The system described herein relates to a packaging element and more particularly to a packaging element for accommodating at least one product.
A packaging element may include a blank which has the following portions connected to one another by folding lines:
The blank consists in particular of paperboard, board or the like flat fiber material, which for example can be produced as a molding by pulp molding. Here, the term “blank” merely designates a one-piece element of thin fiber material which has not necessarily been produced by cutting but instead can be formed by a molded pulp process, for example.
For the dispatch of books, for example, use is made of board blanks in which the accommodating portion has a receptacle delimited by covering flaps. A book is laid between the covering flaps and the covering flaps are folded over the book. Then, along the folding lines, the first side-wall portion, the first cover-wall portion, the second side-wall portion and the second cover-wall portion are each folded through 90° toward each other, so that they form a closed parallelepiped. The second cover-wall portion rests on the side of the accommodating portion that faces away from the book, and is stuck to said portion.
There is a desire to configure such packaging elements to be more esthetically pleasing and capable of better stacking.
Described herein is a packaging element having a first cover-wall portion that has at least one hollow, and a second cover-wall portion that has at least one protrusion with a shape and position complementary to the hollow.
In some embodiments, one side of the packaging element, in particular the upper side, is provided with at least one protrusion, and the other side, primarily the underside, is provided with at least one hollow, into which a protrusion arranged on the upper side of a second identically shaped packaging element can be inserted. However, the protrusions can also be arranged on the underside and the hollows on the upper side. It is also possible both to arrange one or more protrusions on the underside with complementary hollows on the upper side and also to arrange one or more protrusions on the upper side with complementary hollows on the underside. In some embodiments, protrusions and hollows should be arranged such that, in the case of two stacked identically shaped packaging elements, the protrusions and hollows on the upper side of the lower packaging element project into hollows and protrusions on the underside of the upper packaging element. If the protrusions are arranged on the underside of the packaging element, they can form stable supporting surfaces, so that the packaging element can be placed on the protrusions in a stable manner.
In this way, the packaging element can be stacked optimally and in a manner secure against displacement. The protrusion which, for example, is arranged on the cover-wall of the lower packaging element, projects into the complementary hollow on the bottom of the upper packaging element and prevents the stacked packaging elements slipping relative to each other. The protrusion can be of any desired shape and, for example, form symbols such as letters and numbers and also logos or illustrations of the packaged products. Such a protrusion may enhance the optical appearance of the container and serves at the same time as a transport safeguard.
In some embodiments, the packaging element has the product receptacles in the accommodating portion, the two cover-wall portions and the two side-wall portions formed from a blank, the different portions of which are connected via folding lines. The folding lines can in practice extend parallel to one another. The blank made of pulp fibers is simple and inexpensive to produce and simple to handle and dispose of. As explained further below, the blank can have additional accommodating portions and side-wall portions.
As mentioned herein, in practice the accommodating portion can be enveloped by the two side-wall portions and the two cover-wall portions by folding along the folding lines. In practice, the first cover-wall portion and the second cover-wall portion can extend in mutually parallel planes, so that the packaging elements can be stacked securely. The side-wall portions do not necessarily have to be parallel. They can extend obliquely, so that, in side view, the packaging element is given the shape of a flat trapezoid or parallelogram.
In practice, the at least one protrusion and the at least one hollow can have complementary shapes and be provided at mutually corresponding positions, so that the underside of a second identically shaped packaging element can be laid flush on the upper side of a packaging element, the protrusion on the upper side of the lower packaging element projecting into the complementarily shaped hollow on the underside of the upper packaging element. In some embodiments, if multiple protrusions are provided on the upper side, then the underside has hollows with corresponding shapes and positions, so that when two identically shaped packaging elements are stacked, a respective protrusion projects into a respective hollow. As mentioned, alternatively or additionally, protrusions can be arranged on the underside and hollows on the upper side.
In practice, the packaging element can have at least one of the following features:
In some embodiments in particular, company logos, company names but also illustrations of the products in a three-dimensional configuration, promoting sales, are suitable for decorating the packaging element with simultaneous stabilization of a stack of such elements.
In practice, the accommodating portion and/or the cover-wall portion resting thereon can have a closure element, with which the accommodating portion and the cover-wall portion resting thereon can be connected. In the simplest case, at least one portion of a two-sided adhesive tape is arranged between the two portions, bonding the latter. However, it is also possible for two magnetic elements or a magnetic element and an iron-containing element to be attached to the two portions at mutually corresponding positions, so that these elements attract each other. Any desired other closure devices, such as closure flaps which are inserted into slots, or hook-and-loop fasteners, can be used to connect an accommodating portion and a cover-wall portion resting thereon.
In practice, the packaging element can be produced from molded pulp. Molded pulp is an environmentally friendly board material made of pulp fibers, which can be obtained from renewable and biodegradable raw materials and also from waste paper. Beer mats and egg cartons are usually also made from molded pulp. Molded pulp can be molded in very different shapes and is particularly well suited to making complex shapes from pulp fibers economically. However, it is also possible to produce the packaging element from paper material or board material in the deep-drawing process. The deep-drawing of paper or board is known, for example, from the document DE 10 2012 201 882 A1. Both in the case of molded pulp and in the deep-drawing process, the packaging element can consist of pulp fibers of any desired color. In this way, a very attractive visual effect can be achieved.
In practice, the packaging element can have at least one additional accommodating portion with at least one receptacle. At least one folding line can extend between the first accommodating portion and the additional receptacle. In practice, the additional accommodating portion can rest on the accommodating portion. Thus, multiple accommodating portions can be arranged above one another, each accommodating the product to be packaged, accessories for the product or information materials such as operating instructions, proofs of authenticity, etc. A side-wall portion, which extends only over part of the height of the side wall, can extend between the first cover-wall portion and the first accommodating portion. Two accommodating portions folded back onto each other then follow. An additional side-wall portion can adjoin the additional accommodating portion, extending over the remaining part of the height of the side wall. It is also possible for further division of the height of the packaging element to be provided by a second additional accommodating portion.
The receptacles for the objects to be accommodated do not necessarily have to surround these objects in the form of a hollow. The object can, for example, also be accommodated in that the receptacle is formed as a protrusion and the object to be accommodated is pushed onto the receptacle, for example if the object has the shape of a ring or of a closed hoop.
The packaging element can also be inserted into a box-like holding carton having a lid. The upper side of the lid can have at least one hole, the shape and position of which corresponds to the shape and the position of the at least one protrusion of the adjacent cover-wall portion. The underside of the holding carton can have a hole, the shape and position of which corresponds to the shape and the position of the at least one hollow of the adjacent cover-wall portion. The outer walls of the holding carton can be configured or printed in a different color than the packaging element, so that a very attractive packaging carton, which can be stacked, easily results. As mentioned, the protrusions can also be on the underside of the packaging element and the hollows on its upper side, corresponding holes being formed in the upper side and underside of the holding carton.
In practice, the protrusions can project by at least approximately 2 mm out of the surface of the upper side, the hollows accordingly being at least approximately 2 mm deep. In this way, an effective safeguard against slipping is formed. However, the height of the protrusions can also be considerably greater, given a correspondingly greater depth of the hollow. In addition, the base of the hollow does not have to extend flat, so that protrusion and hollow have an inclined or curved profile of the base surfaces opposite each other.
In the following description, illustrative embodiments of the packaging container according to the system described herein will be described in more detail with reference to the drawings, in which:
The accommodating portion 402 is connected via a first folding line 410 to a first side-wall portion 411. Via a second folding line 412, a first cover-wall portion 413, in the center of which a hollow 420 in the shape of a bitten pear is formed, adjoins the first side-wall portion 411. The first cover-wall portion 413 merges via a third folding line 414 into the second side-wall portion 415. A fourth folding line 416 and a second cover-wall portion 417 adjoin the second side-wall portion 415. The second cover-wall portion 417 has the protrusion 423, which has a shape complementary to the hollow 420.
In some embodiments, all the folding lines extend parallel to one another. At all the folding lines, the adjacent wall portions are folded through 90° toward one another, so that when folded along all the folding lines, the cube-like packaging element 419 that can be seen in
The packaging element 419 illustrated in
Alternatively or additionally, the packaging element 419 can be inserted into a box-like holding carton 422, the lower wall of which has a hole 421 which is matched to the hollow 420 and the contour of which corresponds to the contour of the hollow 420. In the bottom view, the hole has the same position as the hollow 420. The packaging element 417 inserted into the holding carton 422 can be seen in
In
In practice, the blank can be formed from molded pulp, as mentioned.
In a way similar to the embodiment described above, the first accommodating portion 502 has two shell-like depressions 503, 504, which each form a receptacle for accessories, for example a power unit or a headset. A first side-wall portion 511 adjoins the first accommodating portion 502 via a first folding line 510. It can be seen in
The second, additional accommodating portion 532 has on its underside a circumferential spacer rib 518, so that a certain distance prevails between the two main planes of the two accommodating portions 502 and 532.
As can be seen in
The additional accommodating portion 532 is adjoined via a folding line 535 by a further side-wall portion 536, which extends in the same vertical plane above the side-wall portion 511. The second cover-wall portion 517, in which the protrusion 523 is formed, which is formed so as to be substantially complementary to the hollow 520 of the first, lower cover-wall portion 513, adjoins via a folding line 537. In the folded-together state of the packaging element 519, illustrated in
In some embodiments, all the portions of the packaging element 519 are formed from a one-piece molded pulp blank 501, the different protrusions and hollows being formed in the molding. This packaging element can also be inserted into a carton, the upper side and underside of which each have a hole, the contour of which corresponds to the contour of the protrusion and of the hollow.
It is readily possible to insert further accommodating portions into the packaging, so that the packaging can be folded open substantially like an accordion with accommodating portions folded onto one another. In the embodiment described here, the side-wall portions 515, 539 located at the end of the blank each extend over only part of the height of the packaging element 519. Alternatively, one of these two side-wall portions 515, 539 can extend over the entire height of the packaging element 519. The second side-wall portion can then be omitted or, for example, folded back underneath the upper cover-wall portion 517.
The features of the system described herein disclosed in the present description, in the drawings and in the claims can be important both on their own and in any desired combinations for the implementation of the system described herein in its various embodiments. The invention is not restricted to the embodiments described. It can be varied within the context of the claims and whilst taking into account the knowledge of the appropriate person skilled in the art. Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from a consideration of the specification and/or an attempt to put into practice the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as illustrative only, with the true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2015 103 276 U | Jun 2015 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2016/063490 | 6/13/2016 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/207007 | 12/29/2016 | WO | A |
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