Not applicable.
The present invention relates to packages generally, and more particularly to packages assembled from plastic and non-plastic components.
Product packages can advantageously be manufactured from various materials. Molded transparent blisters can retain and position products for examination by the purchaser, while printed paper or cardstock elements can display images which attract the shopper's attention, distinguish and brand the product, and provide helpful or required information about the product's composition or use. Both these components can be fabricated at low cost, and are often disposed of after the product has been extracted or consumed.
The prudent customer can limit the waste stream to landfills by recycling a package which has served its use. In many municipalities recycling streams are maintained for both plastic and paper fiber materials. Yet materials are more effectively recovered when these two types of materials are not mixed. Hence a package which can be readily separated into distinct paper fiber and plastic components is a desirable enhancement to recycling material flows. There are many packaging structures that make this possible. For example, plastic clamshell containers which contain paperboard internal cards or which are ultrasonically sealed to external cards. Yet more options for package configuration and filling would be offered by a package employing adhesively adhered card elements with thermoformed thermoplastic blisters which are in no way adhered to the cards.
The plastic and paper fiber elements of a disposable package are readily separated for recycling by affixing a front card to a rear card with adhesive so as to trap the flange of a thermoformed blister between the two cards without adhering the blister to either card. The flange is generously dimensioned to accommodate the less precise positioning of the blister needed to keep it clear of contact with the card adhesive. Because of the deformable nature of a thermoformed thin-sheet part, the blister can be distorted to extract it out through an opening in the card through which the blister product bubble protrudes.
In order to give the consumer a solid engagement with the blister in order to distort it with respect to the card, the blister has an extraction tab which extends from the product bubble into an opening which is accessible to the consumer from the front and the rear of the package. In this way the consumer can grip the tab, for example between a thumb and forefinger, and securely apply force to the blister to distort it in such a way that the blister flange comes clear of the adhered cards and passes out through the opening in the front card. The distortion required to extract the blister makes it difficult to reinsert the blister between the cards without showing evidence of tampering.
The extraction tab may extend past the periphery of the card, or aligned internal openings may be provided in the front and back cards at a location adjacent the product bubble opening. The blister may have a single product bubble, or more than one, for example allowing two items to be contained with respect to a single arrangement of front and back cards, one projecting on the front, and one on the rear.
In an alternative embodiment, the extraction tab extends above the front card and has a spacer segment which supports a grip segment of the tab spaced from the front card in a manner to allow a consumer to access it from both sides.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a disposable package which is readily broken down into plastic and nonplastic components for recycling.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a blister card package where the blister can be separated from the card for access to the contained product which does not require the use of tools.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a package which combines a thermoformed thermoplastic blister and a backing card without requiring any adhesive connection between the card and blister.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a package with a readily removable blister which is difficult to replace in its original configuration without showing evidence of tampering.
Further objects, features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring more particularly to
The front card 24 may be of a paperboard or fiber material, and will preferably be suitable for printing to enable relevant decorative or informational matter to be displayed in connection with the product. The front card has an exterior surface 42 which is visible to the consumer, and an opposite interior surface 44. The back card 26 has an interior surface 46 which is affixed to the interior surface of the front card 24, for example by an adhesive. The back card 26 has an exterior surface opposite to the interior surface 46. The cards 24, 26 may be of other than wood fiber, for example the back card 26 may be a formed bamboo fiber element.
The blister 30 may be conventionally formed of, for example, PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate), or PETG (Polyethylene Terephthalate Glycol). The blister 30 has a product bubble 32 which projects frontwardly from the flange 28, and which provides a volume forward of the front card 24 for retaining and displaying the product 22. An extraction tab 34 extends outwardly from the product bubble 32, and may be a section of the flange 28, or may be specially formed to have texture to enhance the friction when gripped by a user. The texture may take the form of raised indicia 36 alerting the user to its purpose, with instructions like “pull” written on the tab. The extraction tab 34 has a front surface 35 which is accessible through the front card, and an opposite back surface 37.
The width of the flange 28 is selected to adequately retain the blister trapped between the front card 24 and the rear card 26, and thus may be wider than would be necessary if the flange were simply to be directly affixed to a card. For most applications, the flange will be at least one quarter inch wide, and could be three quarters inch or wider.
The front card 24 has a cut-out bubble opening 38 through which the product bubble 32 extends. The front card bubble opening 38 has an internal perimeter 40 which overlies the flange 28 of the blister and is positioned outwardly from the product bubble 32.
The size of the flange 28 required will depend also on the thickness of the card material; if the material is heavier, a wider flange is required. If the card material is thinner and rips readily, the flange may be narrower. Although not necessary, the ripping of the card material in the extracting of the blister is desirable, as that gives effective evidence of tampering with the package. It will be observed that, the wider the flange is, the more it has to distort in order to clear the card bubble opening. To facilitate tearing, a region of weakened material, such as a one-eighth inch slit (not shown) could be die cut in the front card extending radially outwardly from the bubble opening perimeter, for example perpendicular to the perimeter 40. Such a starter slit would tend to cause the card to rip when a user began to pull on the blister to extract it.
The bubble opening 38 includes a tab front access opening 48 which communicates with an exterior perimeter 50 of the front card 24. As indicated in the stipple pattern of
The back card 26 is provided with a tab back access opening 54, best shown in
When a consumer desires to extract the product 22 from the package 20, the consumer grips the extraction tab 34 between a thumb and index finger while holding the adhered cards 24, 26 in the other hand, and pulls on the extraction tab frontwardly to bring the tab away from the back card and through the tab front access opening 48. The tab 34, being integrally formed with the blister 30, brings the rest of the blister along with it as the bubble 32 is distorted and the blister flange 28 is pulled into the bubble opening 38 and then free of the cards entirely. The blister 30 may come free of the cards without affecting them, or it may cause one or both of the cards to tear. In any event, once separated from the cards the blister 30 is free of any card material, and the cards are free of any plastic blister material. The consumer may then make use of the product 22 while disposing of the plastic and fiber components of the package 20 for processing in separate waste recycling streams.
An alternative embodiment package 60 is shown in
The package 20 is filled with the product, not shown, when the blank is opened up to receive the blister, and the front card is then closed upon the back card. As shown in
It will be noted that the aligned tab access openings 74, 76 may also serve as a hang hole, to permit the package to be supported on a conventional retail peg.
Alternatively, as shown in
An alternative embodiment package 96 is shown in
As best shown in
Both the primary extraction tab 118 and the secondary extraction tab 119 are accessible through their respective front and back openings 120, 126 and 122, 124 and are positioned to be free of the front card and the back card to be accessible for gripping by a user to engage and remove the blister from the front card and the back card. Each of the bubbles can be opened separately, aided by the flexibility of the hinge 115, although to remove the blister entirely from the cards, it will be necessary to tear or separate the cards.
An alternative embodiment package 128, shown in
As shown in
An alternative embodiment package 152 is shown in
An alternative embodiment package 170 is shown in
An alternative embodiment blister 260 is shown in
An alternative embodiment clamshell blister 280 is shown in
An alternative embodiment package 300, as shown in
It is understood that the invention is not limited to the particular construction and arrangement of parts herein illustrated and described, but embraces all such modified forms thereof as come within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 17/133,272, filed Dec. 23, 2020, now U.S. Pat. No. 11,560,264, issued Jan. 24, 2023, which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/299,862, filed Mar. 12, 2019, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,899,520, issued Jan. 26, 2021 which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/209,526 filed on Jul. 13, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,266,327, issued Apr. 23, 2019, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16299862 | Mar 2019 | US |
Child | 17133272 | US | |
Parent | 15209526 | Jul 2016 | US |
Child | 16299862 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17133272 | Dec 2020 | US |
Child | 18085373 | US |