an added feature of the invention, the closure is a cap, which is preferably to be screwed onto the channel or pouring spout.
In accordance with yet an additional feature of the invention, the seal is formed of flexible plastic, which makes it easy to remove.
In accordance with again another feature of the invention, the seal, said tab and an inner surface of said closure are all in contact with and do not extend above said top edge. This feature is provided in order to prevent contamination before and during said removal of said seal.
In accordance with again a further feature of the invention, the tab is a ring having a periphery directly attached to said seal at one location for tearing said seal off said top edge.
In accordance with a concomitant feature of the invention, the channel or pouring spout has an outer surface with a top edge. The inner and outer surfaces of said channel or pouring spout, said seal and part of said tab are formed in one piece at said top edge. The height of the system is thus at a minimum since the top edge of the spout is the top of the system.
The new seal and seal removal system according to the invention controls and maintains a sterile technique for seal breaking and seal removal. This simple, easy to use, and failsafe system, even when operated by the untrained consumer, keeps contamination totally contained within the seal and discards bacteria within the seal. The entrance channel or pouring spout is never touched, and sterile technique is maintained before, during and after opening the seal. The milk or food is protected.
The improvement according to the invention provides a milk or foodstuffs sealing device that is removed, in a simple but sterile manner, by the untrained operator.
The normally exposed inner surface of the entrance or pouring spout is totally covered and protected. The seal junction is raised from near the bottom of the channel or pouring spout, to the top lip of the spout. A deep dished-out or cup-shaped area is developed within the body of the seal, with the extraction ring or loop still attached, at the top.
The finger is inserted as before, in a simple and intuitive way to hook the extraction ring or loop, but now because of the unique concave structure of the seal, all areas touched by the contaminated finger are now contained within the seal (outside the container) which is then discarded. At no time is any interior surface exposed before, during or after the seal is broken or removed. Sterility is maintained even by the untrained. Bacteria are excluded and safety is maintained.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a one-piece, non-contaminating milk or food container seal and seal removal system, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction and method of operation of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of the specific embodiment when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawings in detail and first, particularly, to
As is indicated by the arrows in
This permits the system to have a minimum height since no part of the system is above the top edge of the inner surface 5 of the spout. The tab 17 is also remote from the upper portion 13 so that when the finger of a user is placed under the tab 17, it is prevented from touching the upper portion 13 and other parts of the spout 1.
This is a Continuation-In-Part, under 35 U.S.C. §120, of copending application Ser. No. 11/242,765, filed Oct. 4, 2005.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11242765 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 13153943 | US |