This application is entitled to the benefit of and incorporates by reference essential subject matter disclosed in International Patent Application No. PCT/IB2005/052571 filed on Aug. 1, 2005.
The present invention concerns a pressure control device for a fluid dispensing container for maintaining a constant predetermined excess pressure and a method for manufacturing such a pressure control device.
Containers with pressure control devices are known in patent literature since almost thirty years but until today no commercial products are available on the market.
In EP-A-0 349 053 a pressure capsule for a spray can is described, which consists of two chambers. The first chamber is filled with a fluid under relatively high pressure and the second chamber is filled with a fluid with a pressure equal to the overpressure which normally exists in the spray can and needed for expelling a liquid. In the wall of the second chamber a membrane controls a valve. A plug in the wall keeps the fluid under pressure so that the valve keeps closed.
In WO-A-93/22222 (Cruysberghs) published in 1993 a pressure control device for maintaining a constant pressure in a container is disclosed in principle. Many different embodiments of the device are described, but in practice none was realized in commercial scale.
Another example of such a pressure control device is known from PCT patent application WO-A-99/62791. The device described therein is provided for maintaining a constant predetermined pressure in a container which is arranged for dispensing a fluid. The pressure control device has a first chamber and a second chamber, as well as a closing member movable relative to the second chamber for releasing and closing a fluid connection between the first chamber and the container depending on the position of the closing member relative to the second chamber. The first chamber is filled with a gas which, in use, has a higher pressure than the pressure in the container. The second chamber is closed having a gas at a predetermined or reference pressure and is located outside the first chamber. In a first embodiment according to FIG. 2 of WO-A-99/62791, the first chamber is provided as a cup-shaped holder which is placed upside down in the container and has its longitudinal edge joined together with the bottom and the upright sidewall of the vessel or container. In FIG. 3a second embodiment is shown in which the diameter of cup-like first chamber is much smaller than the inner diameter of the container. The chamber is centrally disposed within the container and joined at its longitudinal edge with the bottom of the container. In FIG. 4a third embodiment is shown in which the same first chamber as in FIG. 3 is disposed eccentrically with respect to the container. In FIG. 5a disc is provided slightly below the middle of the height of the vessel and is gas-tightly connected with the inner wall of the vessel through a sealing ring. This disc divides the vessel into two (fixed arranged) parts. A similar construction is shown in FIGS. 6a and 6b. Further, in FIG. 7 the first chamber of pressure control device is designed as a plunger which is sealed to the inner wall of the container with a sealing ring and which can be moved in axial direction within the container. Thus, the plunger divides the container in two parts, wherein the upper part is filled with the fluid to be dispensed. The fluid connection from the first chamber terminates in the lower part. When the pressure in the container drops since fluid has been dispensed by the push button on top of the container, the plunger is moved upwards because of the pressure difference between the lower and the upper part until pressure equilibrium between the lower and the upper part is obtained again. Therefore, the pressure in the lower part has decreased so that the pressure in the second chamber will be higher and the closing member will open the fluid connection between the first chamber and the lower part, so that the pressure in the lower part will rise. The plunger will then be moved upwards again until a pressure equilibrium is achieved corresponding to the predetermined or reference pressure in the second chamber. Finally, in the embodiment according to FIG. 8 the first chamber is of cylindrical design and has an outer diameter corresponding to the inner diameter of the container and thus fitted tightly within the container.
Only the pressure device of FIG. 7 of WO-A-99/62791 is movable in an axial direction. In all other examples the pressure device is fixedly arranged within the container. The complete pressure control device of FIG. 7 is designed as a plunger which functions as a movable piston expelling the dispensing fluid. However, the design of the pressure control device is disadvantageous because of its large dimensions so that less of the container can be used for dispensing fluid.
A further important problem of the above described pressure control devices as a separate module is that the first and second chambers have to be pressurized before mounting in a container. This in practice may be very difficult and costly to achieve e.g. in aluminium aerosol cans where the construction is in one-piece and the production lines run at very high outputs. A further major disadvantage is that it has been shown that the pressure in a separate pressure control device which will be mounted afterwards in a container drops to a large extent during a period of some months which is necessary for storage and distribution in the commercial supply chain. In addition, pressurizing of the pressure control device has to be performed with the fluid connection closed in order to obtain a pressure of the prescribed quantity. Thus the known pressure control devices are not suitable for application in a large industrial scale.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a pressure control device for a fluid dispensing container which is simpler in construction. Another object of the invention is to provide a manufacturing process of the pressure control device which may be assembled easily in a fluid dispensing container.
A main advantage of the present invention is that the pressure control device can be pressurized after implementation and filling of the liquid dispensing bottle. This means that the pressure control device may be pressurized at the same time as the bottle of fluid container is filled. Thus there is no need to pressurize the device in advance as was necessary with previous pressure control devices as e.g. described above. Since the second chamber is encompassing the first chamber, a very compact pressure control device will be obtained so that the total usable space in the bottle is much larger as in known embodiments. As the pressure control device can be fabricated in advance and can be implemented easily in existing plastic bottles, the existing production and filling procedures for e.g. cosmetic products can be maintained with only little additional arrangements in the production line.
Further advantages of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims and in the following description in which an exemplified embodiment of the invention is described with respect to the accompanying drawings. It shows
Specific numbers dedicated to elements defined with respect to a particular figure will be used consistently in all figures if not mentioned otherwise.
In
In
In
a and 3b show the assembling positions of the different parts as described above.
In
Working
The function of the above described pressure control device 1 is as follows: in the second chamber 6 an inert gas, especially normal air, with an overpressure of approximately 8 bar is filled in. In the assembled position the first chamber 2 is at normal air pressure, wherein the sealing ring 5 of the piston 4 is just covering the ends of incisions 37 or is laying on the inner step 39, respectively. The force exerted on the stem 14 by the overpressure in the second chamber 6 pushes the piston towards the circular top plate 27 of the insert 3, until the valve between the stop element 16 and the sealing O-ring 17 will be closed. Since the pressure in the space above the piston 4 raises according to the Law of Boyle-Gay Lussac and the overall temperature will be constant, the pressure in the first chamber 2 will be proportional to the volume at the valve closing position and the volume at the initial position and normal pressure. Over the incisions 32 and the indents 28 of the insert 3 there is a passageway from the second chamber 6 over the valve to the outside, i.e. over the top plate 27 of the insert 3. The so assembled pressure control device 1 is mounted at the bottom of a fluid container with e.g. a spraying valve which is actuated by a knob. If the pressure in the container is equal to the control pressure in the first chamber 2 the regulating valve of the pressure control device 1 remains closed. However, if some of the fluid is dispensed over the spraying valve, the pressure in the container drops and the regulating valve will be opened, so that gas with overpressure will flow from the second chamber 6 to the container. As the pressure in the container will equalize quite fast to the control pressure the regulating valve will be closed again.
If a larger amount of fluid will be spent over the spraying valve, the regulating valve will oscillate between the open and closed positions. In practice the piston will be moved only some tenth or hundredth of millimeter by a rolling motion of the sealing O-ring 34 to open and close the valve.
Practical Calculations
Mathematical models of the pressure control device show that the control pressure obeys following equation:
wherein
PC=control or excess pressure,
PR=pressure in the second chamber,
PI=pressure in the initial position (normal air pressure)
A1=area of the piston stem
A2=area of the piston
V1=volume in the first chamber above the piston in the initial position,
V2=volume in the first chamber above the piston in the pressurized position,
Thus, this equation allows to calculate the container pressure when the pressure in the second chamber 6 and the dimensions of the piston 4 and the piston stem 14 are determined. The equation further shows that the control pressure PC in the first chamber 2 slightly increases as the pressure in the second chamber PR decreases until the PR equals PC, where the pressure control device 1 remains open. Thus, the equation also allows to determine the minimal pressure PR for dispensing all the fluid in the container.
At predetermined geometrical dimensions of the piston 4 and the piston stem 14 the volume V2 is defining the control or excess pressure PC. Thus, by amending only the thickness of the piston 4 different control pressures Pc can be provided at the same geometry of the cup-like insert 3.
Manufacturing Process
The cup-like insert 3 and the closure 12 are moulded from polyethylene terephthalate (PET). The piston 4 with piston stem 14 and the stop element 16 are moulded from polyoximethylene (POM). The bottle-like cylinder 7 is injection blow moulded from PET. The main advantages of the injection blow moulding process for producing the cylinder 7 is that different sizes can be produced with the same tool, and that the orientation of the stretched PET material during the blowing process leads to a higher crystalline structure which gives high strength and good gas barrier properties.
The assembling process is as follows: firstly piston 4 with its sealing O-ring is introduced into the cup-like insert 3. Then the insert 3 is pressed into the funnel 13 of the closure 12 until the projections 33 with its serrated teeth 34 are lying firmly to the ring step of the funnel 13. The insert 3 is then ultrasonic welded to the funnel 13. Thereafter the stop element 16 with the small sealing O-ring 17 are pushed over the piston stem 14 and the stop element 16 is clamped with a snap-fit connection to the funnel 13 and thus pinching the O-ring 17 between the funnel 13 and the upper side of the step element 16. Then the ring part 20 of the stop element 16 is ultrasonic welded to the lower rim of the funnel. At the end the closure 12 is mounted to the flange 11 of the cylinder 7 and ultrasonic welded thereto. The so assembled pressure control device 1 is ready for use to be mounted in a fluid dispensing container e.g. with a spraying nozzle. Thereinafter the cylinder 7 is pressurized with an inert gas or air with an overpressure of e.g. 8 bar, so that the piston 4 is moved upwards and the regulating valve provided by the piston stem 14 and the small O-ring 17 is closed and the container is pressurized with the predetermined excess pressure. Assembling may be done also in a somewhat different sequence, if required.
It is clear that the elements may be fixed also by other welding methods like rotation welding, laser welding or any other well-known plastics welding method, or by adhesives or mechanical fastening, e.g. snap-fit or screws.
A further advantage of the invention is that, since only normal air or any other suitable inert gas is used for the pressure filling, the process facilities, equipment and manufacturing environment and operating procedures do not need to take account of the special safety requirements normally needed for dangerous flammable propellants.
While the present invention has been illustrated and described with respect to a particular embodiment thereof, it should be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications to this invention may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/052571 | 8/1/2005 | WO | 00 | 2/29/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/015123 | 2/8/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4456155 | Miyata et al. | Jun 1984 | A |
5215217 | Leslie | Jun 1993 | A |
6616017 | van 't Hoff | Sep 2003 | B2 |
7708171 | Regan et al. | May 2010 | B2 |
7748578 | van't Hoff | Jul 2010 | B2 |
20030019888 | Gupta | Jan 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 349 053 | Jan 1990 | EP |
9322222 | Nov 1993 | WO |
9962791 | Dec 1999 | WO |
2004065217 | Aug 2004 | WO |
2004065260 | Aug 2004 | WO |
2005082744 | Sep 2005 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080217571 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |