The present invention relates to a plastic bottle for storing a liquid, such as a beverage or the like, and, in particular, relates to a plastic bottle that is easy to hold and minimizes the amount of resin used.
A large number of plastic bottles typified by PET bottles are sold as containers for filling with beverages. For example, JP2007-76717 discloses an example of a 500 ml bottle with improved ease of holding. In this bottle, a constricted portion is formed by constriction toward the center of a barrel portion, resulting in a shape that is easy for a consumer to hold, centered on this constricted portion. In order to maintain strength, a rib is arranged in the constricted portion.
Also, JP2005-247393 discloses a large 2 L size bottle. In this bottle, a barrel portion is formed with a rectangular cross-sectional shape, and a waist portion is formed at the vertical center portion of the barrel portion. This bottle also includes a concave finger insertion portion, which shares part of the waist portion.
Attempts have been made to improve bottle strength by adding liquid nitrogen prior to capping in order to place the interior of the bottle under a positive pressure. JP2006-137463 discloses an example of such a method.
Recently the reduction of bottle weight has advanced with the growing awareness of environmental problems. Disadvantages of reducing bottle weight by reducing wall thickness have included an overall reduction in bottle strength, such that bottles could not stand up to distribution, and could become extremely difficult for consumers to hold. The positive pressure used in JP2006-137463 may provide strength for distribution but, because the interior of the bottle returns to normal pressure after the cap is opened, the strength may be greatly reduced when the bottle is opened and holding the bottle may result in squeezing that could cause the contents to overflow out of the bottle.
An object of the present invention therefore is to provide a plastic bottle capable of assuring ease of holding and strength even when the bottle is reduced in weight, not only when the cap is closed, but also after opening.
In order to achieve the aforementioned object, a plastic bottle includes a constricted portion and a non-constricted portion contiguous above and below with the constricted portion. One of the constricted portion or the non-constricted portion has a substantially polygonal cross-sectional shape, and the other one of the constricted portion or the non-constricted portion has a circular cross-sectional shape.
The bottle, as compared to barrel portion with a cylindrical cross-sectional shape, is configured to have improved lateral and vertical strength in the barrel portion for a bottle having reduced weight. By furnishing the barrel portion with a part having a substantially polygonal cross-sectional shape, ease of holding the barrel portion can be improved, which may, for example, enhance the ease with which the cap may be opened and closed.
The constricted portion may have a substantially polygonal cross-sectional shape, and the non-constricted portion may have a circular cross-sectional shape. This may facilitate engaging a finger on the constricted portion, thereby improving the ease of holding of the constricted portion, which may, for example, improve the ease with which the cap may be opened. Moreover, an advantage of the non-constricted portion having a circular cross-sectional shape is that it may facilitate handling in the manufacturing process. Strength of the constricted portion can also be assured even in bottles in which the basic cross-sectional shape of the barrel portion is circular.
In some embodiments, the constricted portion may have a concave circumferential rib in a position at the vertical center of the constricted portion. This may permit a significant increase in the strength of the constricted portion by combining the substantially polygonal cross-sectional shape and the circumferential rib.
In addition, the circumferential rib may have a circular cross-sectional shape. This may result in a cross-sectional shape which, in order starting from the vertical center of the constricted portion, is circular, substantially polygonal then circular, thereby greatly improving the strength of the constricted portion and the barrel portion.
The constricted portion may have an upper polygonal surface above the circumferential rib and a lower polygonal surface below the circumferential rib. The upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may be formed in mutual vertical symmetry centered on the circumferential rib. The upper polygonal surface and lower polygonal surface respectively have approximately polygonal cross-sectional shapes, and are inclined toward the circumferential rib on the inside of the barrel portion. This may permit the alleviation of stress concentration between the upper polygonal surface and lower polygonal surface and the circumferential rib.
In some embodiments, the upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may include first and second surfaces repeating and alternating in the circumferential direction, wherein the first surfaces incline toward the inside of the barrel portion at an angle different from that of the second surfaces. This may improve the strength of the upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface.
In some embodiments, the upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may respectively connect to the upper edge and lower edge of the circumferential rib by a gradually changing surface. This permits a smooth connection between the polygonal cross-sectional shape and the circular cross-sectional shape.
The upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may respectively have concave circumferential ribs. This may result in further strengthening of the upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface. The cross-sectional shape of this circumferential rib may be circular.
In some embodiments, the cross-sectional shape of the upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may be in the shape of a dodecagon.
In some embodiments, the constricted portion comprises a deepest portion that is most constricted, an upper polygonal surface, and a lower polygonal surface. The upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may be formed in mutual vertical symmetry centered on the deepest portion. The upper polygonal surface and the lower polygonal surface may respectively have an approximately polygonal cross-sectional shape and may be inclined toward the deepest portion at the inside of the barrel portion.
Additional objects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention will be realized and attained by means of the elements and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims. It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive of the invention, as claimed.
The discussion below, refers to the attached Figures, and describes plastic bottles according to exemplary disclosed embodiments.
As shown in
Bottle 1 may be washed and sterilized after molding, then filled with a beverage. Exemplary beverages that may be contained in bottle 1 include water, green tea, oolong tea, juice, and other non-carbonated beverages. In general, the internal pressure in the bottle is negative with non-carbonated beverages, making bottle strength weak. To provide strength, concave rib(s) may be formed on the disclosed bottle. For example, in embodiment 1, bottle 1 may have concave ribs 11-18 described below and may, therefore, be appropriate for filling with a non-carbonated beverage. In some cases, however, the liquid filled into bottle 1 may also be a carbonated beverage (e.g., soft drinks) or a food product such as sauce or the like.
The following are definitions of some of the terms used herein. Top and bottom (and up and down) are defined using
In order starting from the top of center axis Y-Y, bottle 1 has a mouth portion 2, a shoulder portion 3, a barrel portion 4, and a bottom portion 5. These parts (2, 3, 4, and 5) may be integrally formed and constitute the walls of a bottle for storing a beverage therein. The center of gravity of bottle 1, when holding a drink in a filled state, may be located at center axis Y-Y.
Mouth portion 2 may be open at the top end and function as a pour spout for drinks. The opening of mouth portion 2 may be opened and closed using a cap (not shown). Shoulder portion 3 may have a circular cross-sectional shape, which gradually expands from the top to the bottom of shoulder portion 3. The bottom edge of shoulder portion 3 may be connected to a concave rib 11. Bottom portion 5 may be formed by a bottom wall 21 and a perimeter wall 22. Perimeter wall 22 may be a cylindrical part which stands upright so as to open upward from the perimeter of bottom wall 21. The top edge of perimeter wall 22 may be connected to a concave rib 18.
Barrel portion 4 may extend vertically between shoulder portion 3 and bottom portion 5. Barrel portion 4 may comprise a constricted portion 41 and non-constricted portions 42 and 43 connected to the top and bottom of constricted portion 41. Constricted portion 41 may be a section of barrel portion 4 that is constricted, and may be positioned slightly below the vertical center portion of bottle 1. Constricted portion 41 may be positioned slightly below the center of gravity of bottle 1 when filled with a beverage. This may permit easy tilting and stable handling of bottle 1 when a consumer drinks a beverage by holding the constricted portion 41. Constricted portion 41, given its shape, may also be referred to as the “waist” portion.
Non-constricted portions 42 and 43 may be cylindrical sections with a circular cross-sectional shape forming the maximum outer diameter of bottle 1. The upper non-constricted portion 42 may extend in the vertical direction without constrictions, and may be formed with multiple, circumferential, concave ribs 11,12,13, 14, and 15. The lower non-constricted portion 43 may extend in the vertical direction without being constricted, and may also be formed with multiple, circumferential, concave ribs 16, 17, and 18. The cross-sectional shape of concave ribs 11-18, although shown as circular, could have any shape that reinforces strength. The strength (particularly the radial strength) of non-constricted portions 42 and 43 may be reinforced by ribs 11-18.
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The polygonal surfaces 52 and 53 may be respectively formed so as to gradually expand in diameter with vertical distance from circumferential rib 51. As shown in
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According to bottle 1 of the embodiment explained above, the cross-sectional shape of barrel portion 4 may be basically round like non-constricted portions 42 and 43, while only constricted portion 41 has an approximately 12 sided polygonal shape. Therefore even with an overall round bottle shape, the radial strength of the constricted portion 41 as a whole can be improved, as can vertical strength. Radial strength can also be obtained for non-constricted portions 42 and 43 using concave ribs 11-18. Because the cross-sectional shape of barrel portion 4 is arranged in this way, weight reduction of the bottle 1 can be achieved through reducing wall thickness and the like, while assuring strength. This strength can also be assured after the cap has been opened. Exemplary specifications for bottle 1 according to embodiment 1 may include a weight of approximately 18 g and a capacity of approximately 570 ml, with a quotient of weight (PF gauge) divided by capacity being greater than or equal to 20 and less than or equal to 50.
Circumferential ribs 51, 71, and 72 may be formed so that the strength of constricted portion 41 may be reinforced. In particular, the cross-sectional shape of constricted portion 41 may alternately repeat in an order starting from the vertical center as follows: round (circumferential rib 51), approximately 12 sided (polygonal surfaces 52 and 53), round (circumferential ribs 71, 72), and approximately 12 sided (polygonal surfaces 52 and 53). Because of this alternating round and polygonal structure, a synergistic effect may be realized, and strength may be greatly improved. Since polygonal surfaces 52 and 53 may incline on the inside toward circumferential rib 51, the concentration of stress between polygonal surfaces 52 and 53 and circumferential rib 51 can be ameliorated compared to the case in which the polygonal surfaces 52 and 53 extend in parallel to center axis Y-Y. Moreover, an even greater strength improvement can be achieved due to the differing inclination angles of polygonal surfaces 52 and 53 between first surface 61 and second surface 62.
Because the cross-sectional shape of constricted portion 41 may be approximately dodecagonal, opening and closing of the cap can be more smoothly accomplished compared to a circular shape. In addition, because a consumer's finger engages easily with constricted portion 41, bottle 1 can be easily held. Thus, according to embodiment 1, bottle 1 may permit ease of holding and assure strength when weight is reduced, as well as suppressing the deformation caused by external pressures such as gripping force or the like.
Bottle 100 may include a constricted portion 110, which may have an approximately dodecagonal cross-sectional shape. The cross-sectional shape is described as “approximately” dodecagonal for the same reason as explained above with respect to embodiment 1. In other embodiments, the cross-sectional shape of constricted portion 110 may approximate polygons other than a dodecagon. Unlike constricted portion 41 in embodiment 1, embodiment 2 does not include circumferential ribs formed on constricted portion 110.
Constricted portion 110 may have upper and lower polygonal surfaces 112 and 113 centered around a most-constricted, deepest portion 111. As shown in
Polygonal surfaces 112 and 113 may contain 6 each of a first surface 121 and a second surface 122 repeating and alternating in a circumferential direction about bottle 100. As shown in
Constricted portion 110 of bottle 100 may be provided with no circumferential rib, and may, therefore, have less transverse strength than bottle 1 in embodiment 1. However, even if bottle 100, as a whole, is a “round bottle,” the overall radial strength and vertical strength of constricted portion 110 may be improved because the cross-sectional shape of barrel portion 4 may be non-uniform in the same way as in embodiment 1.
Since constricted portion 110 may have an approximately dodecagonal cross-sectional shape, bottle 100 may be easy to hold for consumers, which may, for example, facilitate smooth opening and closing of a cap thereon. Therefore, ease of holding and strength can be assured in bottle 100 even when weight is reduced, not only when the cap is closed, but also after it is opened.
As discussed above, in both embodiment 1 and embodiment 2, constricted portions 41 and 110 may have an approximately polygonal cross-sectional shape, and non-constricted portions 42 and 43 may have a circular cross-sectional shape. Other embodiments, however, may include a constricted portion with a circular cross-sectional shape and non-constricted portions with an approximately polygonal cross-sectional shape.
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with the true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.