Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6257785
-
Patent Number
6,257,785
-
Date Filed
Friday, August 6, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 10, 200123 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 401 7
- 401 266
- 401 261
- 401 201
- 401 264
- 401 25
- 015 227
- 015 10493
- 015 10494
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A semi-enclosed, substance delivery applicator comprising: (a) a three-dimensional structure having outermost surface features and spaces between the outermost surface features for containing a substance, the substance having a level internal to the outermost surface features such that the substance is protected from inadvertent contact with external surfaces, the three-dimensional structure forming at least a portion of a semi-enclosed applicator body having at least one opening and an internal cavity; and (b) a substance, having substantial resistance to flow prior to delivery to a target surface, occupying the spaces of the three-dimensional structure, the substance remaining protected until the three dimensional structure is sufficiently deformed into a substantially two dimensional structure and the substance is thereby exposed to contact a surface of an object without compliance of the surface being necessary, the substance having an effective viscosity upon activation which permits the substance to be liberated from the location and dispensed onto the surface of the object. The substance may be dispensed inwardly of the applicator, outwardly of the applicator, or both. The applicator may take the form of a glove or mitt.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a semi-enclosed applicator containing a substance for application to the surface of a target object. The target object may be placed within the applicator for application of the substance, or the applicator may be utilized as an implement with an extremity placed therein to apply the substance to a target object located externally of the applicator, or both. More particularly, the present invention relates to such applicators wherein the substance may be released from the applicator material and distributed upon the surface of the target object.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In the art of dispensing, articles have been developed which are coated or impregnated with useful substances intended to be utilized when the article is contacted with a target surface. While there are advantages with having the substance present on or near the surface of such articles, there is often the drawback that the useful substance is unprotected and is subject to inadvertent contact before intended use. Inadvertent contact may lead to contamination of the substance, loss of the substance onto surfaces other than the desired target surface, and/or contamination of such other surfaces with the substance. Moreover, the use of such articles to manually apply a substance to a surface of an object frequently results in exposure of a user's hands to the substance. At the very least such a scenario results in a waste of product and is undesirable from an aesthetic standpoint and, at worst, results in excessive exposure of the user to potentially harmful, toxic, or otherwise undesirable substances.
More recently, sheet materials have been developed which utilize a threedimensional structure which is activatible by a user to deliver a substance onto a target surface. While such sheet materials are believed to provide many advantages in relation to other types of delivery systems, the usefulness of non-structured sheets of material for certain applications is limited by the need of the user to grasp and control the sheet material during the process of applying the substance to the target surface. Depending upon the nature of the target surface and the substance to be applied, difficulties in controlling a generic sheet of material can lead to messiness and/or waste of the substance.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide an applicator for applying a substance to a target surface which permits greater control by the user during the application process.
It would also be desirable to provide such an applicator which permits the user to apply a substance to a target surface with reduced messiness and waste of the substance.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a semi-enclosed, substance delivery applicator comprising: (a) a three-dimensional structure having outermost surface features and spaces between the outermost surface features for containing a substance, the substance having a level internal to the outermost surface features such that the substance is protected from inadvertent contact with external surfaces, the three-dimensional structure forming at least a portion of a semi-enclosed applicator body having at least one opening and an internal cavity; and (b) a substance, having substantial resistance to flow prior to delivery to a target surface, occupying the spaces of the three-dimensional structure, the substance remaining protected until the three dimensional structure is sufficiently deformed into a substantially two dimensional structure and the substance is thereby exposed to contact a surface of an object without compliance of the surface being necessary, the substance having an effective viscosity upon activation which permits the substance to be liberated from the location and dispensed onto the surface of the object. The substance may be dispensed inwardly of the applicator, outwardly of the applicator, or both. The applicator may take the form of a glove or mitt.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
While the specification concludes with claims which particularly point out and distinctly claim the present invention, it is believed that the present invention will be better understood from the following description of preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals identify identical elements and wherein:
FIG. 1
is a plan view of a preferred embodiment of a semi-enclosed applicator in accordance with the present invention, in the form of a glove;
FIG. 2
is a plan view of a preferred embodiment of the present invention, disclosing a piece of material having truncated conical protrusions which protect a substance therein or therebetween from contact with external surfaces;
FIG. 3
is an enlarged partial plan view of the material of
FIG. 2
, showing an array of protrusions;
FIG. 4
is an elevational sectional view of the material of
FIG. 3
, taken along section line
4
—
4
, showing the substance located on both sides of the formed material, both substances being protected by the same standoff protrusions;
FIG. 5
is another embodiment of a material in accordance with the present invention, including a porous material spanning the protected substance;
FIG. 6
is another embodiment of a semi-enclosed applicator in accordance with the present invention, in the form of a mitt; and
FIG. 7
is yet another embodiment of a semi-enclosed applicator in accordance with the present invention, in the form of a flexible bag which is convertible to a fully-enclosed applicator.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
As used herein, the term “hand article”, refers to a covering for the hand or portion of the hand such as a finger or thumb. The term “disposable” is used herein to describe hand articles which are not intended to be restored or reused (i.e., they are intended to be discarded after a single use, and preferably, to be recycled, composted or otherwise disposed of in an environmentally compatible manner). As used herein the term “glove” refers to a covering for the hand having separate sections for each finger. As used herein, the term “mitt” refers to a covering for the hand having an enclosure that leaves the fingers unseparated and that may include space for the thumb in the main enclosure, or provide space for the thumb in a separate enclosure for the thumb, or may not include a thumb enclosure at all. While the terms “glove” and “mitt” have been defined with respect to the human hand, similar structures could be utilized to cover or enclose other elements of human anatomy, such as foot coverings, head coverings, or condoms, or other items for which coverings of a particular shape are preferred. As used herein the term “dimple” means a depression or indentation on a surface. As used herein the term “extension force” refers to forces applied by hand movements to a surface to extend and/or bend that surface linearly and/or curvilinearly.
The term “semi-enclosed applicator” is intended to refer to an applicator device having at least one externally-accessible internal cavity for receiving an article to be treated or a portion of human anatomy such as a hand so that the applicator device may be used as an implement. A glove or mitt would be an example of such a semi-enclosed applicator in the context of the present invention. Semi-enclosed applicators frequently may be convertible to a fully-enclosed applicator via the use of a closure device, such that the internal cavity is fully-enclosed and no longer open to the outside. A storage bag with a sliding mechanical closure would be an example of a fully-enclosed structure similar to applicators in the context of the present invention.
A preferred embodiment of a semi-enclosed applicator of the present invention in the form of a hand article is the disposable glove
100
shown in FIG.
1
.
FIG. 1
is a plan view of the glove
100
of the present invention in its flat-out state with portions of the glove
100
being cut-away to more clearly show the construction of the glove
100
. The glove
100
comprises a front panel
160
, a back panel
170
, and a periphery
150
wherein front panel
160
and back panel
170
meet and preferably form a seamless connection. The term “seamless” refers to a surface having substantially no discernible grooves, ridges, indentations or any other irregular surfaces which would be readily discernible to the eye and/or touch. The front panel
160
has an inner surface
161
and an outer surface
162
(not shown) that is opposite to the inner surface
161
. The back panel
170
has an inner surface (not shown) and an outer surface
172
that is opposite to the inner surface. As shown in
FIG. 1
, the glove is assembled such that the inner surfaces
161
and are positioned facing or adjacent to one another. The inner surfaces
161
and comprise that portion of the glove
100
positioned adjacent to a wearer's hand during use. Inner surface is meant to be worn adjacent to the back of a wearer's hand, and inner surface
161
is meant to be worn adjacent to the palm side or front of a wearer's hand. The outer surfaces
162
and
172
comprise those portions of the glove which are positioned away from the wearer's hand during use. The glove
10
shown in
FIG. 1
comprises separate front and back panels
160
and
170
, respectively, secured together about the periphery
150
to define an opening
155
.
If desired, the glove
100
may be a differentially extensible hand article wherein at least a portion of the glove extends and/or contracts about a wearer's hand and/or wrist without the use of traditional elastic such as natural or synthetic rubber. By the term “differentially extensible” or “differential extensibility” it is meant herein to describe that quality of extensibility wherein portions of the glove extend or contract independently of other portions in response to varying hand sizes and motions. Preferably, this differential extensibility allows a range of hand sizes to fit comfortably within the glove. The glove
100
may be provided with differential extensibility by utilizing a structural elastic-like film web such as those described in commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,518,801, issued to Chappell, et al. on May 21, 1996, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,650,214, issued Jul. 22, 1997 in the names of Anderson et al., and commonly-assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/635,220, filed Apr. 17, 1996 in the names of Davis et al., entitled “Fitted Glove”, the disclosures of each of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference. Alternatively, differential extensibility to fit varying sized hands comfortably can be accomplished by various elastic-like materials, composite materials that produce elastic-like characteristics and/or processes to make a material(s) more elastic-like. As used herein, the term “elastic-like” describes the behavior of web materials such as web materials which, when subjected to an applied elongation, extend in the direction of applied elongation. Also, when the applied elongation is released the web materials return, to a substantial degree, to their untensioned condition. The term “web” as used herein refers to a sheet-like material comprising a single layer of material or a laminate of two or more layers.
In use, a wearer inserts his/her hand into the glove
100
at the opening
155
thus partially to fully enclosing the hand. As the hand fits into the glove
100
, the back panel
170
expands and contracts around the back of the hand as necessary to produce a snug, yet unconstricted, fit about a wearer's hand without the use of traditional elastics. As used herein, the term “snug” describes a close fit of the glove
100
that does not substantially restrict the motion of a wearer's hand. The term “unconstricted” as used herein refers to a type of resistance to extension that would not significantly impede or retard normal motion of one's hand.
In all glove embodiments disclosed herein, the first or inner surface of the back panel
170
and/or the second or outer surface of the front panel
160
can comprise a fibrous material such as paper or non-woven material which can function as an absorbent and/or a deliverer of embedded substances. Embedded substances can include surfactant, water, alcohol, lotion, antiperspirant, medicine, cleaning agents, bleach or any mixture of the foregoing.
In a preferred embodiment, the front panel
160
and the back panel
170
are fitted together such that there is a seamless construction at the periphery
150
which, when formed, comprises edge of connection
121
along the front panel
160
and edge of connection
122
along the back panel
170
. This can be accomplished by many methods. One method is to graft an additional layer of polyethylene film over the periphery
150
(
FIG. 1
) and heat seal the graft in place. Another method is to overlap (i.e., fold over) the connection edges
121
and
122
such that the edges
121
and
122
do not connect to one-another but rather, connection edge
121
is sealed to the first surface of the back panel
170
and the connection edge
122
is sealed to the second surface of the front panel
160
. This overlap method can be accomplished by heat sealing, adhesives and/or other attachment means known in the art for fitting together polyethylene films. Truly seamless unitarily formed gloves may also be formed by dipping a form into a liquid material and cooling or curing the material to form the finished product.
In accordance with the present invention, the semi-enclosed applicator represented by the glove
100
is at least partially comprised of a selectively-activatible sheet material which may be activated to deliver a substance initially protected from inadvertant contact to a surface of an object placed within the applicator, to an external surface or object when the applicator is utilized as an implement, or both. For example, an applicator in the form of a glove could apply a substance inwardly to condition or treat a hand while also serving to apply a substance outwardly onto external surfaces or objects for cleaning, polishing, or coating the surfaces or objects.
As utilized herein, the term “selectively activatible” is used to refer to materials which exhibit substantially non-active properties when brought into contact with target surfaces until some action is taken by a user to “activate” the material to expose and dispense a substance. Accordingly, selectively-activatible properties differ from permanently-active strips of material which either maintain the substance in a permanently-deployed orientation or rely upon removal of liner materials (typically silicone-coated paper strips or films) or wrappings such as bags, boxes, or containers, to expose the substance for use.
Although materials in accordance with the present invention may be provided with two active sides or surfaces, if desired for particular applications, in accordance with the present invention it is presently preferred to provide such material with only one active side and one inactive or inert side. Under some circumstances it may be acceptable or desirable to design the sheet material so as to form an intermittent or discontinuous layer of substance on its active surface, while in other circumstances the sheet material be designed so as to exhibit a continuous layer of substance on its active side. For some applications it may also be desirable to provide multiple products on a single side of the material, deposited in discrete discontinuous cells or regions (e.g., co-dispensing epoxies, catalyzed reactions, etc.).
One such material of current interest for use in accordance with the present invention comprises a three-dimensional, conformable web comprising an active substance on at least one surface protected from external contact by the threedimensional surface topography of the base material. After activation, such materials form a substance delivery system which delivers the substance to the target surface. Such materials comprise a polymeric or other sheet material which is embossed/debossed to form a pattern of raised “dimples” on at least one surface which serve as stand-offs to prevent a substance therebetween or therein from contacting external surfaces until the stand-offs are deformed to render the structure more two-dimensional. Representative structures, as well as methods and apparatus for manufacturing them, are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,662,758, issued Sep. 2, 1997 to Hamilton and McGuire, entitled “Composite Material Releasably Sealable to a Target Surface When Pressed Thereagainst and Method of Making”; 5,871,607, issued Feb. 16, 1999 to Hamilton and McGuire, entitled “Material Having A Substance Protected by Deformable Standoffs and Method of Making”; 5,965,235, issued Oct. 12, 1999 to McGuire, Tweddell, and Hamilton, entitled “Three-Dimensional, Nesting-Resistant Sheet Materials and Method and Apparatus for Making Same”; 6,194,062, issued Feb. 27, 2001 to Hamilton and McGuire, entitled “Improved Storage Wrap Materials”; 5,968,633, issued Oct. 19, 1999 to Hamilton, McGuire, Tweddell, and Otten, entitled “Selectively-Activatible Sheet Material For Dispensing and Dispersing a Substance Onto a Target Surface”; and 6,099,940, issued Aug. 8, 2000 to Hamilton and McGuire, entitled “Selectively-Activatible Three-Dimensional Sheet Material Having Multi-Stage Progressive Activation to Deliver a Substance to a Target Surface”. The disclosures of each of these patents and applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
FIGS. 2-4
illustrate a representative embodiment of a material useful in applicators according to the present invention, which comprises a three-dimensional sheet-like structure generally indicated as
10
. Material
10
includes a deformed material
12
having hollow protrusions
14
and a layer of substance
16
located between protrusions
14
. Protrusions
14
are preferably conical in shape with truncated or domed outermost ends
18
. In the embodiment of
FIGS. 2-4
, protrusions
14
are equally spaced in an equilateral triangular pattern, all extending from the same side of the material. Preferably, the protrusions
14
have heights which are less than their diameters, so that when they deform, they deform by substantially inverting and/or crushing along an axis which is substantially perpendicular to a plane of the material. This protrusion shape and mode of deforming discourages protrusions
14
from folding over in a direction parallel to a plane of the material so that the protrusions cannot block substance between them from contact with a target surface.
In the configuration shown in
FIG. 4
, the substance
16
adheres to and partially fills the valleys between the plurality of hollow protrusions in the first side
13
of the piece of material and also fills the depressions in the second side
15
of the piece of material. The embodiment of
FIG. 4
is representative of an optional configuration wherein both sides of the material are capable of dispensing a substance, while a substance could be omitted from one side or the other to create a configuration wherein only one side of the material carries and dispenses a substance. The substances on respective sides of the material in a dual-dispensing configuration could have the same or diverse compositions and characteristics.
With regard to the first side of the material, in the limiting circumstance, the substance fills the valleys to a point at or slightly below the highest point of the protrusions, particularly if a meniscus is formed wherein the substance decreases in thickness with increasing distance from the surface of the protrusions. The substance has a surface below the outermost ends of the plurality of hollow protrusions, so that when a portion of the first side of the piece of deformable material is placed against a target surface, the plurality of hollow protrusions prevent contact between the substance and the target surface until the portion is deformed at the target surface.
With regard to the second side of the material, in the limiting circumstance, the substance fills the depressions to a point at or slightly below the uppermost edge of the depressions, particularly if a meniscus is formed wherein the substance decreases in thickness with increasing distance from the surface of the depressions. The substance has a surface below the outermost edge of the plurality of depressions, so that when a portion of the second side of the piece of deformable material is placed against a target surface, the plurality of depressions prevent contact between the substance and the target surface until the portion is deformed at the target surface.
Sheet materials utilized as a carrier material may be made from films comprising homogeneous resins or blends thereof. Single or multiple layers within the film structure are contemplated, whether co-extruded, extrusion-coated, laminated or combined by other known means. The key attribute of the sheet material is that it be formable to produce protrusions and valleys. Useful resins include polyethylene, polypropylene, PET, PVC, PVDC, latex structures, nylon, etc. Polyolefins are generally preferred due to their lower cost and ease of forming. Other suitable materials include aluminum foil, coated (waxed, etc.) and uncoated paper, coated and uncoated nonwovens, scrims, meshes, wovens, nonwovens, and perforated or porous films, and combinations thereof.
Further, the sheet materials may permit vapors to escape from the interior of the applicator and/or enter the applicator (i.e., be breathable) while still preventing liquids from passing therethrough.
Materials regarded as “breathable” in the context of the present invention include not only those materials which are apertured, microapertured, or otherwise rendered physically porous, but also substantially non-porous “monolithic” polymeric materials (typically films) made from such materials as polyurethanes, block poly-ether-amides, block polyesters, EVA, ethylene/acrylic esther copolymers, and PVP copolymers. Suitable materials include films formed from a block polyether copolymer such as a block polyether ester copolymer, a polyetheramide copolymer, a polyurethane copolymer, a poly(etherimide) ester copolymer, polyvinyl alcohols, or a combination thereof. Preferred copolyether ester block copolymers are segmented elastomers having soft polyether segments and hard polyester segments, as disclosed in Hagman, U.S. Pat. No. 4,739,012. Suitable copolyether ester block copolymers are sold by DuPont under the name Hytrel®. Hytrel® is a registered trademark of DuPont. Suitable copolyether amide polymers are copolyamides available under the name Pebax® from Atochem Inc. of Glen Rock, N.J., USA. Pebax® is a registered trademark of Elf Atochem, S.A. of Paris, France. Suitable polyurethanes are thermoplastic urethanes available under the name Estane® from The B.F. Goodrich Company of Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Suitable copoly(etherimide) esters are described in Hoeschele et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,868,062. Such materials are regarded as breathable in contrast to substantially non-breathable materials such as non-apertured polyethylene films. Breathability may be determined by any suitable test method, such as, for example, the ASTM E-96 “Upright Cup” method. The substance delivery systems of the present invention, as described in detail below, are believed to provide particular advantages in terms of unoccluded breathable surface area versus conventional substance delivery systems.
In the present invention, the term “substance” can mean a flowable substance which is substantially non-flowing prior to delivery to a target surface. “Substance” can also mean a material which doesn't flow at all, such as a fibrous or other interlocking material. “Substance” may mean a fluid or a solid. “Substance” is defined in this invention as any material capable of being held in open valleys and/or depressions of a three dimensional structure. Adhesives, electrostatics, mechanical interlocking, capillary attraction, surface adsorption, van der Waals forces, and friction, for example, may be used to hold the substances in the valleys and/or depressions. The substances are intended to be at least partially released therefrom when exposed to contact with external surfaces or when the three dimensional structure is deformed, heated, or otherwise activated. Of current interest in the present invention include substances such as gels, pastes, foams, powders, agglomerated particles, prills, microencapsulated liquids, waxes, suspensions, liquids, and combinations thereof.
The term “deformable material” is intended to include foils, polymer sheets, cloth, wovens or nonwovens, paper, cellulose fiber sheets, co-extrusions, laminates, and combinations thereof. The properties of a selected deformable material can include, though are not restricted to, combinations or degrees of being: porous, non-porous, microporous, gas or liquid permeable, non-permeable, hydrophilic, hydrophobic, hydroscopic, oleophilic, oleophobic, high critical surface tension, low critical surface tension, surface pre-textured, elastically yieldable, plastically yieldable, electrically conductive, and electrically non-conductive.
In accordance with the present invention, the substance utilized in combination with the deformable material exhibits a selection of physical properties which enable it to be dispensed from its protected orientation within the threedimensional structure and applied to the target surface. Such dispensation may be partial, or substantially or totally complete in nature.
To facilitate such dispensing, substance properties which are believed to be important include the relative affinity of the substance for the target surface versus that for the deformable material and the apparent viscosity or flowability of the substance after activation of the three-dimensional structure. It is presently believed that the substance should preferentially adhere to the target surface to a greater extent than to the deformable material and/or to a greater extent than for other portions of the substance itself. Said differently, the substance has a greater affinity for the target surface than for itself and/or for the deformable sheet material.
Substances may inherently possess viscosity and flow characteristics which permit their liberation from their protected location within the sheet material or may require viscosity modification to permit liberation and dispersal. Viscosity modification may be obtained by the selection of substances which undergo a change in viscosity in response to the mode of activation selected. For example, for a mechanical activation such as a compressive force it may be desirable, and preferably, to employ substances which are commonly referred to as “shear-thinning” (pseudoplastic) substances. Examples of such substances include polymer solutions, many gels and pastes such as dentrifice and body creams, paints, gelled wood stains, etc. Other materials behave as shear-thinning materials only after a certain threshold shear (yield stress) is reached or exceeded. Such materials are commonly referred to as Bingham plastic materials, and one common example of a substance exhibiting such behavior is the type of condiment known as ketchup. Substances which are thermally-responsive (i.e., reduce/change viscosity in response to changes in temperature) may also be employed, such as substances (petrolatum, etc.) which exhibit lower viscosity with increased temperature produced by mechanical friction or other sources.
Some of the factors believed to influence the adhesion or affinity of the substance for the target surface include: electrostatic or electrical charges; chemical bonds via hydrogen bonding, covalent bonding, ionic bonding, partial ionic bonds (partial dipolar attraction), van der Walls forces, osmotic forces, etc.; capillary pressure (suction); adsorption; absorption; vacuum/suction; etc. Other important factors include the wettability of the substance upon the target surface, as reflected by the contact angle of the substance on the target surface.
To facilitate spreading or dispersal of the substance upon the target surface, particularly to counteract the tendency of the substance to remain in a localized distribution pattern given the localized orientation upon the deformable substance, it is presently preferred to utilize substances which are tailored so as to be wettable on the target surface. Other factors which may aid in dispersion or distribution of the substance upon the target surface include the use of substances which exhibit a shear-thinning behavior, as well as mechanical spreading action provided by the user of the composite sheet material to impart a lateral mechanical motion after activation but prior to removal of the deformable material from the target surface. Such lateral mechanical action may also provide additional interaction with the substance such as for shear-thinning substances and may provide additional benefits such as lathering, foam generation, scrubbing/abrasive action, etc.
Successful dispersal occurs when a portion of the deposited or dispensed substance subsequently coats a portion of the target surface where the substance was not originally deposited. Upon removal of the sheet material from the target surface, at least some of the substance remains located on the target surface, preferably in a substantially-uniform fashion.
As discussed above, a wide variety of substances may be selected for use in accordance with the principles of the present invention. Representative substances for illustrative purposes include cleansing agents such as soaps and detergents, emollients such as lotions, medicinal agents such as ointments, anti-inflammatory creams, etc., health and beauty care products, including antiperspirants, deodorants, cosmetics, fragrances, and the like. Other more diverse applications for such a sheet material include applicators for automotive and household products such as lubricants, colorants, protectants such as oils and waxes, adhesives, preservatives, and the like, as well as food-oriented applications such as condiments (mustard, ketchup, etc.).
Multiple substances may also be employed which are not only protected from inadvertent contact but segregated from one another initially (on the same face of, or on opposing faces of, the sheet material) and be commingled during the activation process or during subsequent dispensing and/or dispersion operations. Such an arrangement may be particularly useful for substances which beneficially interact with one another (e.g., co-dispensing epoxies, catalyzed reactions, etc.) to provide additional functionality with each other and/or with the target surface.
FIG. 5
depicts another embodiment of a material in accordance with the present invention, structurally similar to that depicted in
FIG. 4
, including protrusions
158
with outermost ends
164
and lands
162
therebetween. However, in addition to the structural elements of
FIG. 4
the material of
FIG. 5
includes an additional structural element in the form of one or more layers of a porous material
165
which overlies the protected substance
152
from the side opposite to that protected by the sheet material
155
. Porous material
165
may be any material sufficiently porous as to not block or significantly impair the ability of the substance
152
to be dispensed from the sheet material onto the target surface, against which the porous material would be placed. Porous materials may comprise, as depicted in
FIG. 5
, a fibrous material such as a woven or nonwoven material, a scrim or meshlike material, a porous or apertured film or the like, of similar or diverse composition to that of the sheet material itself. Any of the aforementioned types of sheet-like materials may be utilized. The inclusion of such a porous material provides additional protection for the substance prior to activation of the sheet material and may provide additional distributive benefit to more evenly disperse the substance onto the target surface particularly when translational motion of the sheet material is also employed. The porous material may also provide additional interaction with the substance such as for shear-thinning substances and may provide additional benefits such as lathering or foam generation, etc. One application envisioned for such a structure would be a cleansing cloth which provides its own source of cleansing agent. The porous material may also contain a substance for distribution, which may desirably interact with, augment, or otherwise be usable in conjunction with the substance within the three-dimensional sheet material.
FIG. 6
shows a mitt
15
comprising a back panel
22
connected to a front panel
21
that defines a hollow interior into which a hand may be inserted through opening
55
. The back panel
22
and the front panel
21
are connected along a portion of the periphery
45
. The back panel
22
further comprises an outer surface
32
and an inner surface
33
that is opposite the outer surface
32
and is immediately adjacent to the back of a user's hand during use. The front panel
21
also further comprises an outer surface (not shown) and an inner surface
35
that is opposite the outer surface and is immediately adjacent to the palm of a user's hand during use. Thus a wearer's hand is covered by the interior surfaces of the front panel
21
and back panel
22
for application of a substance contained within the sheet material of the front and/or back panels. As show in
FIG. 6
, surface embossments may be utilized for desirable stretch or tactile properties, or as part of the dispensing function comparatively more elongated protrusions may be employed than those depicted in
FIGS. 1-4
.
In use, a wearer of the mitt
15
inserts a hand into the hollow interior through the provided opening
55
wherein the back panel
22
contacts the back of the wearer's hand and the inner surface
35
of the front panel
21
contacts the wearer's palm. As the construction of the mitt
15
is more generic than a glove with defined anatomically-conforming geometry, the mitt may be used for either hand and/or may be appropriately sized to fit the foot of a wearer or any other bodily extremity. As discussed previously, shape-corresponding applicators like the glove of
FIG. 1
may be designed and adapted for various uses such as foot or head coverings, or condoms, or more generically-shaped applicators like mitt
15
may likewise be designed for many applications.
If desired, at the end of its use, the mitt can be everted by making a fist with the mitt-hand, pulling the structure over the fist from the back edge
40
of the mitt
15
. Thus the layers are transposed, and the inner surface
35
of the front panel
21
and the inner surface
33
of the back panel
22
become the outer surfaces of the now waste article. More simply stated, the mitt is turned inside out after its use and then thrown away. That is, the wearer makes a fist, and with his or her other hand, grasps a point on the back edge
40
and carefully pulls the fisted hand toward the open mouth of the mitt
15
, until the entire end of the mitt
15
is pulled through the opening
55
.
FIG. 7
depicts a representative embodiment of a flexible bag
20
suitable for use as a semi-enclosed applicator which is convertible to a fully-enclosed applicator according to the present invention. In the embodiment depicted in
FIG. 7
, the flexible bag
20
includes a bag body formed from a piece of flexible sheet material folded upon itself along fold line
22
and bonded to itself along side seams
24
and
26
to form a semi-enclosed container having an opening along edge
28
. Flexible bag
20
also includes closure means
30
located adjacent to edge
28
for sealing edge
28
to form a fully-enclosed container or vessel. Closure means
30
may be selectively openable, sealable, and resealable, and may be constructed in any known fashion utilizing any closure configuration, such as folds, pleats, adhesives, or mechanical interlocking closures such as ribs, beads, and grooves, which are known in the art. Bags such as the flexible bag
20
of
FIG. 7
can be also constructed from a continuous tube of sheet material, thereby eliminating side seams
24
and
26
and substituting a bottom seam for fold line
22
.
Flexible bag
20
is suitable for containing and protecting a wide variety of materials and/or objects contained within the bag body and applying a substance to them as described above.
FIG. 7
depicts the bag
20
in an open condition wherein the closure means
30
has been released such that edge
28
may be opened to admit materials and/or objects into the interior of the bag body portion of the bag
20
. In
FIG. 7
a plurality of generic solid objects
99
are shown within the bag
20
.
Once the desired sheet materials are manufactured in any desirable and suitable manner, comprising all or part of the materials to be utilized for the bag body, the bag may be constructed in any known and suitable fashion such as those known in the art for making such bags in commercially available form. Heat or adhesive sealing technologies may be utilized to join various components or elements of the bag to themselves or to each other. In addition, the bag bodies may be thermoformed, blown, or otherwise molded rather than reliance upon folding and bonding techniques to construct the bag bodies from a web or sheet of material. Two recent U.S. Patents which are illustrative of the state of the art with regard to flexible storage bags similar in overall structure to those depicted in
FIGS. 1 and 2
but of the types currently available are U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,554,093, issued Sep. 10, 1996 to Porchia et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,575,747, issued Nov. 19, 1996 to Dais et al.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, and it is intended to cover in the appended claims all such modifications that are within the scope of the invention.
Claims
- 1. A semi-enclosed, substance delivery applicator comprising:(a) a sheet of material formed into a three-dimensional structure having a first side and a second side, said first side having outermost surface features and spaces therebetween said outermost surface features for containing a substance, said substance having a level internal to said outermost surface features such that said substance is protected from inadvertent contact with external surfaces, said three-dimensional structure forming at least a portion of a semi-enclosed applicator body having at least one opening and an internal cavity; and (b) a substance having substantial resistance to flow prior to delivery to a target surface, occupying said spaces of said first side, said substance remaining protected until said three-dimensional structure is sufficiently deformed into a substantially two-dimensional structure and said substance is thereby exposed to contact a surface of an object without compliance of said surface being necessary, said substance having an effective viscosity upon activation which permits said substance to be liberated from said location and dispensed onto said surface of said object.
- 2. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said spaces are interconnected.
- 3. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said spaces are discrete.
- 4. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said substance exhibits a greater flowability after said three-dimensional structure is deformed.
- 5. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said applicator dispenses said substance inwardly of said applicator toward said cavity.
- 6. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said applicator dispenses said substance outwardly of said applicator.
- 7. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said applicator further comprises a sheet of porous material such that said substance is located between said three-dimensional structure and said sheet of porous material and may be dispensed through said sheet of porous material.
- 8. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said applicator dispenses a substance both inwardly of said applicator toward said cavity and outwardly of said applicator.
- 9. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said substance is selected from the group consisting of cleansing agents, medicinal agents, emollients, lubricants, colorants, preservatives, protectants, condiments, adhesives, fragrances, anti-perspirants, deodorants, and combinations thereof.
- 10. The substance delivery applicator of claim 1, wherein said applicator includes at least two substances of diverse composition.
US Referenced Citations (25)
Foreign Referenced Citations (5)
Number |
Date |
Country |
3545926 A1 |
Jul 1987 |
DE |
0 291 284B1 |
Nov 1988 |
EP |
0 291 284A2 |
Nov 1988 |
EP |
0 294 189A2 |
Dec 1988 |
EP |
2 754 744 |
Apr 1998 |
FR |