The present invention relates, in general, to spray nozzles configured for use when spraying certain consumer goods such as cleaning fluids, cooking or other oils, personal care products and the like. More particularly, this invention relates to a nozzle assembly for use with low-pressure, trigger spray or “product only” (meaning propellant-less) applicators or nozzles for pressurized aerosols (especially Bag-On-Valve and Compressed Gas packaged products).
Generally, a trigger dispenser for spraying consumer goods is a relatively low-cost pump device for delivering liquids from a container. The dispenser is held in the hand of an operator and has a trigger that is operable by squeezing or pulling the fingers of the hand to pump liquid from the container and through a spray head incorporating a nozzle at the front of the dispenser.
Such manually-operated dispensers may have a variety of features that have become common and well known in the industry. For example, a prior art dispenser may incorporate a dedicated spray head having a nozzle that produces a defined spray pattern for the liquid as it is dispensed or issued from the nozzle. It is also known to provide nozzles having adjustable spray patterns so that with a single dispenser the user may select a spray pattern that is in the form of either a stream or a substantially circular or conical spray of liquid droplets.
Many substances are currently sold and marketed as consumer goods in containers with such trigger-operated spray heads, as shown in
Sprayer heads recently have been introduced into the marketplace which have battery operated pumps in which one has to only press the trigger once to initiate a pumping action that continues until pressure is released on the trigger. These typically operate at lower pressures in the range of 5-15 PSI. They also suffer from the same deficiencies as noted for manual pumps; plus, they generally have even less variety in or control of the spray patterns that can be generated due to their lower operating pressures.
Aerosol applications are also common and now use Bag-On-Valve (“BOV”) and compressed gas methods to develop higher operating pressures, in the range of, e.g., 50-140 PSI rather than the previously-used costly and less environmentally friendly propellants. These packaging methods are desired because they can produce higher operating pressures compared to the other delivery methods, as mentioned above.
Some commercial products are packaged with dispensers configured to generate a product spray in a selected spray pattern. The nozzles for typical commercial dispensers (see, e.g.,
For many consumer product fluids, traditional flat fan spray nozzle 30 generates an acceptable and substantially planar flat fan spray with the plane of the spray fan being parallel with and between the exit orifice's spaced, parallel, first and second opposing fluid flow shearing lips L1, L2, where the fan width is partly a function of the nozzles feed width FW and the thickness of the spray fan is partly a function of the fluid feed channel's convergence angle β (Beta, best seen in
There is a need for a nozzle which can provide an acceptable uniform flat fan spray with liquids in the range of 10-100 centiPoise (cP) to be sprayed in trigger spray applications where pressures up to 60 pounds per square inch (PSI) are available. It can easily be also used with aerosols, specifically bag-on-valve (BOV) or compressed gas, where pressures up to 140 PSI are available. The prior art nozzles (e.g., 30) are able to spray high viscosity liquids in the above mentioned range. However, the spray distribution obtained with prior art nozzles is highly non-uniform with excessive volume at fan edges. When applicants sprayed viscous liquids (i.e., liquids such as oils or lotions with viscosities of 10-100 cP) with traditional nozzle 30, the spray impacting the center of the fan pattern comprised only about 10% of the fluid, whereas the fluid impacting the opposing ends of the fan pattern comprised about 90% of the fluid. There is a need to spray viscous liquids and apply a uniform coating/distribution, to enable a user to obtain a uniform coating (spray distribution) of liquid without excessive volume at the edges of the spray fan.
Examples of product spray applications which would benefit from such a nozzle include oils, sunscreen lotions, lotions, cleaning liquids, shear-thinning liquids and gels, etc.
There is a need, therefore, for a cost effective substitute for the traditional nozzles of the prior art which will permit a user to spray viscous liquids and obtain a uniform coating on a surface, which is impossible unless the fluid spray distribution along the spray fan's transverse axis is substantially uniform. There is also a need for a nozzle configuration which enables a user to generate and aim a uniform coating (spray distribution) of liquid without excessive volume at the edges of the spray fan.
The applicants have studied the prior art flat fan spray shear nozzles (e.g., as illustrated in
The applicants have undertaken significant research and development work with the goal of providing a nozzle to spray the subject high viscosity liquids at lower pressures, and specifically low pressures without the use of propellants. This development work also sought to develop a nozzle for spraying a uniform coating or spray distribution with the subject high viscosity liquids. The nozzle configuration and method of the present invention targets spray applications for liquids in the range of 10-100 cP to be sprayed in trigger spray applications (e.g., using pumping mechanisms such as those shown in
The nozzle construction of the present invention differs from the prior art flat fan spray shear nozzle of
In the present invention, the exit orifice is bounded by multiple separate discontinuous lips or edges. These separate or discontinuous lips are each formed at the distal end of separate and distinct interior wall segments having selected convergence angles β, so an outlet orifice can have outer or first and third lip segments defined by first and third separate interior wall segments having a first selected interior wall convergence angle β1 (selected to be, e.g., 100-180 degrees, for interior wall segments 1 and 3, resulting in lips 1 and 3) while a second lip segment is defined by a second separate interior wall segment having a second selected interior wall convergence angle β2 (selected to be, e.g., 20-100 degrees) forming the center lip 2. Note that convergence angles for lips 1 and 3 are equal in this example, but could be different as well. In that case the three wall segments would define three convergence angles (β1, β2 and β3).
The exemplary embodiment here described is for three lips or lip segments, but the nozzle structure and method of the present invention can be extended to five or more lips, when there is a need to control distribution and spray angle. A nozzle with five lip segments could include five (5) separate and distinct selected interior wall convergence angles (β1-β5) each selected from the range of 20 to 180 degrees.
In accordance with the present invention, each lip segment defines an edge having its own lateral extent or width. In existing designs (e.g., prior art nozzle 30), each single lip (e.g., L1 or L2) has a width equal to the width of the feed lumen, Fw (as shown in
In operation, for the example nozzle described above, lip 1 and lip 3 have a high convergence angle (e.g., 150 degrees). This results in a larger spray angle on intersection, however since lips 1 and 3 have smaller widths compared to lip 2, lesser volume is at the edges of lips 1 and 3. The center lip (lip 2) has the largest width or edge length and the smallest convergence angle, resulting in a smaller fan and more volume in the center of the spray. The spray from this nozzle can be thought of as a superposition of three distinct spray fans, and the superposition of the three spray fans from the three lip segments results in a substantially more uniform volume distribution over the spray fan, when compared with prior art nozzle 30.
More generally, the multi-lip design of the present invention is now believed to provide several effective embodiments for flat fan spray nozzles which are especially well suited for spraying viscous fluids uniformly into spray fan pattern. The preferred embodiments comprise two to five lip segments, each having a selected edge length or width and interior wall convergence angle β. By controlling lip width and convergence angle, liquid streamlines intersect at varying angles resulting in a uniform spray distribution and so the nozzles of the present invention can provide a much more even coating over a surface.
In one embodiment of the invention, a cup-shaped viscous fluid flat fan spray generating nozzle member for spray-type dispensers has a substantially cylindrical sidewall surrounding a central longitudinal spray axis which intersects a transverse spray fan axis. The cup-shaped viscous fluid flat fan spray generating nozzle member's cylindrical sidewall terminates distally in a substantially circular distal end wall having an interior surface and an exterior, or distal, surface with a central outlet, or exit aperture, which provides fluid communication between the interior and exterior of the cup. Defined in the interior surface of the distal wall is an enhanced multi-lip flat fan spray generating structure which includes at least first and second contiguous regions defined by converging fluid feed channel wall segments converging at first and second interior wall convergence angles (β1, β2, each selected from the range of 20 to 180 degrees) to define first and second exit orifice lips or lip segments. Each exit orifice lip has a selected lip edge length or transverse width to define a portion of the exit orifice in the end wall.
With all of the foregoing embodiments, it is an object of the present invention to provide a cost effective substitute for traditional flat fan spray shear nozzle assemblies which will, for viscous products, reliably generate a substantially uniform flat fan spray.
The foregoing, and additional objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will be further understood from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments thereof, taken with the following drawings, in which:
Referring now to the Figures, wherein common elements are identified by the same numbers,
To overcome the problems found in prior art sprayers of
Referring initially to
Referring next to three views of a cup-shaped viscous fluid flat fan spray generating nozzle member 100 configured for use with for spray-type dispensers (e.g., as shown in
Cup-shaped viscous fluid flat fan spray generating nozzle member 100 has a substantially cylindrical sidewall 102 surrounding a central longitudinal spray axis 120 which intersects a transverse spray fan axis 220. The cup-shaped viscous fluid flat fan spray generating nozzle member's cylindrical sidewall 102 has an open proximal end 104 defining the upstream end of an interior volume 106. Nozzle member sidewall 102 terminates distally in a substantially circular distal end wall 112 having an interior surface 114 and an exterior, or distal, surface 116 with a central outlet or exit aperture 134 which provides fluid communication between the interior 106 and exterior of the cup shaped nozzle member 100. There may be more than one exit orifice in a nozzle assembly or for use with a dispenser, but for purposes of describing the nozzle geometry of the present invention, the exemplary nozzle member 100 including at least a first shear nozzle exit orifice 134 passing through distal end wall 112, and that exit orifice is coaxially aligned with first central longitudinal spray axis 120 and provides fluid communication between said nozzle member's interior fluid channel 106 and the ambient space beyond the distal end wall 116. As best seen in
Defined in the interior surface 114 of the distal wall 112 is an enhanced multi-lip flat fan spray generating structure which includes plural (at least first and second, but, in the illustrated embodiment, first, second and third) distinct, contiguous fluid feed channel wall segments converging at plural (e.g., first and second interior wall convergence angles (β1, β2, each selected from the range of 20 to 180 degrees) to define plural exit orifice lips or lip segments (e.g., 150A, 150B, 150C. Each exit orifice lip has a selected lip edge length or transverse width to define a portion of the exit orifice 134 in the end wall 112.
In the configuration seen in
The distal or exit side or surface 116 of distal wall 112 has distally projecting boss 118 with transverse “V-shaped” groove 119 cut therethrough which intersects the interior forming the elongated exit orifice 134. Transverse “V-shaped” groove 119 defines a pair of angled inside surfaces symmetrically arranged about and spaced from transverse spray axis 220, and the groove's inside surfaces define an exit angle α (alpha), which is (in the illustrated example) 30 degrees. During a dispensing cycle of a spray delivery system using nozzle member 100 it is the transition of the internal feed lumen 110 the interior surface features defining exit orifice 134 that causes the convergence of the fluid streamlines toward the elongated orifice 134 at high stream velocities when the fluid is forced through the spray nozzle member 100. The multi-lipped geometry of exit orifice 134 forces the fluid streamlines to form a plurality or flat liquid sheets oriented parallel to transverse axis 220 upon exiting or being dispensed from the confines of the spray nozzle member 100. External to the spray nozzle member 100 the fluid flowing over each lip segment (e.g., 150A, 150B and 150C) form ligaments and thereafter droplets which disperse or disintegrate into a fan shaped atomized spray pattern (not shown) aligned along transverse axis 220.
Generally, this fan spray pattern (not shown) consists of dispersed droplets of fluid arranged such that a transverse cross-section of the fan spray pattern would be elongated, elliptical, or oblong in shape. The dispersed droplets of fluid may be finely dispersed, such as an atomized spray, or even more coarsely dispersed representing larger droplets of fluid. When this fan spray pattern contacts a surface intended to be coated with the fluid, a substantially uniform coating of fluid is produced having a substantially linear elongated shape.
The multi-lip configuration of nozzle member 100 enables significantly enhanced control of spray volume distribution, and is especially well suited for controlling the distribution of liquid volume across the spray fan for high viscosity liquids. In an exemplary embodiment, fluid flow enters through rectangular feed channel or lumen 110, and the fluid is forced or directed distally or downstream to exit orifice 134 between the planar, parallel side walls and converging top and bottom walls of feed lumen 110. At distal end wall 112, exit orifice 134 is bounded by multiple separate discontinuous lips or edges (e.g., 150A, 150B, 150C). These separate or discontinuous lips are each formed at the distal end of separate and distinct interior wall segments (160A, 160B, 160C) having selected convergence angles β, so in the example illustrated in
The exemplary embodiment here described is for three lips or lip segments 150A, 150B, 150C, but the nozzle structure and method of the present invention can be extended to five or more lips, when there is a need to control distribution and spray angle with greater resolution. A nozzle with five lip segments could include five (5) separate and distinct selected interior wall convergence angles (β1-β5) each selected from the range of 20 to 180 degrees.
In accordance with the present invention, each lip segment defines an edge having its own lateral extent or width. In existing designs (e.g., prior art nozzle 30), each single lip (e.g., L1 or L2) has a width equal to the width of the feed lumen, Fw (as shown in
In operation, for the example nozzle described above, outer lips 150A and 150C have a high convergence angle (e.g., β1=150 degrees, see
More generally, the multi-lip design of the present invention is now believed to provide several effective embodiments for flat fan spray nozzles which are especially well suited for spraying viscous fluids uniformly into spray fan pattern. The preferred embodiments comprise two to five lip segments (e.g., 150A, 150B, 150C), each having a selected edge length or width (e.g., Fw1, Fw2, Fw3) and interior wall convergence angle β. By controlling lip width and convergence angle, liquid streamlines intersect at varying angles resulting in a uniform spray distribution and so the nozzles of the present invention can provide a much more even coating over a surface when spraying the subject high viscosity fluids (i.e., oils, sunscreen lotions, other lotions, cleaning liquids, shear-thinning liquids and gels and similar Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids having viscosities of 10-100 cP).
Spray or exit orifice 134 is defined by first and second crenellated or discontinuous edges having symmetrically arrayed and aligned lip segments (e.g., 150A, 150B, 150C), as shown in
As noted above, alternative embodiments are envisioned. For example,
Having described preferred embodiments of new and improved nozzle configurations and methods for generating uniform sprays of viscous fluids, it is believed that other modifications, variations and changes will be suggested to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings set forth herein. It is therefore to be understood that all such variations, modifications and changes are believed to fall within the scope of the present invention as set forth in the appended claims.
This application claims the priority benefit of prior commonly owned (a) copending PCT application number PCT/US15/58947, filed 4 Nov. 2015 and entitled “Spray nozzle for high viscosity (e.g., Oil) applications with uniform spray distribution”, and (b) U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/077,616, filed on Nov. 10, 2014, and entitled “Spray nozzle for high viscosity (e.g., Oil) applications with uniform spray distribution”. This application is also related to commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 7,354,008 entitled “Fluidic Nozzle for Trigger Spray Applications” and PCT application number PCT/US12/34293, entitled “Cup-shaped Fluidic Circuit, Nozzle Assembly and Method” issued on Apr. 8, 2008 to Hester et al (now WIPO Pub WO 2012/145537). The entire disclosures of all of the foregoing applications and patents are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2015/058947 | Nov 2015 | US |
Child | 15591913 | US |