This invention relates to a fillable closure that can be triggered by means of a push button, so that a small, separately fillable capsule moulded inside the closure is opened and emptied into the container, to which this closure is attached. Today, many beverages are already being produced by mixing a concentrate with water. Instead of distributing the ready mixture, it would be much more efficient, if the bottler would fill merely water on-site, and the concentrate would be added to the water in the bottle at the consumer-end, and mixed with it when the bottle is opened for the first time.
Various solutions have been implemented for this purpose in recent years. For example, WO 2009/100544 discloses such a plastic dosing closure. It consists of a threaded cap, a separately fillable capsule inside the threaded cap which can be closed with a sealing foil after filling, and the associated container neck. The capsule, with its sealing foil facing downwards, is held inside the container neck. A cap that is attached to the container neck protrudes into the inside of the container neck and the lower edge of the container neck has a piercing and cutting mechanism by means of which the sealing foil can be opened from the bottom at the lower end of the capsule when opening the plastic dosing closure for the first time so that the substance contained in the capsule falls into container. While turning in the anticlockwise direction—hence in the release direction—the threaded cap is first pushed down on the container neck, whereby the foil of the capsule is pressed on a piercing and cutting mechanism and thus cuts open, while container neck acts as a stop for the threaded cap. Upon further rotation of the threaded cap in the release direction, the threaded cap takes along the container neck, which in turn is attached to a threaded container nozzle, and therefore requires a relatively high torque for unscrewing. If the threaded cap is turned further, it will take along the container neck and the empty capsule located therein and the entire closure is unscrewed from the container nozzle. The elegance of this solution lies therein that it requires a single action, namely only one continuous unscrewing motion of the threaded cap in the release direction. Everything happens automatically in a sequence, that is, the piercing and cutting of the foil, the emptying of the capsule, and the removal of the entire closure, including the emptied capsule, from the container. The disadvantage of this solution lies in the fact that it is complex in design and execution, and that clockwise and left-handed threads are required, and also the assembly of the closure is not without problems.
Another solution, disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,003,728, is a fillable closure with a raised cap lid at the top which can be pressed down. Inside a separate container is a plunger, which sits on top of a disc. The edge of the disc is clicked into place at the bottom edge of the container in a groove. By applying downward pressure, the plunger is pressed down, and the disc is pressed out of its position downward. However, this closure is not easy to fill, and it cannot even be made oxygen impermeable, because it is locked down only with a snap-on fastener. The emptying does not work completely for bulk materials. A portion of the bulk material is left on the disc.
And the US2007/0170142 discloses a fillable closure with a container sealed at the bottom with a foil. This foil is cut by constantly rotating the cap, whereby this rotation activates a knife, which cuts open the foil along its outer edge. The mechanism for this type of cutting is complicated in design and is composed of several parts, and the assembly of the closure is therefore commensurately expensive.
All the known solutions have the disadvantage that the enclosed capsule for receiving a separate fluid, which is to be added to the water in the container immediately before drinking, is not oxygen-impermeable. So, for many substances for which dosing could be metered more sensibly, no suitable closure solutions are available. There are particular vitamin preparations that should be added to the water only immediately before drinking it because they do not last long if they are already mixed in the water. They are very sensitive to light and react with atmospheric oxygen. The molecular structure of the vitamins changes under exposure to light and in the presence of oxygen. As a result, the vitamins lose their effectiveness. Besides, in different closure solutions, the capsule must be filled as a separate component and after that inserted into the closure. Because the preparations must be kept in a separate capsule, and may be added only immediately before drinking the water, such capsules must be made impermeable to oxygen with the use of complex technologies. So far this is accomplished by inserting a thin aluminium foil like a laminate into a foil, which is otherwise usually made only of plastic or cardboard. This solution is not applicable to plastic capsules made by injection moulding. If a capsule were manufactured entirely from an oxygen-impermeable laminate, the automatic opening of the capsule while unscrewing the container closure would be an almost unsolvable task, at least if this opening mechanism is to be simple and inexpensive to manufacture.
The object of the present invention therefore is to provide a fillable closure with a directly fillable capsule space, whereby the fillable capsule space is oxygen-impermeable and lightproof, and the capsule can be opened safely by a single action, without much force or effort, so that the contents of the capsule fall completely into the container on which this fillable closure is mounted. This closure shall also consist of a minimum number of components, so that it does not require any assembly and is therefore cost-effective to manufacture.
This object is achieved by a fillable closure with a push button to initiate the emptying of a capsule moulded into this closure. The capsule can be filled separately and sealed with a sealing foil; characterised in that the capsule is in any case provided on the inside or the outside with a smooth mirror-finish coating of 60 nm to 80 nm thickness of metal or quartz glass (silicon dioxide) using the plasma assisted physical vapour deposition process; and that after filling, this capsule can be sealed with an oxygen-impermeable laminate foil; and that the volume of this capsule can be reduced through pressurisation from the top by the deformation of its side walls, for cutting open or rupturing the sealing foil.
In the figures an embodiment of this fillable closure with push button is illustrated in several views. With these figures, the closure will be described in detail and its function will be explained. In the process, the special coating and sealing of the capsule which provides it oxygen-impermeability are described and illustrated.
In the drawings:
In
The capsule 2 is filled with the desired substance in an overturned position of the closure 1, in which it forms a shell, and afterwards sealed with a sealing foil 6. This sealing foil 6 is formed as a laminate, wherein the laminate is made of at least one plastic film and an aluminium foil, or, alternatively, of a plastic foil on one side with a vapour-deposited layer of metal or quartz glass, so that the sealing film 6 is oxygen impermeable or even light-tight. Alternatively, a commonly used seal foil made of plastic can be welded onto it, which is afterwards made oxygen impermeable or even light-tight by vapour deposition of metal or quartz glass. This sealing foil 6 is then welded on to the edge of the overturned capsule 2. Afterwards the capsule 2, along with its contents, is sealed impermeable to oxygen, or if using a metal vapour-deposition, it is even sealed to be light-tight. This makes it an ideal container for highly sensitive materials and substances such as all kinds of vitamins.
The flat top of the capsule 2 forms a pusher surface 7. On the underside of the pusher surface 7, as shown in
Such a closure may also be provided with a tamper-proof seal mechanism.
To ensure the opening of the sealing foil, instead of a blade 8 with a sharp tip 16 and cutting edge 17, a simple blunt punch can be formed beneath the pusher surface 7. To ensure that the capsule 2 is emptied completely, the sealing foil 6, though made oxygen-impermeable, can be specifically weakened.
An alternative embodiment of such a closure having an asymmetrical capsule 2 is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12180195 | Aug 2012 | EP | regional |
This application is a continuation of PCT Application No. PCT/EP2013/066129, filed Jul. 31, 2013, which claims the priority of European patent application No. 12180195.5, filed Aug. 12, 2012. All prior applications are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 14225921 | US |