The invention relates to sealed packages.
It more particularly concerns sealed packages, specially designed to achieve airtight packaging, capable of resisting high pressures and large temperature variations.
To allow the transport in safe conditions of small quantities of dangerous materials, particularly by air, packages subject to very strict requirements are used.
One of these applications is the transport of vials containing “diagnostic specimens”, that is to say samples taken, for example, from man or animal.
Other applications consist of the transport of small quantities of materials of determined danger level, for example chemical products that can be aggressive.
In the case of “diagnostic specimens”, the “International Air Transport Association” (abbreviated as: “I.A.T.A.”), has set the rule “Packaging Instruction 650-diagnostic specimens”. This rule requires that the samples shall be contained in sealed “primary receptacles” and that the latter shall be contained in leakproof “secondary packaging”.
The invention relates in particular to this leakproof “secondary packaging”.
The rule cited above, requires that the “secondary packaging” resists without leakage a pressure difference between the inside and outside, in fact an internal overpressure of 0.95 bar and this over a temperature range from ˜40° C. to +55° C.
In addition a “secondary packaging” must contain an absorbing material (except when the “specimen” is solid).
The aim is to avoid any contamination by the products that escape in exceptional circumstances such as the depressurization of an aircraft hold or an accident.
Very generally, the “secondary packaging” is currently made up of two envelopes one inside the other, one of which essentially ensures sealing, the other resistance to internal overpressure.
The closure arrangement comprises a difficulty generally encountered in the design of “secondary packaging.”
In document U.S. Pat. No. 6,012,844, a sealed package is proposed, comprising, in the one part an envelope provided with an opening, and in the other part, a self adhesive film that is closed over the opening and seals onto the wall of the envelope to close the package. A package of this type does not generally allow compliance with the safety conditions stated in the air transport safety rules cited above. In particular, the closure of the envelope by means of a self-adhesive film does not guarantee the resistance of the packaging to the pressures and temperatures imposed by the said rule.
The invention has the aim of providing a new and original package, meeting severe requirements, in a particular, the above named rule “Packaging Instruction 650-Diagnostic Specimens” imposed for air transport.
Another objective of the invention is to provide a package capable of complying with the severe requirements stated above, which is of low cost.
An additional objective of the invention is to provide a package of this type, whose manipulation is easy, particularly its closure.
The invention has the special objective of a package that will comply with the requirements imposed on the “secondary packaging” that has been discussed above and which can then constitute such a “secondary packaging.”
The invention concerns a sealed package comprising, on the one hand, a flexible air-tight envelope, of which one wall is pierced by a slot, and on the other hand, a self adhesive film to close the slot in the envelope, the said package being characterized in that the self adhesive film includes two parallel self adhesive faces, of which one is completely covered with a detachable protective strip and of which the other comprises a first zone that is fixed to the above mentioned wall of the envelope, along a lip of the said slot and a second zone that extends in front of the slot and beyond a second lip of the slot, the said second zone of the self adhesive film being covered with a detachable protective strip.
In the installation in accordance with the invention, the envelope must be flexible and it must be in a material that is capable of resisting the conditions for which it is intended. It is generally formed of two or more sheets of plastic material, welded at their periphery. Depending on the use for which it is intended, the envelope can be opaque or translucent. In the case of a package intended for air transport, the envelope must in particular comply with the above named rule “Packaging Instruction 650-diagnostic specimens”. Notwithstanding the preceding conditions, the profile, the dimensions and the material of the envelope are not critical for the definition of the invention. In practice, the envelope is habitually realized in one of more layers of synthetic polymer. Synthetic polymers that are usable within the context of the invention include halogenated vinyl polymers (particularly chlorinated vinyl polymers, notable polyvinyl chloride and polyvinylidene chloride), the polyolefins (particularly the homopolymers and copolymers of ethylene, propylene and butylene) and the polyamides. Oriented polyamides (OPA) are specially recommended in the case of packages intended for air transport. For this application of the package in accordance with the invention, oriented polyamide sheets are advantageously used, laminated with a polyethylene layer, this last being for preference situated inside the envelope.
The slot is intended to give access to the interior of the envelope, to introduce into it a defined product. Its profile and its position on the wall of the envelope are not critical for the definition of the invention. In a preferred form of realization of the package according to the invention, the slot is approximately rectilinear and it is advantageously situated close to the edge of the envelope. In this preferred form of realization of the invention, it is recommended that the said envelope edge should be approximately rectilinear and approximately parallel to the slot.
The self-adhesive strip is normally a flexible film, whose two faces are self-adhesive. One of these two faces is covered with a protective strip. This protective strip has the function of isolating the said face from the external environment and of thus preserving its self-adhesive character. The protective strip is designed to be able to be removed by pulling off, without changing the self-adhesive character of the said face. The other face of the said self-adhesive strip is subdivided into two contiguous zones, respectively designated “first zone” and “second zone” in the continuation of the present memorandum. The said first zone is fixed to the wall of the envelope, along a lip of the said slot. Any appropriate means can be used to join the said first zone to the wall of the envelope. It can for example include a weld, an adhesive bond, stapling or a combination of these means of fixation. The adhesive bond is preferred. The said second zone prolongs the first zone and extends in front of the slot, in front of the second lip of the slot and beyond this latter. It is covered by a protective strip. This has the same function as the protective strip that covers the other face of the self-adhesive strip and which was discussed above.
As explained above, the self-adhesive strip is normally a flexible film, whose two faces are self-adhesive. Any self adhesive film possessing the properties stated above is suitable for use in the context of the invention. Self-adhesive films that are suitable include an olefin polymer, covered with a rubber-based adhesive. The expression “olefin polymer” indifferently designates homopolymers and olefin copolymers. The ethylene homopolymers and copolymers of propylene and butylene are generally well suited.
To use the package according to the invention an object or product to be enclosed in the envelope is introduced into the envelope through the slot. The protective strips are removed from the self adhesive strip, the above mentioned stripped second zone of the self adhesive strip is sealed onto the envelope wall and the envelope is folded back on itself, so as to fold back on itself the other face, stripped bare, of the self adhesive strip.
In a particular form of realization of the package according to the invention, the envelope extends beyond the above-mentioned second lip of the slot, for a distance at least equal to that of the above-mentioned second zone of the self-adhesive strip. In an advantageous variant of this form of realization of the invention, the length of the aforementioned second zone of the self adhesive strip is at least equal (in preference greater than) the length of the above mentioned first zone of the self adhesive strip. All other things on the other hand being equal, this particular form of realization of the package, according to the invention and its advantageous variant eases the closing of the envelope and reinforces the air tightness of the package and its resistance to mechanical loads.
In another form of particular realization of the package according to the invention, the envelope is divided into several distinct pockets communicating with the slot. This particular form of realization of the invention allows the isolation of several distinct products of objects in the package according to the invention.
The package according to the invention allows the realization of airtight conditions, capable of resisting large mechanical forces, especially large pressure and large temperature variations. It particularly allows the realization of airtight conditions that comply with the standards set by the air transport regulations, especially those of the above named rule “Packaging Instruction 650-diagnostic specimens”.
The invention also concerns a process for the airtight packaging of a product, according to which
In the procedure according to the invention, the term “product” must be considered in a generally accepted meaning and indifferently designates a solid material object, a powder or a liquid. It can be a bottle, an ampoule or a vial containing a powder or a liquid.
The procedure according to the invention achieves optimum packaging air-tightness. It allows packaging in accordance with the above named rule “Packaging Instruction 650-diagnostic specimens”. In particular it allows packaging whose air-tightness is retained under a relative overpressure at least equal to 0.5 bar, generally at least equal to 0.9 bar, or even equal or greater than 0.95 bar and under a temperature of −40° C. to +55° C.
The invention also concerns an airtight packaging of a product in a package inside which a relative pressure of at least 0.5 bar and a temperature of −40° C. to +55° C. exist, obtained by the procedure according to the invention, defined above.
In airtight sealing in accordance with the invention, the term “product” has the general definition provided above.
Characteristics and details of the invention will appear in the course of the following description of the attached figures, which represent a particular form of realization of the package according to the invention and the application, to this, of a particular form of execution of the procedure according to the invention.
The figures are not drawn to scale.
Generally, the same reference numbers designate the same elements.
The package represented in the figures includes an envelope designated in its entirety by the notation reference 30 (
The front sheet 2 and the rear sheet 6 are thin films in plastic material. They are hot welded in the zones 3 and 8 surrounding the pockets 27. The welds are represented by hatching.
The sheet 2 is pierced by a rectilinear slot 5, which communicates with the pockets 27. The slot 5 is intended for the insertion, into the pockets 27, of “primary containers” 28 (
The package includes in addition a self-adhesive strip 10 serving to close it (
To pack one or more products 28 (
The manual application of the flap during bending is sufficient to give the stack of all these layers, adhesion forces that remain effective despite the severe pressure and temperature conditions of the I.A.T.A. rules.
If anyone had been content to implement the closure using a single face self-adhesive applied on the slot, the forces exercised on the adhesive layer at the slot would have progressively pulled off this self-adhesive.
In effect, this arrangement of the self-adhesive leads to the combined application of two types of forces on the adhesive:
a shearing due to the take up of the force interrupted by the slot.
The self-adhesive strip used in the package according to the invention is commercially available. This type of self-adhesive strip includes an adhesive that remains plastic and whose viscosity reduces with temperature. It cannot in general withstand significant pulling off forces without progressively disbanding.
In the package closure procedure according to the invention, the pulling off force on the adhesive is removed and moved towards the weld bead 31, which is able to withstand it.
The forces are applied separately in distinct zones:
An adequate dimensioning of the surfaces 14 and 22 allows resistance to the envisaged forces without creep of the adhesive.
In the package represented in the figures, the sheets 2 and 6 are advantageously thin combined sheets of oriented polyamide-polyethylene (OPA/PE). The polyethylene faces are arranged on the inside faces of the pockets 27. The double-sided self-adhesive strip 10 preferred as a function of the I.A.T.A. application requirements and for its cost is “Pressure Sensitive Adhesive” (PSA). It is made up of a polyethylene film (13, 20) coated on each face with an acrylic, or for preference a rubber based adhesive. The research undertaken to offer a package meeting the I.A.T.A. requirements has lead to a preference for the solutions and materials described. For other more severe or even less severe applications or in other conditions, for example the dimensions of the contents, the means in accordance with the invention are usable by selecting more or less high performance materials, at greater or lesser costs.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003/0435 | Aug 2003 | BE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/BE04/00114 | 8/5/2004 | WO | 1/24/2006 |