The present invention relates to a unitary packaging structure, and in particular, to a dimensionally stable and resilient packaging device constructed of a three-dimensional polymeric filament network.
Shipping of fragile articles requires special packaging to provide shock absorbing to avoid damage to the fragile articles. Packaging of many devices is typically done with an exterior container and interior packaging. Exterior containers are almost always made from cardboard and interior packaging is designed to limit movement within the exterior container. The interior packaging may be made from many different types of products, including molded cardboard, plastic bubbles, polymeric “peanuts,” or crumpled paper.
The packaging industry is currently dominated with interior packaging made of folded cardboard that is designed to create space and provide support within an exterior container. For example, merchandise such as televisions and other electronics are shipped with a cardboard exterior container and a cardboard interior packaging structure. An alternative interior packaging structure to cardboard may be a cut or molded polystyrene material shaped to the contours of the merchandise being shipped. These molded structures are typically made from expanded polystyrene and are bulky and expensive to ship. In addition, the polystyrene structures are not easy to recycle.
In small product packaging, such as a toy or battery package, the interior packaging structure includes a “bubble pack” that is used to create a shell to hold the product within the exterior container.
With the purchasing of many products, consumers are turning more and more to internet direct purchasing. Shipping of many of these internet-purchased products is based as much on the weight of the exterior container and interior packaging as on the weight of the product itself. Because of the high cost of shipping, smaller, less bulky and more lightweight packaging material is desired so that the cost savings may be passed on to the consumer.
It is known in this industry how to create forms or molds for stamping out formed plastic injection molded materials. This expensive process is typically one in which the manufacturer creates a design, sends the design to a metal work shop, and has the profile cut into steel for injecting plastic into the space creating an interior packaging structure in the shape of the product to be packaged. The steel forming can be extremely expensive to develop.
In one aspect of the invention, there is provided a unitary packaging device for packaging an article including a resilient three-dimensional web of extruded polymer monofilaments, the polymer monofilaments being heat welded at junctions to form an open network of tangled monofilament, wherein the resilient three-dimensional web of extruded polymer monofilaments is configured to modify the contact area between the article and an exterior container.
In one embodiment, the extruded polymer monofilaments include a polyolefin, polyamide, polyester, polyvinylhalide, polystyrene, polyvinylester, or a mixture of two or more thereof.
In one embodiment the resilient three-dimensional web of extruded polymer monofilaments has a plurality of protrusions. The plurality of protrusions may have a shape selected from among cones, truncated cones, pyramids having polygonal bases, truncated pyramids having polygonal bases, cylinders, prisms, spherical elements, and combinations of two or more thereof. In one embodiment, the plurality of protrusions is aligned into an array of rows.
In one embodiment, the resilient three-dimensional web of extruded polymer monofilaments is configured to form an article-receiving cavity surrounded by an article-contacting surface. The article-receiving cavity may be contoured to the shape of the article.
In one embodiment, the unitary packaging device further includes a compressible layer overlaying at least a portion of the resilient three-dimensional web of extruded polymer monofilaments. In one embodiment, the compressible layer includes a high-loft nonwoven fabric. The compressible layer may be positioned between the article and the resilient three-dimensional web of extruded polymer monofilaments.
In one aspect of the invention there is provided a packaging system including two or more of the unitary packaging devices, wherein each unitary packaging device contacts the article.
In one embodiment, the resilient three-dimensional web of the packaging device has at least one pair of interlocking formations, wherein the resilient three-dimensional web is configured to be foldable onto itself and secured in a folded position by engaging the least one pair of interlocking formations.
In one embodiment, the resilient three dimensional web of the packaging device includes top and bottom shell halves and a hinge integrally formed with and interconnecting the top and bottom shell halves, the top and bottom shell halves cooperatively defining a cavity for containing the article. In one embodiment, the packaging device further includes at least one pair of interlocking formations positioned at marginal portions of the top and bottom shell halves.
2H are perspective views of embodiments of the protrusions of
The present invention is directed to a resilient packaging device formed of an open network of randomly oriented polymeric filaments. Referring to
The monofilaments 12 of web 10 may be made from any thermoplastic polymer that provides the desired properties of strength and resilience for the application in which it is used. For example, the monofilaments 12 may be made of a polyolefin (e.g., polyethylene, polypropylene, etc.), polyamide (e.g., Nylon), polyester, polyvinylhalide (e.g., polyvinylchloride (PVC), polyvinylidene chloride, polyvinyltetrafluoride, polyvinyl chlorotrifluoride), polystyrene, polyvinylester (e.g., polyvinyl acetate, etc.) or a mixture of two or more thereof. The monofilaments 12 are extruded onto a mold having the desired structural profile to form the packaging device.
One of the benefits of the packaging device of the present invention is the lowered cost of molding. The length of the belt or conveyer used in the manufacturing process can be minimized through quick cooling and made from a much less expensive process than computer-aided design (CAD) and computer numerical control (CNC) cut molds. Die cut pieces can be created to form simple geometric patterns in the packaging device. Another beneficial characteristic is that some of the cutting can be done in the same process as the extrusion. Instead of manufacturing cardboard pieces and die cutting them separately, the process of the present invention can produce the molded packaging material and in the same process die cut the finished part. The packaging device can be corrugated in order to create strength. The packaging device can have natural straight line molded areas so as to enhance folding ability.
The processing enhancement and the unique look of the web 10 formed from a plurality of extruded polymer monofilaments 12 makes the packaging device of the present invention attractive to those companies wanting to stand out. The monofilaments 12 can be any color, and can be transparent or translucent to a more typical, less expensive black filament made from recycled polymers. Also, the filament based materials minimize the overall costs by lowering the quantity of material used to create the packaging device.
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Although the invention has been shown and described with reference to certain exemplary embodiments, it is understood that equivalents and modifications may occur to others skilled in the art upon reading and understanding the specification. The present invention is intended to include all such equivalents and modifications as they come within the scope of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2014/035846 | 4/29/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61816975 | Apr 2013 | US | |
61857388 | Jul 2013 | US |