The present invention relates to a plastic cap for a container, which cap, for oxygen-tight sealing of the container, comprises an oxygen-tight liner to be joined to an opening end surface of a spout on the container and, for attachment to the spout, has a circumferential skirt, which is arranged to surround the spout and which has an internal annular bead adapted for snap connection with a corresponding annular groove in the spout, the liner having an oxygen-tight intermediate layer, whose side facing the cap is coated with a first plastic layer arranged to be permanently joined to the cap and whose side facing the container is coated with a second plastic layer arranged to be temporarily hermetically sealed to said opening end surface, and the liner and the cap being joined to each other such that the liner when removing the cap from the spout accompanies the cap. The invention also relates to a method of making such a cap by means of a mould, which comprises a first mould part having a cavity and a second mould part having a core.
A cap of the type stated by way of introduction is known from patent specification GB-A-1,571,938. More specifically, this document discloses temporary, hermetic sealing between an opening end surface on the spout of a container and an oxygen-tight liner, which is mounted in the cap, and permanent joining of the liner and the cap, preferably by induction heating of plastic layers on both sides of the liner after the mounting of the cap on the container.
A first drawback of this method is that the mounting of the liner in the cap requires precise positioning of the cap before the insertion of the liner, i.e. it requires a special mounting unit, which first turns the cap right and then inserts the liner. A second drawback is that, no matter where in the production line this mounting unit is placed, there is still a risk that a liner will fall out of the cap again, thus making a hermetic seal between a container and the defective cap impossible to obtain.
A manufacturing method, other than that disclosed in GB-A-1,571,938, is described in DE-A1-196 21 617. According to this patent specification, which relates to a screw cap, a liner is inserted into a mould, in which the liner is positioned in a manner which is not described in greater detail. Then plastic is injected into the mould, thereby causing a special separation layer on one side of the liner to be melted with the plastic material of the cap. Finally, the cap is mounted on the spout of a container, where the liner is glued by means of a glue thread applied to the end surface of the spout. When removing the cap from the container, the liner remains on the container, since the adhesive force of the glue thread exceeds the adhesive force of the separation layer of the liner.
A first drawback of the solution according to DE-A1-196 21 617 is that, irrespective of the type of container, it is necessary to apply the glue thread in connection with the mounting of the cap on the container and that this application of the glue thread constitutes an extra operation, which has to be carried out before the mounting of the actual cap. A second drawback is that the liner, which remains after the removal of the cap, prevents quick opening of the container. Furthermore, the remaining cap makes it more difficult in particular for disabled people to open the container. In addition, it is stated in DE-A1-196 21 617 that the liner is inserted into the mould when making the cap, but it is not stated where in the mould it should be placed.
In these circumstances, it is reasonable to assume that the liner is supposed to be placed in the mould in the same way as in previously known patent specification U.S. Pat. No. 4,774,134. According to this document, a liner having a first flat side of a meltable plastic material is placed with an opposite second flat side on a core of a mould, after which the mould is closed and plastic is injected round the core and the liner placed thereon. This causes the plastic and the plastic material of the liner to melt together, thus being permanently joined.
A first drawback of the solution according to U.S. Pat. No. 4,774,134 is that an extra operation has been added after the manufacturing of the cap, in which operation an annular packing in the form of a string of sealing material is injected into the cap. A second drawback is that the positioning of the liner on the core of the mould slows down the cooling process of the core when the mould is open, which may result in a considerably longer cycle time. The vacuum channels for retaining the liner on the core also make it more difficult to provide coolant channels in the core, which channels could contribute to a reduced core temperature and thus a reduced cycle time.
Another cap in the form of a screw cap, which has some features in common with the cap stated by way of introduction, is already known from patent specification U.S. Pat. No. 5,927,532. More particularly, this specification discloses a child-resistant cap, which in one embodiment has an insert with a thin liner, which may be welded to an end surface of the spout on a container to obtain oxygen-tightness. When opening the container, the weld joint is broken by lifting the insert at the same time as the cap since the insert is pulled along by a circumferential bead in the cap. It is thus possible to remove the cap and to break the oxygen-tight seal in one single grip.
A first drawback of this prior-art cap is that it is comparatively difficult to manufacture, since it consists of several parts that have to be assembled in a separate mounting operation. A second drawback is that the lifting motion to break the seal has to be carried out by pulling the container and the cap apart, which requires a relatively great force and often results in a sudden opening motion, which may cause spillage of part of the contents of the container. Another drawback is that the division of the opening operation into two separate steps makes it difficult to know if the seal has been broken or not.
In the light of that stated above, the object of the present invention is to provide a plastic cap, which is considerably easier to manufacture and to open than prior-art solutions. Another object of the invention is to provide an easy and efficient way of making this cap.
The first object is achieved according to the invention by means of a cap which is of the type stated by way of introduction and which is characterised in that said first plastic layer is arranged to be permanently joined, when injection-moulding the cap, to the plastic material of the cap, and that the skirt at the end facing the container has a radial projection, which serves as a thumb grip and which when opening the container allows the cap to be bent away from said opening end surface so that the temporary, hermetic seal between the second plastic layer of the liner and the opening end surface of the spout is gradually broken.
By joining the liner directly to the cap in connection with the injection-moulding, instead of placing the liner in the finished cap after injection-moulding, a much simpler and cheaper solution is obtained than in GB-A-1,571,938. Furthermore, this solution presents the advantage that the liner cannot fall out of the cap, since it is already permanently joined to the plastic material of the cap in the injection-moulding. Moreover, the radial projection serving as a thumb grip is a more user-friendly solution than the pull tab according to the British patent specification, since the pull tab is intended for a thumb-index finger grip, which requires strong fingers and the use of both hands, one hand for holding the container and the other for the thumb-index finger grip. As for the thumb grip used for the cap according to the invention, it can be obtained with one hand only, by the user's hand surrounding the container and the thumb making an opening motion towards the radial projection in the axial direction of the container. This axially directed opening motion can, of course, also be obtained in some other suitable manner, for example, by the radial projection being applied to the edge of a table and the container being moved downwards relative to this edge, and this motion is even easier to carry out as the cap, when opening the container, is bent away from the opening end surface of the container so that the temporary, hermetic seal between the second plastic layer of the liner and the opening end surface of the spout is gradually broken. This feature is not stated in any one of the patent specifications mentioned above, in particular not in connection with the cap according to GB-A-1,571,938, in which radial reinforcing flanges are arranged to prevent bending.
Preferably, said radial projection is a flange extending along the entire circumference of the cap. The advantage of this solution is that a cap designed in this manner is easy to open, irrespective of the position of the container, i.e. the solution is particularly suitable, for example, for beverage packages which should be openable by a quick snap motion with the thumb.
It goes without saying that the skirt may have a tamper-evident ring at the end facing the container, which ring is arranged to cooperate with a corresponding retaining means on the spout and to be broken off from the cap when removing the cap from the spout. It will be understood that such a tamper-evident ring can be designed in a number of appropriate ways and that the corresponding retaining means on the spout may, for example, in the case of a snap cap be a circumferential groove.
According to a preferred embodiment, the intermediate layer of the liner is made of a metal material, so that the liner is weldable by induction welding to the opening end surface of the container. This metal material is preferably a thin aluminium foil, but also other metal materials suitable for this purpose may be used. The advantage of induction welding is that the heat, owing to the metal material, is automatically concentrated to the desired location, i.e. to the boundary layer between the liner and the opening end surface of the spout.
According to an alternative embodiment, the second plastic layer of the liner is a layer which is applicable to the opening end surface of the container by adhesive. The advantage of this solution is that the cap according to the invention will be capable of sealing in an oxygen-tight manner also containers that are not suitable for induction or ultrasonic welding.
According to another embodiment, the second plastic layer of the liner is a layer which is weldable to the opening end surface of the container by ultrasonic welding. This embodiment may be useful in particular if, for environmental reasons, it is not desirable to use any metal material and if, for the same reasons, it is not desirable to use adhesive for the joining of the liner in the cap to the opening end surface of the spout. However, ultrasonic welding requires relatively precise positioning of the container relative to the welding head and is thus more difficult to use than induction welding.
The second object is achieved according to the invention by means of a method of the type stated in the introductory part, which method comprises the steps of inserting a liner, with the mould being open, into the cavity of the first mould part, where it is applied with a first flat side to a mould wall, closing the mould by means of the second mould part, whose core is then inserted into the cavity of the first mould part, injecting plastic through at least one opening in said mould wall onto the first flat side of the liner so that the plastic flows over said flat side, presses an opposite second flat side of the liner against said core and fills a remaining cavity between the mould parts, and opening the mould and removing the finished cap with the liner embedded therein.
This method is considerably easier to carry out than the prior-art methods mentioned above, and owing to the application of the first flat side of the liner to a mould wall of the first mould part all previous limitations due to possible heating of the core of the mould are efficiently obviated. The application of the liner to the mould wall is preferably obtained by a negative pressure being created in said at least one opening in said mould wall.
Below a preferred embodiment of a cap and a preferred method of making the same are described in more detail with reference to the accompanying schematic drawings, in which
To ensure the longest possible shelf life of the contents of the container 4, the cap 1 has to engage the above-mentioned opening end surface 6 in a completely oxygen-tight sealing manner. To achieve this, an oxygen-tight liner 8 is arranged in the cap 1, in this case in the form of a thin aluminium foil 83 with a heat-weldable plastic layer 81, 82 on both sides thereof. The liner 8 has been placed in the cap 1 when injection-moulding the cap and, after mounting of the cap 1 on the spout 5 of the container 4, it has been welded by induction-welding to the opening end surface 6 of the spout 5.
Besides the sealing of the cap 1 provided by the induction welding, the cap 1 is also tamper-proof sealed by means of a circumferential tamper-evident ring 9. As shown in the drawings, this tamper-evident ring 9 is attached to the cap 1 below the skirt 2 of the cap 1 and, when the cap 1 is mounted on the spout 5 of the container 4, it engages in a circumferential groove (not shown) of the spout 5. When opening the cap 1, which is done as shown in
Furthermore, the skirt 2 of the cap 1 has a radial projection 10 serving as a thumb grip at the end facing the tamper-evident ring 9 to make it easier for a user to open the container 4. This projection 10 is preferably formed as an outwardly directed annular flange but it may, of course, be designed in any suitable way.
The cap 1 described above is preferably made by a manufacturing method which is described below with reference to a somewhat simpler cap variant without a tamper-evident ring, but for the sake of clarity the same reference numerals as for the preferred embodiment are used.
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A person skilled in the art will realise that the invention may be varied in a number of ways within the scope of the claims. It is thus conceivable to use different types of liners, such as a liner with more layers or layers other than those described above, to apply joining methods other than induction welding, such as gluing and ultrasonic welding, and to arrange caps on other types of containers than plastic bottles or plastic cans, such as glass bottles or metal cans.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0200434-9 | Feb 2002 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE03/00236 | 2/13/2003 | WO |