The present invention relates to a tear-open seal packaging with a packaging element having an opening and a tear-open film which closes the opening according to the preamble of claim 1.
Seal packagings of this type are used for food, for example. A container to accommodate the product is closed with a sealing film made of aluminium, plastic or a composite material. An impermeable connection is created along the sealing seam between the opening edge of the container and the outer edge of the film, e.g. by melting a sealing coating onto the underside of the film, or onto the top of the container or packaging element. In this way, the film and the edge of the packaging enter into a material-locking connection with each other.
Whilst in many cases, the container is formed as a single moulded part, one may also provide one part of the packaging only with tear-open film, and then connect this part to the rest of the packaging. Such a part may be an intermediate ring, whose opening is initially seal with the tear-open film, before it is then impermeably connected with another part of the container by means of crimping or some other prior art method. Within the meaning of this invention, then, the term packaging element is understood to designate both entire packagings such as pots, sealed bowls or such like, as well as parts thereof, such as the aforementioned intermediate rings.
Seal packagings must satisfy various requirements. On the one hand, the contents must be reliably protected. The packaging must, therefore, be impermeable, stable and resistant to damage. On the other hand, it should also be easy to open. Meeting both needs simultaneously is problematic in some cases, especially in terms of the shape and strength of the sealing seam. Reliable sealing can be achieved by widening the sealing seam, but this makes the film more difficult to tear open. The sealing seam in the vicinity of any tear-open tab part of the film is especially critical. As a general rule, this is where, at the start of the opening process, the greatest tear-open forces occur, and yet the consumer is only given a small tab to grip and pull on the film. If an arc-shaped seam is torn open from the exterior, the force required to continue tearing open initially increases considerably because the length of the tear-open edge, i.e. the width of the seal connection between the film and the opening edge of the packaging, is very large at the outset.
A high tear-open force at the outset of the opening process may cause the already detached part to become torn off from the rest of the film, thereby making it far more difficult, or even impossible, to open the packaging further, because the consumer can no longer grip the film. Frequently, a hole therefore has to be made in the film with a sharp object, from where the film can then be pulled off.
When a high tear-open force is applied, the film also frequently tears on one side of the tab, so that the film can then only be partly removed, whilst the rest remains seal to the packaging and has to be removed in a second tear-open operation.
Various proposals have therefore been made to contrive the sealing seam in such a way that the tear-open force is reduced, especially at the outset of the opening process. The seam can, for example, have a tapering or wave-shaped section in the vicinity of the tab, thereby departing from the arc-shaped path of the seam. This does, however, weaken the seam on the inside. This is a problem, particularly in packagings which have to withstand high interior pressure. At points where the path of the seam is not curved, i.e. where it zig-zags, stress peaks may occur if the tear-open film bulges towards the outside, and said peaks may destroy the seam, causing impermeability. The path of the seam on such packagings should therefore be as curved as possible in order to distribute the occurring inner pressure forces as evenly as possible along the seam. This type of seam path is not compatible with the use of pre-determined tear-open points in the above-described manner.
The task of this invention is, therefore, to create a seal packaging of the aforementioned type which is capable of withstanding a relatively high interior pressure and yet can still be easily torn open by the consumer with a low level of force that is as evenly spread as possible.
This task is solved according to the invention by a tear-open seal packaging with the features of claim 1.
According to the invention, the sealing seam has at least one indentation from the exterior, extending inwards from the outer edge of the sealing seam. The depth of extension is less than the width of the sealing seam at the location in question.
As a result of the indentation or indentations, the sealing seam is slightly weakened in places from the exterior in such a way that when the film is torn open at the point where there is an indentation towards the middle of the film, the force is reduced to the level required to break the seam connection. The length of the tear-open edge, i.e. the width of the seal connection between film and opening edge of the packaging, is reduced by the indentations as will be explained in more detail further on in the description. As the depth of extension of the indentations is less than the width of the seam, the sealing seam is not weakened from its inner edge and is capable of withstanding even high degrees of stress such as those which may be caused by high pressure on the inside of the seal packaging.
In particular, such indentations can be applied without difficulty to curved sealing seams.
In the context of this invention, the term “indentation” designates a recess of any shape in the outer edge of the sealing seam, without the shape of said recess being specified. The person skilled in the art may adapt the shape, width and depth of this recess in suitable manner to the respective requirements of the seal packaging.
The indentation or indentations are preferably disposed on an approximately circular-shaped section of the sealing seam.
The indentation(s) is/are preferably disposed in a portion between an imaginary tangent of the outer edge of the sealing seam and a parallel imaginary tangent of the inner edge of the sealing seam.
Further, the indentation(s) is/are preferably shaped as a recess with an arc-shaped edge.
In a preferred form of embodiment, the tear-open film is provided with a free tear-open tab along an edge portion at an indentation in the sealing seam.
The sealing seam preferably has at least two indentations at a distance from each other along the sealing seam.
In this case, the tab can preferably be disposed between two indentations.
Pulling on the tab thus produces a tear-open edge which extends between the indentations and is shortened at both ends by the latter. This decisively reduces the material resistance, and hence the tensile force required to continue pulling the tab back further.
According to another preferred form of embodiment, recesses are disposed at opposite points on the sealing seam.
Whilst the tear-open film can be torn open at a point at which there are notches to reduce the required tear-open force, in this form of embodiment opposite indentations additionally ensure that the process of fully detaching the film from the opening edge proceeds evenly, rather than causing, here too, a sudden increase in the level of force required.
In one preferred form of embodiment, the packaging element is an intermediate ring which forms the upper edge of a container and is mechanically or materially connected to the other part of the container.
A preferred example of an embodiment will be described in more detail below with reference to the drawings, in which
The tear-open seal packaging 10 shown in
Along the edge portion disposed uppermost in
In this figure, the path of sealing seam 18 (not visible in the top-plan view shown in
At this point, the manufacturing process used for the seal packaging 10 according to the invention will be described.
The unit shown in
As shown in
Edges 16 and 32 can be sealed together with a suitable stamp tool, by means of which tear-open film 14 and packaging element 12 are pressed together from above and below. The sealing point is heated during the pressing process. Alternatively, the heat required for sealing can be supplied to packaging element 12 before pressing.
The unit shown in
The shape of the sealing seam is shown in more detail in
Indentations 26,28 are each contrived as an arc-shaped recess in the outer edge 24 of sealing seam 18. The depth of each recess is less than the width B of the sealing seam at the point of each indentation. Thus the path of sealing seam 18 is never completely broken at any point. In particular, the inner edge 22 of sealing seam 18 retains its round shape and is not touched by indentations 26,28. Indentations 26,28 are relatively flat, i.e., their width in the circumferential direction is substantially greater than their depth in the radial direction. The radii of the arcs of the recess edges of indentations 26,28 are greater than the width B of sealing seam 18, i.e. the centre point of these arcs 38 lies relatively far outside seam 18.
Indentations 26,28 need not necessarily have the recess shape shown here, the shape may differ. In particular, flatter, or less flat, indentations 26,28 are also conceivable, as well as V-shaped recesses, etc. The distance between indentations 26,28 may also vary.
The mode of functioning of indentations 26,28 will now be explained in more detail with reference to the following figures. For the sake of better comprehension, the mode of functioning of a conventional seal packaging will be described first.
If one pulls on tear-open tab 120, thereby exerting tensile force F on tab 120 towards the opposite edge area of tear-open film 114, this force F acts along a line separating the already detached part of tear-open film 114 from the surface area of film 114 that is still firmly connected to packaging element 112 by means of sealing seam 118, and lies flat on the opening thereof. This line, which will be referred to below as separating line 50, runs perpendicular to the direction of pull of tab 120 and corresponds to a chord connecting two points on the circular outer edge 116 of tear-open film 114. As the pulling movement progresses, tab 120 grows longer by the detached part of the film as sealing seam 118 gives way to tensile force F, and separating line 50 moves towards the middle of tear-open film 114, becoming longer as it does so.
The amount of force required to pull tab 120 further depends on the momentary material resistance along separating line 50. This in turn depends on the length of the section(s) of separating line 50 running over sealing seam 118, i.e. via which there is contact with sealing seam 118, contact which has to be overcome by exerting tensile force. In
As can be seen in
The above description reveals that the force, F, required for tearing open, increases with the length L1 of tear-open edge 56. The maximum force occurs in the situation in
The way in which the present invention considerably reduces this force peak, thereby substantially facilitating the process of opening seal packaging 10, will be described below.
Indentations 26,28 are disposed at an angular distance around the periphery of sealing seam 18 in such a way that separating line 50, which moves inwards during the pulling back movement, parallel to the progression thereof, passes just beyond indentations 26,28 at the moment at which the inner edge 22 of sealing seam 18 has already been reached, and no further critical force peaks can occur. Hence indentations 26,28 are advantageously disposed in a strip-shaped area limited by two parallel straight lines, of which one straight line is a tangent of outer edge 24 of sealing seam 18 and the other straight line forms a tangent of inner edge 22, which simultaneously forms a secant of outer edge 24.
As can be seen in the force-path diagram in
Indentations 26,28 have virtually no weakening impact on sealing seam 18 on the inside portion of the opening of seal packaging 10. The invention is therefore especially well suited for use with seal packagings which have to resist a high level of inner pressure, as the pressure force can distribute itself evenly along the circular inner edge 22 of sealing seam 18, and no stresses occur in tear-open film 14. And yet the tear-open process is made considerably easier, and proceeds more evenly, by providing indentations 26,28.
Departing from the embodiment described in connection with the Figures, the desired effect of weakening the material resistance at the tear-open point can also be achieved with a single indentation. If, for example, one omits one of the two indentations 26 or 28 of the above-described embodiment, so that the other indentation remains, tear-open edge 56 is shortened at one end only. The effect of reducing the required tensile force may be slightly less in this case. The user will still, however, find the process of tearing open the film much easier.
Further, the indentations can of course be contrived in sealing seams shaped differently to that shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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08 004 717.8 | Mar 2008 | EP | regional |