This invention relates to dispensers for consumable liquids, and more particularly to a dispenser that delivers consumable liquid from a container at one location, through a flow path to a dispensing location.
Often, in the past, consumable liquid dispensers for delivering, for example, cream or milk to a consumer's coffee or tea has relied on gravity flow downward from a container to a dispensing location. This has meant that such dispensers were typically located entirely above a counter. These dispensers use valuable above-counter space that could be put to better use. The dispensing unit has to be large enough to house one or more containers of significant size. In addition refrigeration of the above-counter container or containers (essential for dairy products) further adds to the size of the above-counter unit.
Liquid consumables that are delivered under pressure such as beer or carbonated water can be remotely housed and delivered to a tap or dispenser at a bar or counter where drinks are prepared. Non-carbonated drinks like cream, milk and fruit juice have ordinarily not been delivered to a dispensing station in this manner. Beer is delivered to a remote tap by compressed air forced into direct contact with the beer in a keg. Where spoilage is a concern one would ordinarily like to avoid air contact with the liquid.
Non-carbonated liquid can be moved from one place to another by a pump. However, where the liquid is consumable (i.e. a food product), that raises concerns for sanitation. Pump parts that contact liquid require constant, repeated cleaning to maintain proper sanitary conditions.
There is a need, therefore, for a consumable liquid delivery system that does not require extensive counter space, that works to deliver non-carbonated liquids from a remote location, that does not contact the liquid with any movable part as would a pump and that moves the liquid other than by gravity.
Where, as in the case of dairy products, temperature of the consumable liquid is an important consideration, a further problem must be addressed. That problem is maintaining temperature of the liquid product in the path from its container or “store” to its dispensing location. For dairy products close temperature control at all points along the delivery system is a government requirement. In the U.S. dairy product must be maintained at a temperature above 32° and below 41° Fahrenheit within its container and along the length of the delivery tube.
A shortcoming of known dispensers of consumable liquids such as cream is lack of a consistent dose from one dispenser use to the next. In certain environments this is undesirable. Proprietors of many convenience stores and fast food restaurants where consumers operate the cream dispensers would prefer to know that each activation of the dispenser will provide the same dose. This is also true where an employee provides a beverage at a drive-through window. It is preferable for coffee with cream, for example, to be consistent from one restaurant to the next. Travelers that patronize chain restaurants often do so in the expectation that products they purchase will be virtually identical at each restaurant. So a consistent dose of cream, half and half or milk with every cup of coffee or tea is desirable.
In accordance with this invention, a dispenser for consumable liquids delivers the liquid to a dispensing location from a remote store or container without reliance on gravity flow, without introducing air or other gas under pressure into contact with the liquid and without contacting the liquid with any moving part of a pump or the like. The mechanism for delivery of the liquid is gas pressure activated. In the preferred embodiment it is an inflatable bladder or air bag that engages a collapsible container such as a compressible bag containing the liquid. Compressed air is fed to the inflatable bladder, which is confined in its position in force exerting contact with the flexible, liquid-containing bag. The compressible bag opens to a liquid delivery path leading to the dispensing location. Preferably the path contains a flexible tube through which the liquid flows. In a preferred embodiment, flow is controlled by a pinch valve normally pinching the tube closed. Preferably both the flexible bag and the flexible liquid delivery tube are relatively inexpensive and can be discarded after the bag is exhausted of liquid. In a preferred embodiment no part of the mechanism for forcing the liquid out of the bag to the dispensing location ever touches the liquid. Maintaining sanitary conditions is made very easy.
Using the type of prior art pinch valve and flexible tube arrangement of U.S. Pat. No. 6,186,361, incorporated herein by reference, the dispensed liquid touches no permanent part of the dispenser on its way from the collapsible container to the tip of the tube from which it is dispensed.
Delivery of liquid to a dispensing location in the manner of this invention as described above permits even non-carbonated or “still” consumable liquids to be pumped from a remote location to a dispensing location. In one exemplary and preferred embodiment the remote location of the compressible, flexible liquid container is a below-counter location while the dispensing location is an above-counter location. A relatively narrow stem projecting upward from the counter leads one or more of the flexible liquid delivery tubes to the dispensing location. Little counter space is used for dispensing the liquid. The under-counter location containing the flexible liquid filled bag and the inflatable bladder can be refrigerated. Also a compressor or air pump for supplying compressed air to the bladder can be housed below the counter. The under-counter location can be in a cabinet directly under the dispensing location.
In the exemplary embodiment, the under-counter cabinet contains one or more enclosures or compartments. Each enclosure or compartment contains one or more of the flexible liquid filled bags and one or more bladders in contact with the bag or bags. Each enclosure that is equipped with one or more of the inflatable bladders has a structure that confines the bladder in contact with the flexible bag so that pressure from the bladder is exerted against the flexible liquid-containing bag. In an exemplary preferred embodiment described below the enclosure is a slidable drawer and the structure confining the bladder in contact with the bag is a stationary lid supporting the drawer for sliding movement. Preferably, as a safety feature, one or more safety shut off switches serve to relieve the pressure in the bladder or bladders in an enclosure when the enclosure is opened. The switch or switches serve as safety interlock devices, preventing pressure in the inflatable bladder or bladders expanding the bladder explosively when the drawer is slid out from under its lid, possibly injuring an attendant.
In an embodiment where a variety of products are dispensed, the enclosures and the liquid containers that they accommodate can be of various sizes so as to take into account varying demand for the products. The enclosure can be modular, entirely removable and replaceable so as to permit a dispenser to be modified and tailored to the needs of a particular installation. In the case of the drawer and stationary lid, both drawer and lid can be attached and detached as a single module facilitating removal and replacement of one size enclosure with another.
In one embodiment of the invention, the liquid delivery system delivers one or more of cream, non-dairy creamer, milk, half and half and/or other coffee and tea additives such as flavorings from the flexible bags at the below-counter location to the above-counter dispensing location. In a fast food restaurant, convenience store or elsewhere, valuable counter top space is conserved.
In one particular embodiment, a below-counter cabinet containing the consumable liquid store is on wheels, casters or sliders or other means facilitating the movement of the cabinet, making the cabinet, its counter and the liquid dispenser easily moved from one location to another. This is an embodiment useful for hotels and resorts that set up refreshments at various locations in connection with conferences, meetings, parties, etc. held in various conference rooms.
In any of the above embodiments of the invention, where refrigeration of the liquid to be dispensed is important, cooling by the refrigeration unit can extend upward from an under-counter location to a location at or very near the dispensing location. This is important in dispensing dairy product such as cream, milk or half and half for coffee or tea. Where, as described above, a stem containing a liquid delivery tube extends upward from a counter top, that stem's interior can be in communication with the refrigerated location of the liquid bag or bags below the counter in accordance with one aspect of this invention. Cooling of the stem interior by convection can be assisted by a fan moving refrigerated air into the liquid delivery path. Additionally for good conduction of heat away from the liquid dispensing location and away from the flexible tube or tubes leading the liquid to the dispensing location, a return air flow channel may extend into and along the inside of the stem.
Preferably, too, in some embodiments, the pinch valve or valves that normally pinch the one or more flexible tubes closed are electrically operated from a manually activated switch or switches at the dispensing locations. Electrical solenoid-operated pinch valves suitable for use in this invention are commercially available items. Although, without departing from the invention, manually operated pinch valves can be used. These may be of the kind described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,186,361, incorporated herein by reference. In either case the valves, their manual actuators and the stem that communicates with the under counter refrigeration unit can be part of a dispensing head supported on the stem.
An aspect of this inventive liquid dispenser addresses the problem of consistency in doses of coffee or tea additives. This is a dosing valve that meters out a consistent dose of the additive each and every time the dispenser is operated. The valve is a slide valve that, when the slide is spring biased to its “home” position defines a chamber in a close fitting housing in which the slide moves. The chamber, so-defined, is in communication with the tube supplying the additive from the collapsible bag that is the additive store. Movement of the slide to the dispensing position moves a liquid path formed in the slide between the chamber and a liquid emission opening through a wall of the housing. At the same time the slide closes the communication path between the chamber and the tube. An air passage between the outer surface of the slide and its housing allows the slide to return towards its home position under the influence of the biasing spring until the communication is again established between the chamber and the additive supply tube. As the additive again fills the chamber, air is displaced and escapes along the air passage.
The above and further objects and advantages of the invention will be better understood in connection with the following detailed description of the invention taken in consideration with the accompanying drawings.
Turning now to
The fountainhead 28 has a base 31 resting on the counter surface 24. A drip tray 33 is shown supporting a cup 34. A hollow stem 35 extends upwardly from the base 31 supporting a dispensing head 36. A series of five manually activated push buttons 38 are the activators of manually operable pinch valves that normally pinch closed five flexible consumable liquid supply tubes as described in greater detail below. A user pushes one or more of the push buttons 38 to choose the consumable liquid of choice. The available products are identified at the five displays 39 aligned with the push buttons 38. Additional information can be displayed at a display area 41. This can be a passive or active electronic display. At 42 can be found a temperature readout of temperature in the fountainhead as determined by a suitably chosen, commercially available temperature sensor located there. At 43 low product and out of product indications are provided by LEDs. Supported on the fountainhead 28 in a fashion described in greater detail below is a placard 45 that may contain advertising or additional product information. The fountainhead 28 is particularly well suited for supplying coffee or tea additives such as cream, half and half, non-dairy creamer, flavorings, etc., but can be as well, a dispenser of fruit juices, water or other beverages. In the embodiment of
The cabinet 22 of
Turning to
In
In
In
As is evident in
Five flexible liquid supply tubes 115-119 extend from the drawers 91-95 upward to the fountainhead through the opening 58. At their lower ends, the tubes 115-119 connect with hollow outlet connections 121 of a series of fitments 122. These fitments 122, better seen in
As shown at 131-136 in the cross-sectional view of
Shown in
In
The three molded elements 171, 172 and 173 that make up the fountainhead are shown in
Held in place by a bracket 195, as seen in
In an alternate embodiment of the invention illustrated in
Returning to
When one or both safety switches 225 and 226 open, the valve 230 connects the air lines 241 and 242 thus connecting line 242 to the intake of the pump 64 and dropping the pressure in the line 242. The valve 231 at the same time vents the line 245 to atmosphere through the valve outlet 265 marked “EXH.” Through the manifold 246 the bladders 143 are thus vented to atmosphere, deflating the bladders and making it safe to open the drawers containing the bladders and the flexible bags containing the liquid product. The output of the pump 64, also, is vented to atmosphere by the closing of the normally closed valve 232. The air intake and filter 253 are disconnected from the vacuum side of the pump 64 by the opening of the normally open valve 233. The loss of air pressure in the line 242 is communicated to the pressure switch 256 which interrupts the mains power to the pump 64.
As shown in
With the incorporated-by-reference valve of the above-cited U.S. Pat. No. 6,186,361 as shown in
Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been described in detail, it will be readily appreciated by those skilled in the art that further modifications, alterations and additions to the invention embodiments disclosed may be made without departure from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
This application is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/613,973, filed on Jul. 3, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,086,566 issued on Aug. 8, 2006, priority from which is hereby claimed.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060138164 A1 | Jun 2006 | US | |
20070056985 A9 | Mar 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10613973 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 11362122 | US |