This invention relates to a process for forming the wall of the mouth of a metal container or packaging and the device for this purpose and the packaging or container obtained.
The packaging, according to the invention, is produced from a tubular ring that may or may not be molded to improve its strength.
The packaging or container in question is of the type that should accommodate a lid equipped with an elastic seal and secured by the vacuum created in the pre-filled container, at the top of said container, with said vacuum being able to be obtained according to the technology defined according to the patents or patent applications previously filed by the company
SODETECH:
These references illustrate the research conducted by the applicant company in the use of a deep vacuum both to facilitate sterilization while preserving as much as possible the natural organoleptic qualities of the products as well as to facilitate sealing by the lid.
The concept of deep vacuum is variable on the order of 900 mb (nine hundred millibars) at the temperature of four degrees Centigrade.
To this end, this invention relates to both the process for forming the wall of the mouth of the container and the container obtained and the device for this purpose.
The process, according to the invention, of forming the wall of the mouth of a cylindrical, metal container or packaging from a tubular ring that may or may not be molded that has to accommodate a sealing lid equipped with an elastic seal secured by a vacuum created in the container is characterized essentially by the use of a single element, the head carrying out the deformation of the internal diameter of the container by expansion to produce a bead together and simultaneously with a contraction that produces shrinkage above the bead of the mouth, the head comprising an expansible stationary part and a moving part that turns around the stationary part, said parts of the head being coaxial, which has the effect of compressing the metal and hardening it by organizing the metal molecules under two simultaneous stresses, which hardens the packaging and allows it to withstand the vacuum that is applied to it.
Other advantages and characteristics of the invention will emerge from reading the description below of an embodiment of the invention given by way of nonlimiting example and illustrated by the attached drawings in which:
The container or packaging obtained after the process is implemented according to the invention as shown in
The diameter of the extension cone 3 can be, for example, 157 millimeters.
The metal of the ring can originally have, for example, a hardness of 57 on the Rockwell scale and a thickness that can be, for example, 0.27 hundredth of a millimeter.
At its opening or mouth 4 (
The creation of the bead by expansion can, for example, bring the internal diameter at the bead to 157 millimeters. The annular shrinkage 6 can, for example, produce an internal diameter of the opening of the can of 145 millimeters.
For this purpose, the device comprises, on a rotary element 10 (
The magnetic plate 11 (
The head 12 (
The head 12 (
It comprises a matrix 15 (
The shaft, which moves from bottom to top and conversely, controls the outward positioning or the retraction of the elements producing the expansion consisting of the bead 5 (
These elements consist of a disk divided into sectors 18 (
To facilitate understanding,
The expansion of the sectors 18/20 (
Each sector 18 (
A male cone 23 (
Under the intermediate part 24 (
A stationary crown 26 (
The moving part 14 (
In
By withdrawal of the sectors 20 (
The device that makes it possible to carry out this second operation is depicted in
The essential elements of this rotary device are the following:
The result of these two operations is, for the first, synchronized expansion-contraction to compress the metal and harden it by organizing the metal molecules under two simultaneous stresses while limiting disorders that might result from an expansion operation alone and especially from a contraction operation alone.
The second operation in rolling the flange makes it possible to accommodate the lid equipped with its seal.
Reinforcement of the packaging or can by the hardening operation as explained allows the packaging to accept, without deformation, sterilization under extremely rapid deep vacuum. This makes it possible to obtain a canned product of better quality than a deep-frozen product. Having the product under vacuum makes it possible to use very little liquid in the packaging, and to increase the quantity of product contained, for example, to go from 1.5 kilograms to 1.8 kilograms, without degradation of the product.
The tests performed would show that in the case of canning olives, according to the technique of the invention, the result would produce the equivalent of fresh olives, the negligible quantity of water in the packaging preventing organoleptic degradations of the product.
The deep vacuum in the packaging on the order of 900 mb (nine hundred millibars) practically eliminates any oxidation of the product and preserves the vitamins and all the natural components that are soluble in the water of the canned product.
The canned product equals the steam-cooked fresh product.
The difference obtained from the standpoint of quality of the product is due to the fact that the invention allows us to reduce the liquid in the packaging (the can) to the utmost minimum and that the deep vacuum allows for the transmission of heat to carry out sterilization by the evaporation-condensation technique in which the rapidity of exchange allows us to obtain sterilization by cooking the product very little. This is unlike the current system of heat transmission by conduction, which makes it necessary to overcook in order to sterilize.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
11 00864 | Mar 2011 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2335260 | Chamberlain | Nov 1943 | A |
3967488 | Hasselbeck et al. | Jul 1976 | A |
4870847 | Kitt | Oct 1989 | A |
4927043 | Vanderlaan | May 1990 | A |
5152417 | Gallagher | Oct 1992 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 975 076 | Oct 2008 | EP |
Entry |
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French Search Report, dated Nov. 17, 2011, from corresponding French application. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120243963 A1 | Sep 2012 | US |