The present invention relates to a screw cap, consisting of a lower part, which comprises a cylindrical threaded tubular section and a terminal flange for attaching to a closed container made from film material, and a cutting sleeve connected to the thread of the lower part by means of a threaded connection.
Screw caps of the kind mentioned above have already been known since the late 1980s. For example, the European patent application EP 0328652 discloses such a cap. Further modifications thereto are disclosed, for example, by the U.S. Pat. No. 5,147,070, the WIPO patent application 99/62776, the WIPO patent application 2004/083055 and many others. Closures of this kind use entraining elements to drive the cutting sleeve, said elements being mounted to the bottom of the top surface of the screw cap. If said screw cap is unscrewed, the cutting sleeve moves simultaneously in a rotary motion which is in the same direction but has opposite axial displacement. In so doing, the cutting sleeve cuts open the closed container, wherein a combined perforating and cutting effect is employed.
Closures of this kind have established themselves in the market and have become an integral part of closed receptacles made from film material. Said receptacles have been to date substantially manufactured from laminated film material which consists of a combination of plastic films, cardboard layers, an aluminum barrier layer and an inner sealing layer made from plastic film. Receptacles consisting of such multi-layer film material are relatively pressure-resistant and have been to date a main stay on the beverage market.
Receptacles have only recently been manufactured from pure plastic film material, said receptacles being substantially more flexible and correspondingly sensitive to pressure. For that reason, not only beverages can now be packaged in such receptacles but also highly viscous liquids, thixotropic liquids or pourable solids. Such contents can in fact be dispensed in a metered manner by pressure being exerted on the receptacle when the closure is open and in so doing reducing the interior volume. A controlled, metered dispensing is, however, difficult to achieve. In particular if the receptacle is still practically completely full, the user has to lift the same. In so doing, a more or less strong pressure is automatically exerted on said receptacle depending on the weight of the filled receptacle. Because the screw cap is completely screwed off with the screw closures comprising a cutting sleeve known to date, the complete passageway in the cutting sleeve is open and the chance is extremely great that the liquid spills out merely by lifting the receptacle.
A plurality of the most different shapes of metering closures is also available on the market. Said metering closures have metering openings, wherein the metering opening can correspondingly be opened or closed in a more or less strong manner or even wherein the feed to the metering opening can more or less be opened with, for example, a valve piston.
Screw caps of the kind mentioned above, which have a cutting sleeve with which the container, on which the screw closure is mounted, can be severed and thereby opened, have not been provided up until now with a metering closure. It is now the aim of the present invention to remedy this situation.
This aim is met by a screw cap of the kind mentioned at the beginning of the application, in which screw cap the cutting sleeve protrudes beyond the lower part and a lateral metering opening as well as an internal thread, in which a valve piston is situated that closes and opens the lateral metering opening, is located in the region where the cutting sleeve protrudes beyond the lower part. In so doing, the valve piston engages in a sealing manner into the cutting sleeve in the region below the lateral metering opening.
Such a screw cap is preferably embodied such that the cutting sleeve is designed to have double walls below the lateral metering opening, comprising an unthreaded inner lateral wall having a terminal cutting edge and an outer lateral wall having internal thread which mesh with the thread on the lower part, and such that the outer lateral wall is shorter in an axial direction than the height of the cylindrical tubular section of the lower part. In this way, the cutting sleeve can now be grasped from the outside and actuated by hand independently of the screwing movement of a screw cap. Whereas the container can thus be opened while the screw cap is still closed, the danger does not exist that liquid is already squeezed out of the container during opening.
Further advantageous embodiments of the subject matter of the invention emerge from the additional dependent patent claims and their importance and mode of operation is explained in the description with reference to the attached drawings.
A preferred exemplary embodiment of the subject matter of the invention is depicted in the drawings. In the drawings:
The self-opening screw cap is denoted in its entirety with the reference numeral 1. The same screw cap could however be just as well referred to as a metering closure because the invention relates to a combination of a self-opening screw cap and a metering closure. The inventive screw cap consists of four components, namely a lower part 2, a cutting sleeve 3, a spacing means 4 and a valve piston 5 which is designed as a rotary handle in the uppermost region, wherein only this part is visible in the assembled state. The screw cap of interest here is, as previously mentioned, mounted on a closed container made of film. To this end, the lower part 2 comprises an outwardly protruding, circumferential flange 21. The cutting sleeve 3 has a lateral metering opening 31, which in this case is implemented relatively large as a square window. Prior to initial use, the spacing means 4 is still present, which can be embodied either as a spacing ring or as a tamperproof strip 40. On the one hand, the terminal top surface 52 and on the other hand the circumferential apron 53 which engages over the cutting sleeve in the upper region can be seen here as parts of the valve piston. Said apron 53 serves as a gripping surface and is accordingly provided with ribbing 54.
The individual parts of said screw cap will now be described below in detail with reference to
The lower part 2 comprises a tubular section 20 at the bottom of which a flange 21 oriented radially outwards is integrally formed in a terminal position. An external thread 22 is applied to the outside of the tubular section 20. The lower part 2 can be adhesively bonded or welded to the closed container. If the closed container relates particularly to a tubular bag made from plastic film, the lower part 2 is preferably welded to said tubular bag. This usually takes place by means of ultrasonic welding. A spacing means 4 can now be placed over the tubular section 20 of the lower part 2, said spacing means 4 approximately bridging the distance between the flange 21 and the external thread 22. In the example depicted here, the spacing means 4 is a spacing ring which can be pushed over the external thread with a slight amount of elongation. Prior to the initial opening of the container, said spacing ring 40 must be removed. To this end, a pull-off tab 41 is integrally formed to said spacing ring 40.
The next step entails unscrewing the cutting sleeve 3. The cutting sleeve 3 consists of a cylinder 30 which is open at both ends and comprises a lateral metering opening 31. The region above the metering opening 31 is referred to here as the valve cylinder region. The cutting sleeve 3 is double-walled below the metering opening 31. This double-walled region is denoted with the reference numeral 33. The inner lateral wall, which cannot be seen here, represents the linear continuation of the valve cylinder region 32. Said inner lateral wall 35 has cutting means 38 at the lower end, by means of which the closed container, on which the screw cap is mounted, can be cut open. Prior to the initial use of the screw cap, said cutting means 38 lie completely within the region of the tubular section 20 of the lower part 2. The outer lateral wall 34 of the double-walled region 33 can particularly be recognized in
In
The valve piston 5 is embodied as a hollow cylinder 55 and has an external thread 56 on the upper end thereof, which matches the internal thread 39 of the cutting sleeve. The hollow cylinder 55 of the valve piston 5 has a circumferential stop lip 51 which ensures that the valve piston 5 cannot be completely screwed out of the cutting sleeve 3. In the maximally open position, said circumferential stop lip 51 strikes against the upper edge of the lateral metering opening. In addition, a circumferential groove can be located at the same height in the cutting sleeve 3, in which the stop lip engages in the uppermost position.
The function of the inventive screw cap will now be explained once again with reference to
The user can now grasp the gripping area of the apron 53 and rotate the valve piston 5 upwards. In so doing, the external thread 56 on the hollow cylinder 55 runs in the internal thread 39 of the cutting sleeve 3 above the metering opening 31. Below said internal thread 39 but above the metering opening 31, a circumferential sealing bead 60 oriented to the inside is mounted to the cutting sleeve 3. The valve piston 5 can be rotated upwards to such an extent that the circumferential stop lip 51 comes to rest on the upper edge of the metering opening 31. In the example depicted here, a closed formed-out area 61 is also provided diametrically opposite the metering opening 31. Said closed formed-out area 61 is formed by the outer lateral wall 34, which is extended in an axial direction and on which, at the height of the upper edge of the metering opening 31, the connection of said outer lateral wall to the upper region of the cylinder 30, which is open at both ends, is established by a shoulder 62 oriented to the inside.
Instead of the closed formed-out area 61, the outer lateral wall 34 can also be generally and circumferentially drawn up to the specified shoulder 62, which runs at the height of the upper edge of the metering opening. This is however not suitable in this case because during closing, a residual volume would be present below said shoulder 62, from which a still considerable residual quantity of the contents would subsequently flow after closing. Such a subsequent flow of the contents cannot take place with the closed formed-out area 61 selected here. The preferred embodiment depicted here comprising the closed configuration diametrically opposite the metering opening 31 can also be realized by means of injection molding with a single lateral slider.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 080 920.1 | Aug 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/061656 | 6/19/2012 | WO | 00 | 2/11/2014 |