This invention relates to an industrial procedure for filling alcoholic beverages, in particular wine, into stand-up type pouches made from polylaminate material. This invention also relates to a filling machine designed to perform the procedure.
The machine according to the invention comprises certain operating stations which are able to perform various advanced functions during the filling steps, at the end of which there is a final product of high quality, which is especially necessary in the presence of high quality wines.
This invention can be applied in the field of machines for filling beverages such as wines or the like in containers and in particular in paper-based polylaminate containers.
It is known that machines currently exist on the market allowing automation of the operations for packaging a wide range of food products in a wide range of containers made from a wide range of materials.
One of the containers most commonly used for beverages which, in addition to glass, gives the best results from the point of view of conservation is the cellulose-based polylaminate container; this is a packaging system for foodstuffs which is widely used throughout the world for the conservation of a wide variety of beverages and liquid foodstuffs such as milk and fruit juices.
The polylaminate packaging is a container which, depending on the commercial life-span of the product, can consist of paper, plastic and aluminium or paper and plastic. The first type allows a long conservation of the foods, of between six and twenty four months, at ambient temperature, whilst the container made of paper and plastic is used for the short-term conservation of fresh foods at low temperatures.
The cellulose-based polylaminate containers are currently made using machines for the production of beverage containers, also for single use, where the machines comprise means for making containers made from polylaminate material, starting from a sheet of polylaminate material made of paper, generally comprising two main folds facing each other and sealed at the edges, a bottom fold joined with the main folds and withdrawn between the two main folds along a median line and an opening positioned between the two main folds in a counter-opposed position with respect to the base fold.
These containers are generally defined as “stand-up” and a type of these containers is described in patent document US 2012/0008884 A1, which also describes a system for filling liquids inside the containers.
Patent document US 2011/167763 A1 also describes a system which allows the filling and closing by heat sealing, of stand-up type containers.
These machines comprise filling means designed to introduce a predetermined quantity of liquid in the container, closing means designed for closing the opening after introduction of the liquid, as well as means allowing a predetermined quantity of inert gas to be injected into the container, after introducing the liquid.
It has been found that these machines lack means which allow the perfect shape of the finished container to be obtained and also means which allow the environment for injection of the liquid and the subsequent environment for closing the container to be kept perfectly aseptic.
Due to these drawbacks, the prior art machines do not allow finished containers with a high quality to be obtained and consequently the beverages contained therein are easily perishable especially if they are alcoholic beverages, in particular wine, which is notoriously much more subject to oxidation phenomena and deterioration, compared with other beverages.
Moreover, in the particular case of containers filled with alcoholic beverages, in particular but not exclusively wine, the polylaminate materials conventionally used in the industry for making containers for food products are not adequate to constitute a container which is at the same time robust, sterile and perfectly sealed from the outside environment. In the opinion of the Applicant, there are no systems which are able to produce robust, sterile and perfectly sealed containers filled with alcoholic beverages, in particular wine, on a large scale.
The present invention provides a procedure and a machine which makes it possible to eliminate or at least reduce the drawbacks described above.
This is achieved by means of a procedure for filling alcoholic beverages, in particular wine, into stand-up type containers made from polylaminate material having the characteristics described in the main claim.
The dependent claims describe advantageous embodiments of the invention.
The main advantages of this solution, in addition to those deriving from the construction simplicity, concern the fact that the machine for implementing the procedure according to the invention allows a high standard of quality of the containers finished and ready for use to be obtained, improving the constancy of the production which is made much more reliable compared with that possible with the known solutions.
The machine for implementing the procedure according to the invention substantially comprises means which allow the making in series of containers which can be filled with alcoholic beverages, in particular wine, starting from a continuous sheet of cellulose-based polylaminate material having an extremely robust laminar structure; it not being possible to use this material according to the prior art procedures and with the prior art machines.
The machine for implementing the procedure according to the invention uses a plurality of workstations, including a station for pre-shaping the container, a station for dosing gas in the presence of ultraviolet ray lamps, a station for dosing the alcoholic beverage, in particular wine, a further station for dosing inert gas positioned immediately upstream of a closing station in which the container is hermetically closed by heat or ultrasound sealing.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become clear on reading the description given below of one embodiment, provided as a non-binding example, with the help of the accompanying drawings, in which:
The machine for implementing the procedure according to the invention generally comprises a machine for packaging containers made of polylaminate material, where the containers are initially made in known fashion starting from a continuous sheet of cellulose-based polylaminate material which is unwound from a reel 11, which passes between rollers positioned at an initial station 12 in which the sheet is folded into two main flaps alongside each other. A similar machine, with a circular structure, is described in the above-mentioned patent document US 2012/0008884 A1.
A first important feature of the invention is the type of polylaminate material which is used for implementing the procedure according to the invention. In effect, studies, research and experiments carried out by the Applicant have shown that the conventional polylaminate materials used for producing containers, also for single use, for long-life food products are not suitable for the production of containers for alcoholic beverages, in particular wine. It is has been found that the conventional containers are equipped with a layer of paper with a low basic weight, in particular less than 100 g/m2, which is not able to adequately withstand the sophisticated sealing procedures to which the containers must be subjected after filling with the aim of guaranteeing the perfect seal, sterility and substantial absence of oxygen inside the container.
These production procedures are supported solely by cellulose-based polylaminate materials wherein the cellulose layer comprises cardboard with a basic weight of between 150 and 250 g/m2. Excellent results can be obtained using a cellulose-based polylaminate material wherein the cellulose layer comprises cardboard with a basic weight of 180 g/m2.
By way of a non-binding example, a sheet made of polylaminate material which can be used for implementing the procedure according to the invention has the following structure, starting from the outer side towards the inner side of the finished container:
low-density polyethylene (LDPE) 15 g/m2;
pure cellulose cardboard 180 g/m2;
low-density polyethylene (LDPE) 20 g/m2;
aluminium foil—6.3 micron 17 g/m2;
ethylene-methacrylic acid copolymer 10 g/m2;
low-density polyethylene (LDPE) 10 g/m2;
linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE film) 25 micron 23 g/m2.
The various layers mentioned above can vary in composition and weight. However, it appears essential that the basic weight of the cardboard is never less than that shown above.
Conventionally, the sheet folded previously is intercepted inside a second workstation 13 by a component which pushes it at its lower folded edge, in such a way as to form a bottom fold folded inside and upwards.
Inside the third workstation 14 of the machine the shaped container, which is still in the form of a continuous sheet which in a vertical section is now substantially “W”-shaped, is subjected to a first heat-sealing process of two counter-opposing vertical edges 40, 41 (see
The sheet pre-shaped and with the vertical edges 40, heat sealed is then subjected to operations for separating the various containers by cutting with conventional counter-opposing blades, creating a series of substantially rectangular, closed containers.
The separated containers, each of which has a base with a “W”-shaped vertical cross-section and two vertical heat-sealed sides, are now close to a plurality of further workstations for filling and closing the individual containers.
It should be noted that, due to the selection of the polylaminate material having a cellulose layer with a basic weight of not less than 160 g/m2, the container which is formed possesses a rigidity which is much greater than that of conventional containers of the stand-up type used for food products. Experiments carried out by the Applicant have shown that the means conventionally used for opening containers with the aim of being able to fill them, the means comprising a mechanism with suckers acting on the counter-opposing flaps of the container and a jet of air acting in the container (see, for example, patent document US 2012/0008884 A1), are not absolutely sufficient to guarantee the complete opening of the containers used in the procedure according to the invention, due to the greater rigidity of the latter.
The machine designed to implement the procedure according to the invention therefore has, as well as the conventional system with suckers and a jet of air to perform a preliminary opening of the containers, the following additional workstations, the operation of which is illustrated in
In each of the workstations, each container 21 moves forward pushed by gripping means of the conventional type forming part of automatic filling machines for liquid food products.
In the conventional systems for filling containers of the stand-up type there are generally one or two sealing stations, in particular heat sealing, which are typically identical, the aim of the second sealing operation being solely that of strengthening the effects of the first sealing. In the case of the procedure according to the invention, which uses a cellulose-based polylaminate material wherein the cellulose layer has a basic weight of less than 150 g/m2, the conventional sealing system is not sufficient to guarantee the total seal of the container filled with an alcoholic beverage, in particular wine.
According to the invention, the machine 10 comprises a sealing station 38 inside of which there are two sealing systems which perform different operations. As shown in
The sealing, which acts on a limited surface, can, according to the invention, be performed by heat as described above; however, the sealing can also be performed by ultrasound or by electro-induction.
As shown in
As shown in
Lastly, the container reaches a final cutting station 43, wherein a pair of side portions of the upper part of the container 21 are cut and separated from the container, which adopts the shape of a bottle.
The container is then sent to further steps for storage.
As can be seen, this succession of steps ensures that the filling of the liquid foodstuff, in particular wine, takes place under conditions which are absolutely favourable for keeping it inside the container, creating the ideal conditions for its perfect conservation in this particular type of container created specifically for single-use consumption.
The invention as described above refers to a preferred embodiment. It is nevertheless clear that the invention is susceptible to numerous variations which lie within the scope of its disclosure, in the framework of technical equivalents.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2012A000169 | Aug 2012 | IT | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/IB2013/056531 | 8/9/2013 | WO | 00 |