Temporary package and method

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6874633
  • Patent Number
    6,874,633
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, December 31, 2002
    22 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 5, 2005
    19 years ago
Abstract
A temporary packaging method and a resultant package are provided for comprising temporarily bonding containers on a flat base member to stabilize the containers for further packaging, the method comprising the steps of providing a base member, providing containers, temporarily bonding the containers to the base member with a hot melt adhesive, advancing the base member with containers through the packaging or handling system so that further processing of the containers may optionally be effected, encapsulating the base member and bonded containers with a plastic shrink film to complete the package, followed by release of the containers from the bond to base member within minutes after shrink wrapping, with the adhesive remaining bonded to the base member.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention


This invention relates to a method for package assembly, and more particularly to a method for briefly stabilizing containers on a flat base member by temporarily bonding the containers to the base member with a hot melt adhesive that releases the container from its bond to the base member soon after the handling and packaging process is complete, and a package which consists of a rigid base member, containers temporarily bonded with hot melt adhesive to the base member, and a plastic shrink film encapsulating the base member and containers.


2. Description of the Related Art


Prior art packaging methods and packages do not address the special need of stabilizing containers on a flat base member during the brief period of package assembly by forming a temporary adhesive bond between the containers and the base member.


Placement of a group or pack pattern of containers on a flat base member poses a stability problem as the base member with containers is transported through a packaging or handling process. This is particularly a problem for intermittent motion packaging or handling systems, but is also a concern for continuous motion equipment. Even the machine vibration on a continuous motion machine can result in movement of containers on the flat base member, which can negatively effect the completed package, or the effectiveness of the packaging or handling system.


To avoid this instability with containers on a flat base member, many packaging or handling systems use a corrugated box or tray with four side walls. The box or tray forms a containment boundary so that movement of the containers during the handling or packaging process minimizes the stability problem.


A need exists for a temporary packaging method and package so that containers are restricted from movement when placed on a flat base member during the packaging or handling process, yet upon completion of the packaging or handling, the containers are free of this movement restriction.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Accordingly, the present invention provides a temporary packaging method and package which briefly bonds a group or pack pattern of containers to a flat base member to stabilize the containers during the handling or packaging process, and these containers release from this adhesive bond soon after the handling or packaging process is completed by plastic shrink film encapsulation of the base member and containers. The method comprises the steps of providing a base member, providing adhesive to the base member, placement of containers to base member resulting in a temporary bond, advancing the base member with bonded containers through the handling or packaging process, encapsulation of base member and containers with plastic shrink film, and release of containers from bond to base member within minutes after the encapsulation by shrink film, with adhesive remaining bonded to base member.


The method of the present invention eliminates the instability of the containers on a flat base member during the handling or packaging process, thereby permitting a wide range of movement and handling to occur. The present invention permits the group of containers which are bonded to the flat base member to be aggressively handled by inclines, declines, side transfers, abrupt starting and stopping, equipment vibration, stacking, etc.


The temporary bond effectively locks the containers in place during the handling or packaging process. This temporary bond is defined herein as a bond that releases by itself over time. It is required to hold the containers in place during the handling or packaging process, and within minutes after the base member and containers are encapsulated by film, the container releases from the base member with the adhesive residue remaining on the base member.


This novel packaging method dramatically simplifies the packaging and handling process for packaging containers on a flat base member. By temporarily stabilizing the group or pack pattern on the base member during the packaging or handling process, this invention offers an effective alternative to the traditional corrugated box or tray with four side walls.


This invention utilizes less packaging materials than boxes or trays, is more cost efficient, and because there is no need to form boxes or trays, which generate both corrugated dust and spores, it is more sanitary. This invention also offers greater efficiency than current methods of packaging containers on flat base members because of the increased stability of containers on the base member during package assembly.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a grouping of containers of the present invention showing a base member with containers adhered thereto;



FIG. 2 is a plan view of a base member with continuous strips of a temporary adhesive applied thereto;



FIG. 3 is a plan view of a base member with intermittent strips of a temporary adhesive applied thereto;



FIG. 4 is a diagram of the apparatus and method for assembling the package assembly of the present invention;



FIG. 5 is a perspective view of a base member with containers adhered thereto and having a cover member;



FIG. 6 is a perspective view of a base member with containers adhered thereto and having a divider insert;



FIG. 7 is a perspective view of a grouping of containers of the present invention temporarily bonded to a base member and traveling up an incline prior to encapsulation by shrink film, and



FIG. 8 is a perspective view of a grouping of containers of the present invention showing a base member with containers encapsulated with shrink film.



FIG. 9 is a perspective view of a grouping of containers of the present invention showing stacked layers of base members with bonded containers encapsulated with shrink film.



FIG. 10 is a perspective view of a grouping of containers of the present invention on a circular base member encapsulated with shrink film.





DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

While this invention may be embodied in many different forms, there are shown in the drawings and described in detail herein specific preferred embodiments of the invention. The present disclosure is an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the particular embodiments illustrated.


The present invention provides a temporary packaging method and package which briefly bonds a group or pack pattern of containers to a flat base member during the handling or packaging process and releases this bond once the handling or packaging process is completed. The method comprises the steps of providing a base member, providing adhesive to the base member, placement of containers on base member to form a temporary bond, optionally adding a top cover member or divider, advancing the base member with bonded containers through the handling or packaging process so that further processing of the containers may optionally be effected, encapsulation of the base member with bonded containers by a plastic shrink film, followed by release of containers from base member soon after encapsulation of the shrink film, with adhesive remaining bonded to base member.


The method of the present invention provides a means for briefly bonding containers to a base member so containers can be effectively controlled during the handling or packaging process. The optional top cover member adds extra strength and protection for certain container types such as those having foil or paper lids or a bottle with a sport cap, the optional divider insert adds extra protection for certain container types such as glass bottles or jars to avoid glass on glass contact.


Referring to FIG. 1, an assembly of containers of the present invention is shown generally at 10 and comprises a flat base member 12, onto which containers are adhered to temporary bonding adhesive strips 13.


Base member 12 may be made of any suitable material such as chip board, paper board or corrugated board depending on the dimensions of the package and intermediate steps which accompany the packaging method. Chip board, however, possesses the minimum desired degree of stiffness according to the present invention.


By means of appropriate adhesive dispensing equipment the nature of which will be readily apparent to those familiar with the art, strips of adhesive 20 are placed on the upper surface 21 of base member 12, as shown in FIG. 2, adhesive strips 20 being disposed parallel to ends 22 and 24 of base member 12. The adhesive is a hot melt adhesive which may be applied by applicators situated above a conveyor (not shown) along which base member 12 is traveling during the packaging process. Both the application temperature and depth of adhesive strip should be consistent with the strips of adhesive 20 on base member 12.


The timing between application of adhesive strips and placement of containers should be substantially consistent, generally 2 to 3 seconds between placement of adhesive strips on base member and placement of containers on base member.


In order to form a temporary bond, the hot melt adhesive should have an open time of approximately 30 to 45 seconds. The open time is defined as the period between application of adhesive on base member and solidification of adhesive. During the open time the elasticity of the semi-solid hot melt adhesive permits aggressive movement of the base member without movement of the containers from their position on the base member. As the adhesive begins to solidify the bond weakens and within minutes the container totally releases from the bond to base member, with all adhesive remaining on the base member.


An adhesive with this characteristic is commercially available from H. B. Fuller as Product No. H.L. 7674. Depending upon the type of handling contemplated, however, the specific open time may vary. In general, an open time of between 20 seconds to 1 minute is particularly well suited for the present invention.


The specific bonding strength between base member and container is controlled by varying the application temperature of the adhesive, and the depth of the adhesive strips (generally {fraction (1/16)} to ⅛″ depth). A higher application temperature and deeper adhesive strips will increase the bonding, and a lower temperature and thinner adhesive strips will decrease bonding. In general, the hot melt adhesive is preferably applied within a temperature range of 270 degrees F. to 340 degrees F.


Adhesive strips 20 hold containers 14 firmly in place on base member 12, as shown in FIG. 1. The adhesive is such that it will adhere to containers 14 to the extent that containers 14 are secured to base member 12 firmly enough to resist movement relative thereto and provide stability during normal handling.



FIG. 3 shows an alternative embodiment of the invention, in which adhesive strips 20a are intermittent, so that the adhesive strips extend only beneath the individual containers and not between them.


Soon after the adhesive is applied to base member 12 (generally 2 to 3 seconds), containers are placed in an adjacent side by side relationship on adhesive strips 20 on base member 12, as shown in FIG. 1. Containers 14 may be positioned on base member 12 by equipment which feeds containers 14 in a direction perpendicularly to the direction in which base member is traveling, and then positions a pre-arranged set of containers 14 on base member 12 within a consistently short period of time (generally 2 to 3 seconds). Containers 14 preferably touch the adhesive strip at two contact points, or at four contact points, as shown in FIG. 2 at 26, 28, 30 and 32, in which strips of adhesive, after a container has been affixed thereto and removed, are shown for purposes of illustration.


The advantage of automatic loading of containers into a pack pattern and bonding same to a base member is that a stable unitized assembly is placed on the adhesive strips at the same time. The time interval between application of adhesive and placement of containers should remain substantially constant to replicate the bonding characteristics of container to base member. For this reason, automatic loading equipment is the most preferred method.



FIG. 4 is a diagram of the apparatus for assembling the package assembly and temporary packaging method of the present invention. Containers enter this apparatus on a single lane conveyor (A) and are channeled through lane dividers (B) which separate the containers into the appropriate number of lanes. A pack pattern of containers is released to collation area (C). Simultaneously a base member is picked from the base member magazine (D) and placed on the conveyor bed (F). As the base member indexes forward on the conyeyor bed the adhesive unit (E) and adhesive applicator (G) place strips of the temporary bonding hot melt adhesive on the base member.


The adhesive unit and applicator apply a consistent strip or strips of adhesive to the base member (generally {fraction (1/16)}″ to ⅛″ depth) at a consistent application temperature (generally 270 degrees F. to 340 degrees F.).


Within a consistent time period after application of adhesive to base member (generally 2 to 3 seconds), the pack pattern of containers (C) are transferred by the apparatus for placement on the base member with temporary bonding adhesive.


Once containers have been loaded onto the base member, the package assembly is moved by a conveyor through a series of optional applications such as placement of cover member or divider insert (J), conveying on inclines, declines or angled turns (K), abrupt stopping and starting (L), and transfer into the apparatus for encapsulating the base member and containers with plastic shrink film (M), and ending with the final package with shrink wrap encapsulation (N). Within minutes after shrink wrapping, the containers will release from the bond to base member with adhesive remaining bonded to base member.


As shown in FIG. 5, a flat cover member 40 may optionally be applied over the containers. The cover member provides added strength to package and offers top layer protection for certain container types such as containers with paper or foil lids, or bottles with sport caps. Once cover member is in position, the package assembly is encapsulated with shrink film such as commercially available from Armin Plastics as Product No. 2304B. The tight film encapsulation thus provided keeps the top pad tightly pressed to the tops of the containers which increases package strength and protects the top layer of containers.


An alternative embodiment of a temporary package assembly according to the present invention is shown at FIG. 6. A divider has been added to avoid container to container contact within package assembly. This has application for such containers as glass jars, bottles, vials, etc., in which container to container contact can result in damage during distribution. The divider (usually corrugated or chipboard) is placed between containers after containers are bonded to base member and prior to shrink film encapsulation.


Referring to FIG. 7, a schematic drawing of the temporary package assembly according to the present invention is shown. Use of the flat base member and temporary adhesive bonding of containers to base member locks product containers in place and prevents individual movement of the containers until after the package assembly has been shrink wrapped. Within minutes the adhesive releases the containers from the bond to base member with the adhesive remaining on the base member. This temporary package assembly uses less packaging material than either a box or tray with four side walls, is more cost efficient, and because there is no need to form boxes or trays, which generate both corrugated dust and spores, it is more sanitary.


The present invention provides a method for temporarily bonding containers to a flat base member to restrict movement of containers on the base member during the handling or packaging process. This method of bonding the containers permits a wide range of movement and handling to occur without concern for container stability on the flat base member.


The present invention permits the group or pack pattern of containers to be aggressively handled by inclines as shown in FIG. 7, declines, side transfers, abrupt starting and stopping, equipment vibrations, stacking, etc., without individual movement of container, and within minutes after the group or pack pattern of containers and base member has been encapsulated with plastic shrink film, the adhesive bond releases the containers from the base member with the adhesive residue remaining on the base member. The completed package assembly of the present invention is shown in FIG. 8.


Additional embodiments of the invention are shown in FIGS. 9 and 10. FIG. 9 shows an embodiment in which multiple layers of base members with bonded containers are stacked. FIG. 10 shows an embodiment in which a circular base member is used.


Other advantages of the method of the present invention are as follows. The temporary bond effectively eliminates individual movement of the container on a flat base member during package assembly or handling, thereby greatly enhancing stability of the package assembly, which results in greater packaging efficiency. This improved stability increases the range of containers which are candidates for packaging by means of a flat base member, and it reduces the need for the packaging or handling equipment to maintain control of container movement after the container has been placed on the flat base member, thereby reducing equipment costs.


Additionally, for containers that are placed into boxes or trays for conveying through a heat transfer process, the present invention offers greater heat transfer due to the flat base member. The present invention permits greater airflow than a box or tray, thereby improving heat transfer.


This completes the description of the preferred and alternate embodiments of the invention. Those skilled in the art may recognize other equivalents to the specific embodiment described herein which equivalents are intended to be encompassed by the claims attached hereto.

Claims
  • 1. A package utilizing a temporary bond, comprising a substantially rigid planar base member, a plurality of containers, the plurality of containers removably bonded to the base member by an adhesive, the removable bond being a temporary bond, and plastic shrink film encapsulating the base member and containers; whereby after encapsulation of the base member and containers with plastic shrink film, the containers will self-release from their temporary bond to the base member.
  • 2. A package utilizing a self-releasing bond, comprising a substantially rigid planar base member, a plurality of containers, the plurality of containers removably bonded to the base member by an adhesive, the removable bond being a self-releasing bond, and plastic shrink film encapsulating the base member and containers; whereby after encapsulation of the base member and containers with plastic shrink film, the containers will self-release from their temporary bond to the base member.
  • 3. A package utilizing a temporary self-releasing bond, comprising a substantially rigid planar base member, a plurality of containers, the plurality of containers removably bonded to the base member by an adhesive, the removable bond being a temporary self-releasing bond, and plastic shrink film encapsulating the base member and containers; whereby after encapsulation of the base member and containers with plastic shrink film, the container will self-release from their temporary bond to the base member.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation from application Ser. No. 09/447,751, filed Nov. 22, 1999 U.S. Pat. No. 6,499,596, issued Dec. 31, 2002 which is a divisional of application Ser. No. 09/080,609, filed May 18, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,182,422, issued Feb. 6, 2001, the contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference.

US Referenced Citations (68)
Number Name Date Kind
1981647 Johnson Nov 1934 A
2313731 Brogden Mar 1943 A
2774474 Phillips Dec 1956 A
2810476 Guyer Oct 1957 A
2835381 Ackermann et al. May 1958 A
3047144 Wissel Jul 1962 A
3164252 Hosbein Jan 1965 A
3198327 Boehling et al. Aug 1965 A
3253707 Gooding May 1966 A
3312340 Face Apr 1967 A
3319783 Henrici et al. May 1967 A
3331503 Brown Jul 1967 A
3343903 Roy Sep 1967 A
3347365 Funkhouser Oct 1967 A
3389784 Hendricks et al. Jun 1968 A
3487918 Roden et al. Jan 1970 A
3522688 Kaliwoda et al. Aug 1970 A
3542193 Hewlett et al. Nov 1970 A
3638790 Schmid et al. Feb 1972 A
3665674 Bivans et al. May 1972 A
3667598 Selnick et al. Jun 1972 A
3675767 Taylor Jul 1972 A
3719018 Focke et al. Mar 1973 A
3734280 Amneus et al. May 1973 A
3878943 Ryan et al. Apr 1975 A
3883000 Gibbs May 1975 A
3885671 Spiegel et al. May 1975 A
3946862 Klygis et al. Mar 1976 A
4036362 Ullman Jul 1977 A
4050579 Gorski et al. Sep 1977 A
4053049 Beauvais Oct 1977 A
4055249 Kojima Oct 1977 A
4078357 Ida Mar 1978 A
4130200 Iepson et al. Dec 1978 A
4177895 Shelton Dec 1979 A
4304332 Danti Dec 1981 A
4387808 Dornbusch Jun 1983 A
4444311 Rias Apr 1984 A
4505389 Whiteside Mar 1985 A
4523676 Barrash Jun 1985 A
4625864 Nigrelli Dec 1986 A
4730730 Clarkson Mar 1988 A
4730732 Wagonseller Mar 1988 A
4801024 Flum et al. Jan 1989 A
4821880 Ditton Apr 1989 A
4919265 Lems et al. Apr 1990 A
4930633 Gloyer Jun 1990 A
4942720 Berney Jul 1990 A
4962625 Johnson et al. Oct 1990 A
4998619 Sowa et al. Mar 1991 A
5035323 Daniels et al. Jul 1991 A
5069338 Grigsby Dec 1991 A
5083674 Clark Jan 1992 A
5139145 Cook Aug 1992 A
5213211 Umiker May 1993 A
5228564 Randeria Jul 1993 A
5259524 Eckert Nov 1993 A
5269645 Winski Dec 1993 A
5314557 Schwartz et al. May 1994 A
5423428 Selz Jun 1995 A
5450708 Lashyro Sep 1995 A
5487471 Marchek et al. Jan 1996 A
5607056 Whiteside Mar 1997 A
5692612 Weder et al. Dec 1997 A
5701721 Weder et al. Dec 1997 A
5887717 Anderson et al. Mar 1999 A
6182422 Andersen et al. Feb 2001 B1
6499596 Andersen et al. Dec 2002 B1
Foreign Referenced Citations (6)
Number Date Country
1191819 Aug 1995 CA
28 36 533 Feb 1990 DE
0 511 134 Oct 1992 EP
2 387 172 Oct 1978 FR
2 581 038 Oct 1986 FR
9617791 Jun 1996 WO
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20030150760 A1 Aug 2003 US
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09080609 May 1998 US
Child 09447751 US
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 09447751 Nov 1999 US
Child 10335579 US