The invention relates to a system for dispensing a web of absorbent product in the form of a roll.
The invention lies in the field of single-use rolls of paper used in particular by the general public or in away from home facilities and known under names such as toilet paper, wipe-all, kitchen rolls or paper towels.
For away-from-home use, the product is most often placed in a dispensing apparatus that protects the roll and dispenses the paper. Important functions of the dispenser that can be mentioned include the storage of the paper, hygiene, control of consumption, and of course the discharging of sheets.
Numerous examples of dispensing systems of this type are known.
In order to ensure the quality of the product dispensed, certain manufacturers have developed what are known as “captive” systems which are able to accommodate only one type of product or family of products determined in a given dispensing system.
Various systems exist to make the system “captive”. The prior art comprises in particular plastics end fittings or plugs which have a special form and are placed for example inside a core on which the product is wound and which engage with holders placed in the dispenser. Without these end fittings, the roll cannot be installed or cannot be used correctly.
The main drawback with this type of dispenser is of an economic nature: it is necessary to manufacture additional elements that are not of great benefit to the user of the system and which cannot be used once the roll is finished. These plastics components therefore represent an additional cost and cause additional waste once the roll is finished.
Also known are rolls having flanks provided with a groove that engages in each case with a special holder. In such a design, a roll without a groove cannot be held in the dispenser or else the door of the dispenser cannot be closed on account of the different space requirement of the grooveless roll compared with a compatible roll having a groove.
This type of system is effective but manufacturing these grooves requires complex roll conversion plants.
Also known, among automatic or semi-automatic, electric or electronic motorized dispensers, is the use of rolls having a central core which is provided with a marking such as a barcode, which can be read by a “reading device” or barcode reader which is arranged in the dispenser on a special holder. In particular two common means exist for reading barcodes. Most conventional is optical reading, which consists in passing a light beam over the barcode and then analysing the light reflected. The barcodes used can also be printed using a magnetisable ink, in which case reading will then be magnetic.
A “compatible” roll without a barcode is unable to start the motorized dispenser. As a result, paper cannot be unwound, or alternatively it cannot be unwound under normal operating conditions.
When the marking formed by the barcode is carried by the core, and most frequently by the concave internal surface of the core, this requires particular and complex implantation of the reader.
Document EP-B1-0 566 384 discloses a roll having a mark, or marking, which is able to be detected and identified and can be attached directly to the external surface, or front, of the wound web over the entire length of the roll.
Such a design can make it easier to arrange means for reading the marking.
However, such a solution can only be accepted with difficulty because it entails providing, on the visible external surface of all sheets, an unattractive motif, such as a barcode, and also requires means for marking the entire web before it is wound up to form a new roll.
Furthermore, the marking can affect the general properties of the product and thus affect all of a roll.
The object of the invention is to provide an economical is system for making captive a dispenser for paper in the form of a roll, said dispenser being, for example, automatic or semi-automatic, electric or electronic, while using conventional means for converting the paper.
To this end, the invention provides a system for dispensing a web of absorbent product in the form of a roll, of the type comprising:
characterized in that said mark is present on a free end section of the new roll, and in that this marked free end section is followed by at least one section that does not have a characteristic mark of the roll.
According to other features of the invention:
Further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from reading the following detailed description, for the description of which reference is made to the appended drawings, in which:
In the following description, identical, analogous or similar components will be designated by the same reference numerals.
Such a product can, for example, be a roll 12 of a web 2 of absorbent paper product such as what is known as kitchen roll.
According to this prior art, if the product is discharged in successive sheets as it is used, manually or in a motorized dispenser, each sheet bears the printed barcode 8.
The cover 20 has an outlet slot 22 through which the free end section 4 of the wound web 2 protrudes outwards from the casing in order to discharge and grip each cut sheet at the free end of the web of the roll when the dispenser 18 is in its normal use state with its cover 20 in the closed raised position.
The roll is, for example, rotated in this case, in particular in the unwinding direction of the web 2, by controlled motorized means (not shown in detail). The dispenser is thus known as an electric or electronic dispenser depending on the means used to trigger operation of the dispenser for unwinding a section is corresponding to a sheet which can be severed automatically or manually by pulling on the discharged sheet protruding outwards from the casing 16.
When a new roll 12 is installed in the dispenser 16, it is then held and guided in rotation in order to operate correctly and, as can be seen in
When a new roll 12 is installed, the person fitting this roll can, for example, cause the free end section 4 of the web 2 to start advancing in the unwinding direction by pressing an advancing button in what is known as a maintenance mode for feeding the “first sheet” into the dispenser.
In accordance with the invention, the roll 12 has a mark or marking 8 which is present only on a free end section of the roll 12.
In
As can be seen in
After this, the other sheets will no longer have the mark 8.
According to a first possibility, the mark 8, in this case in the form of a barcode, is printed on the free end section 4 of the web 2.
Such printing can be carried out by any means known in is this field, for example by depositing or spraying a visible ink, by thermal marking, etc.
According to another possibility, and in accordance with another feature of the invention, the partial marking of the free end of the new roll is carried out in conjunction with the means for connecting the free end section 4 of the web 2 to the rest of the web forming the roll 12, in order to “close” the new roll.
Specifically, in a known manner, in order to close a new roll, i.e. in order that the web does not unwind accidentally during the various handling operations of the roll as it is manufactured, packaged and then unpacked with a view to using it, in particular in order to install it in a dispenser, it is known to “close the roll”, i.e. to at least partially fix the free end section 4 of the web 2 (which will form the start of the roll when it is used) to the rest of the roll.
According to a first known technique, the means for connecting the free end section to the rest of the roll have one or more connecting regions which are produced by bonding, i.e. the bonding means comprise a bonding fluid.
In order for it to act in a bonding manner, the bonding fluid is introduced between the back of the free end section 4 and the front of the opposite portion of the wound web 2 in the form of a roll 12.
In accordance with the invention, in order to form one or more connecting regions, the bonding fluid used is of a kind that has a physical and/or chemical characteristic and can be analysed by identification means.
For example, the bonding fluid may be coloured with an ink and the connecting regions may be produced in the form of bonding lines such that, following application of the bonding fluid and closure of the roll, the coloured lines of bonding fluid form the parallel lines of the barcode 8, said lines then being “visible” on the free end section 4 bonded in order to close the roll 12.
Depending on the conditions for producing the bond and on the fluid used, the coloured lines may be visible from the “outside” on the front 6 of the free end section 4 and/or from the “inside” on the back of the free end section 4.
If the coloured lines forming the barcode 8 can be detected from outside the roll “through” the sheet forming the end section, the identification means are arranged opposite the external face of the roll.
Conversely, if the coloured lines can only be seen from the back of the sheet forming the free end section, the identification means are arranged, in the dispenser, facing the back of the free end section 4 in such way that, when the latter is detached from the roll 12 during the installation of a new roll, the detection means are arranged facing the marked back.
According to another known technique for closing a roll, the free end section can be connected to the opposite portion of the wound web by “mechanical” means such as those illustrated, for example, in document U.S. Pat. No. 3,134,980.
When such a technique is used, the “mechanical” connecting regions also form “visible” regions likely to form identification marks for a compatible roll, it being possible for said marks then to be detected by associated detection means provided for this purpose.
Specifically, variations in the surface state and/or relief corresponding to these mechanical connecting regions make it possible to distinguish these connecting regions from the other parts of the web which do not have the mechanical connection.
The associated identification means for detecting the mark on a compatible roll according to the invention can be produced by any known technique, in particular in order to detect a compatible roll.
The identification means (not shown in detail) have is excitation means which emit incident radiation towards the surface of the web (front and/or back), said radiation being, for example, optical radiation; means for receiving the radiation reflected from the excited surface of the web; and means for analysing the reflected radiation in order to determine the presence of a characteristic mark and to identify said mark in order to determine, in a known manner, whether the new roll installed in the dispenser is a compatible roll.
The mark can be detected and identified for example as soon as a new roll is installed in the dispenser, for example by means of a manual advancing button which is provided for this purpose and is used to start feeding the web in the dispenser.
When the mark is identified and recognized as corresponding to a compatible roll, the dispenser can be put into the “conventional” operating mode with its cover closed.
If the mark is not detected, or if the mark detected is not identified as corresponding to a compatible roll, the dispenser 18 puts itself into a “degraded” state in which it can be stopped or in which, for example, the length of the discharged sheet is reduced or increased compared with a “normal” sheet length.
Of course, the invention is not limited to marking of the barcode type, the forms and orientations of the marks can vary.
Similarly, the physico-chemical nature of the marks is not limited to visible marks or marks which can be detected and identified in the visible range.
In the examples which have just been described, the characteristic mark of the roll is present only on a free end section of the new roll.
According to a variant which is not shown, and without departing from the scope of the invention, the characteristic mark of the roll is present on at least one other section of the roll, said section being located after a section which does not have a is characteristic mark of the roll and is interposed longitudinally between the marked free end section and this other marked section.
The distance between these two marked sections may be several metres.
The presence of such a second marked section, while avoiding the drawbacks which are inherent to a continuous marking over the entire length of the web forming the roll, makes it possible to carry out, if necessary, another check of the compatibility of the roll.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1056268 | Jul 2010 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR11/00412 | 7/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 1/24/2013 |