This application relates to paperboard containers, such as cartons, boxes and the like, and, more particularly, to paperboard containers having a friction-reducing coating on an interior surface thereof.
Products are typically shipped to retailers in bulk by enclosing multiple individual product units in a container, such as a carton or box. For example, canned soup may be shipped to a retailer in a box containing twenty-four individual cans. Then, it is typically the retailer's obligation to remove the individual product units from the container and present them (e.g., on a shelf) to consumers.
Alternatives to the traditional package-ship-unpack-display model are being developed in an effort to improve operating efficiency. For example, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/777,444 filed on May 11, 2010, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference, discloses a new system for dispensing and displaying products packaged in a container. Specifically, the system includes a frame having a support structure, a product display area and an opening tool. The frame may be positioned on a retailer's shelf and loaded with product simply by placing a container comprising multiple units of product onto the support structure of the frame. As the container is being placed onto the support structure, the opening tool of the frame opens the container in such a manner that product is dispensed from the container and moved to the product display area of the frame under the force of gravity.
Unfortunately, from time-to-time, clogs have developed in such systems, thereby preventing product from making its way from the container to the product display area of the frame. Such clogs have been observed to occur when product fails to move relative to the container as intended.
Accordingly, those skilled in the art continue with research and development efforts directed to apparatus and methods for dispensing products from packaging containers.
In one aspect, the disclosed paperboard container may include a paperboard substrate assembled into a three-dimensional structure having an external surface and at least one internal surface, wherein at least a portion of the internal surface includes a friction-reducing coating applied thereto.
In another aspect, the disclosed paperboard container may include a paperboard substrate that defines at least one wall panel and at least one partition panel, the wall panel defining an internal volume, the partition panel including a first major surface and a second major surface, and being position in the internal volume such that the first major surface defines a first chamber within the internal volume and the second major surface defines a second chamber within the internal volume, and a friction-reducing coating applied to at least a portion of the first and/or second major surfaces.
In another aspect, the disclosed paperboard container may include a paperboard substrate having a clay coated side and an uncoated side, the paperboard substrate defining a plurality of wall panels and at least one partition panel, the wall panels being assembled into a three-dimensional structure defining an internal volume, the partition panel being positioned in the internal volume such that the clay coated side of the partition panel defines a first chamber within the internal volume and the uncoated side of the partition panel defines a second chamber within the internal volume, and a friction-reducing coating applied to the clay coated side of the partition panel.
In yet another aspect, the disclosed paperboard container may include a paperboard substrate having a clay coated side and an uncoated side, the paperboard substrate defining a plurality of wall panels and at least one partition panel, the wall panels being assembled into a three-dimensional rectilinear structure defining an internal volume, the partition panel being positioned in the internal volume such that the clay coated side of the partition panel defines a first chamber within the internal volume and the uncoated side of the partition panel defines a second chamber within the internal volume, and a gloss coating applied to the clay coated side of the partition panel, the gloss coating having a coefficient of friction that is substantially less than the coefficient of friction of the clay coated side of the paperboard substrate.
Other aspects of the disclosed paperboard container with friction-reducing coating will become apparent from the following description, the accompanying drawings and the appended claims.
Paperboard containers may be formed from C1S paperboard substrates having a coated first major surface and an uncoated second major surface. The uncoated side of the paperboard substrate may be presented on the inside of the finished container. The coated side may be coated with clay or the like, and may be presented on the outside of the finished container. Various indicia and graphics may be printed on the coated side of the paperboard substrate prior to forming the finished container.
Other types of paperboard substrates may be also be used to form the disclosed paperboard container with friction-reducing coating. For example, the disclosed paperboard container may be formed from a C2S paperboard substrate, which may include a coating (e.g., clay) on both major surfaces of the paperboard substrate. Other examples of suitable paperboard substrates will become apparent to the skilled artisan.
It has now been discovered that certain surfaces of a paperboard substrate may have coefficients of friction that are sufficiently high that such surfaces impede the movement of product relative to the container. For example, it has been discovered that the clay coated side of a paperboard substrate has a significantly higher coefficient of friction than the uncoated side of a paperboard substrate. As such, product may move relative to the uncoated side of a paperboard substrate as desired. However, if the product makes contact with the coated surface of the paperboard substrate, friction between the product and the coated surface may impede movement of the product relative to the container.
Accordingly, a friction-reducing coating may be applied to all or a portion of the interior surface of a paperboard container to facilitate the desired movement of product relative to the container. In particular, the friction-reducing coating may be applied to the portions of the interior surface of the paperboard container having a relatively high coefficient of friction (e.g., clay coated portions), thereby reducing the effective coefficient of friction at such locations to facilitate the desired movement of product relative to the container.
Referring to
The container blank 10 may be pre-cut from a sheet of paperboard substrate material to define an outer periphery 14 of the container blank 10. As noted above, various paperboard substrates may be used to form the container blank 10 and, ultimately, the disclosed paperboard container 12.
In one implementation, the container blank 10 may be cut from a C1S paperboard substrate having a coating layer 88 that defines a first (i.e., coated) major surface 16 of the paperboard substrate and a paperboard layer 90 that defines a second (i.e., uncoated) major surface 17 of the paperboard substrate, as best shown in
The container blank 10 may include a plurality of pre-formed fold lines 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34 that define four side wall panels 36, 38, 40, 42, first end-enclosing panels 44, 46, 48, 50, second end-enclosing panels 52, 54, 56, a partition panel 58 and partition support panels 60, 62, 64. Specifically, side wall panel 36 may be defined by fold lines 18, 30 and 32, side wall panel 38 may be defined by fold lines 18, 20, 30 and 32, side wall panel 40 may be defined by fold lines 20, 22 and 30 and side wall panel 42 may be defined by fold lines 22, 24, 30, 34. The first end-enclosing panels 44, 46, 48, 50 may be defined by fold line 30. Second end-enclosing panels 52 and 54 may be defined by fold line 32 and second end-enclosing panel 56 may be defined by fold line 34. The partition panel 58 may be defined by fold lines 26, 28 and 30. Partition support panel 60 may be defined by fold lines 24, 26 and 30, partition support panel 62 may be defined by fold line 30 and partition support panel 64 may be defined by fold line 28.
Referring now to
As shown in
As shown in
While the friction-reducing coating 92 is shown covering about 100 percent of the first major surface 16′ of the partition panel 58, those skilled in the art will appreciate that coverage of less than 100 percent may be used and may still provide the required reduction in friction. For example, the friction-reducing coating 92 may cover at least 50 percent of the first major surface 16 of the partition panel 58, such as at least about 75 percent of the first major surface 16 of the partition panel 58, or at least 90 percent of the first major surface 16 of the partition panel 58, without departing from the scope of the present disclosure.
In a first construction, the friction-reducing coating 92 may be any coating material that provides a coefficient of friction that is less than the coefficient of friction of the coating layer 88 (
In a second construction, the friction-reducing coating 92 may be any coating material that provides a coefficient of friction that is the same or less than the coefficient of friction of the underlying, but uncoated, paperboard layer 90.
In a third construction, the friction-reducing coating 92 may be any coating material that provides a coefficient of friction that is sufficiently low to allow product 94 (
It has been discovered that various coating compositions used in the paper industry, including varnishes, gloss coatings, inks (e.g., color inks) and printing, form suitable friction-reducing coatings 92. In one specific, non-limiting example, the friction-reducing coating 92 may be 1469E low angle gloss coating available from Coatings & Adhesives Corporation of Leland, N.C. Static friction testing has shown that 1469E low angle gloss coating has a slide angle (TMI 32-25) of 11° (±4°) using a face-to-face configuration at a relative humidity of 50 percent (±5 percent).
Accordingly, the second major surface 17 of the container blank 10 may define each of the internal surfaces of the first chamber 84 of the paperboard container 12, but the internal surfaces of the second chamber 86 may be defined by both the second major surface 17 of the container blank 10 and the first major surface 16′ of the partition panel 58 (e.g., the surface of the partition panel 58 that includes the friction-reducing coating 92). As such, product 94 received in the internal volume 82 of the paperboard container 12 may be isolated from contact with the coating layer 88 of the paperboard substrate, thereby improving movement of the product 94 relative to the paperboard container 12.
While the paperboard container 12 is shown and described with the friction-reducing coating 92 (
Although various aspects of the disclosed paperboard container with friction-reducing coating have been shown and described, modifications may occur to those skilled in the art upon reading the specification. The present application includes such modifications and is limited only by the scope of the claims.