The invention relates to dispensing containers. More particularly, the invention relates to dispensing containers for powdered products.
Powdered product is sold in a variety of containers. One exemplary food product is infant formula. Other products include adult meal replacement mixes. Similar containers may be used for household or other chemicals such as powdered detergent, plant food, and so forth.
In recent decades, such products have been sold in containers along with a measuring scoop. In one basic example, the container is a metal can and the scoop is initially packed as loosely within the can. The can is typically sold along with a plastic snap-on cover which is used to close the can once the metal lid is removed (e.g., via can opener).
Such cans have largely been replaced by molded plastic jars with screw-on plastic closures (but also loosely containing a measuring scoop). More recently, dedicated containers have been proposed. In one example, US2006/000840 discloses a molded plastic container having a rounded rectangular planform. The lid includes features for mounting the scoop. The scoop has a round bowl of profile (e.g., radius selected to be complementary to a radius of corner junctions between the sidewall and the base of the container) so as to allow clean scooping of material from the bottom of the container. US2016/000270, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein as if set forth at length, discloses a circular footprint/planform container with scoop dock features on the lid underside.
One aspect of the disclosure involves an assembly of a scoop and a closure. The A scoop has a bowl and a handle. A closure has: a frame for mounting to a container body; a cover; and a scoop dock hinged relative to the frame by a dock hinge and holding the scoop.
Further embodiments may involve any physically possible combination of the claim elements or other disclosed features below.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements. Various of the drawings include artifacts of computer aided design (CAD) such as stitching lines which may be unseen in the actual container but help illustrate shape.
When a prior art container is inverted and shaken for mixing, the powder pushes against the inside of the lid, fills the scoop bowl, and surrounds the scoop handle. The momentum of the powder may distort the lid, which distorts the seals, to cause powder leakage. Also, powder residue may be left on the scoop bowl and scoop handle and lid underside. These problems may be addressed by effectively providing an inner lid and an outer lid and a scoop storage position in the volume between the two.
In an exemplary implementation, the outer lid still provides sealing. In such a situation, the inner lid helps contain the powder but does not necessarily provide a quality seal. Even without providing a seal, the inner lid blunts powder momentum from interfering with the outer lid and reduces the amount of powder that can contact the stored scoop. Nevertheless, the exemplary embodiment involves the inner lid also providing sealing for extra protection, particularly if the outer lid is left open.
The closure 24 comprises a base or frame 26 mounted to the can and a lid/cover 28 (an outer lid/cover as is discussed below) connected to the frame by a living hinge 29 (
The exemplary body 22 (
The frame planform is complementary to the planform of the body to which it mates (e.g., the can top crimp 45 in the example). To establish a frame of reference, the hinge 29 is formed at a rear of the frame. The exemplary frame has a downwardly open channel cross-section for receiving an upper portion of the container (e.g., receiving the top crimp 45).
The frame (
The frame has features for securing the frame to the body. With the exemplary channel like section, these features may comprise radially-inwardly protruding projections 66 (
The cover 28 has a sidewall 100 (
The can or other container may be manufactured/filled by conventional processes.
The exemplary closure as shown consists of three molded pieces plastic. The first piece forms the frame and cover or lid (outer cover or lid) including their living hinge 29 and the latching features. The second piece forms the scoop dock (which may serve as an inner cover or inner lid) including its living hinge 180. The third piece forms the scoop.
In one exemplary process, with the first piece in its as-molded condition, the second piece is installed by a translation. The translation brings the dock hinge tab 186 into the complementary frame slot 190, ultimately into a backlocked condition locked by the tab barb or similar feature. The translation also seats the perimeter wall of the dock in a detented closed condition (e.g., with the inner web/flange 194 of the frame captured between the perimeter bead 204 and the pair of tabs 208).
The scoop may then be installed to the dock.
The cover may then be closed and latched.
Accordingly, this process leaves the scoop assembled to the closure ready for installation to the container body.
An exemplary securing to the container body comprises downwardly pressing the closure onto the body so that the projections 66 pass over and ultimately capture the top crimp. An overwrap and other tamper-evident feature may then be applied. Additionally, the closure itself may have been manufactured with one or more tamper-evident features (not shown).
In use, the user may remove any shrink seal, break any tamper-evident feature, and then unlatch the latch 30 and rotates the cover to an open condition (e.g., to or toward the as-molded condition). The user may then remove the scoop and temporarily store it on the frame latch (e.g., by a slot in the scoop handle receiving a latching projection of the latch). The user may then grasp the fin and lift the dock, initially releasing the detent and then shifting to an open condition, exposing the can top.
At first use, the user may open the pull tab or remove a safety foil or the like. The user may then use the scoop to scoop the contents. Once done, the user may place the empty scoop back on the latch. The user may close the scoop dock via return rotation, ultimately reaching the detented closed condition. The scoop may then be reinstalled to the dock. The cover may then be closed and latched.
The scoop dock may act as an inner cover. In the closed condition, it may block at least enough of the opening to act as a baffle to reduce impact inertia with the cover. However, it may be more extensive to form a seal or near seal, covering 90% or more of the frame opening area, more particularly 95% or more or 99% or more. For example, in the illustrated condition it seals and closes all but a very small area near its hinge. The scoop dock thus allows shaking, inverting, etc. with little if any product passing by the dock and contacting the scoop or inertially impacting the cover in such a way to risk compromising sealing between cover and frame. Other embodiments may provide a full seal of the scoop dock. Variations may have the outer lid with features cooperating with the scoop dock so that closing of the outer lid shifts/seats (detents) the scoop dock into its closed condition.
The closure may be designed as a reengineering of a baseline container such as those shown in US2016/000270.
The second difference is the detenting features of the dock. The first embodiment's continuous perimeter bead 204 is replaced with a lower interrupted bead or segmented short radial flange 320 (
The third difference is that the essentially circular sheet metal pull top (a central portion of the can top removable at a score) is replaced with a removable (peel away) foil 340. The illustrated foil is scored for removal not along a full circumference, but to leave a portion 342 having an edge 344 (
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, when implemented in the modification of an existing container configuration, details of the existing configuration or its use may influence details of any particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Benefit is claimed of U.S. Patent Application No. 62/336,060, filed May 13, 2016, and entitled “Scoop Dock and Assembly Methods”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety as if set forth at length.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
8651311 | Drummond | Feb 2014 | B1 |
8727149 | Reid | May 2014 | B1 |
20060000840 | Kipperman et al. | Jan 2006 | A1 |
20070102061 | Tsao | May 2007 | A1 |
20100051631 | Blomdahl | Mar 2010 | A1 |
20140299567 | Vogel | Oct 2014 | A1 |
20160000270 | Wiggins et al. | Jan 2016 | A1 |
20160001915 | Wiggins et al. | Jan 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62336060 | May 2016 | US |