This application is a National Stage entry of International Application No. PCT/IB2005/003982 filed Dec. 14, 2005, which claims priority of Italy Application Number BO2004A000785 filed Dec. 20, 2004, the entire specification, claims and Drawings of which are incorporated herewith by reference.
The present invention relates to a unit for packaging articles containing a product for infusion.
In particular, the invention is advantageously used to package stacked groups of single-use pods of filter paper containing measured quantities or charges of infusion product such as tea, barley coffee, chamomile and the like, preferably powdered coffee, in bag-like packets to which this specification expressly refers but without thereby restricting the scope of the invention.
Usually, an automatic machine for making filter-paper pods, containing doses of infusion product comprises a production line having a plurality of operating stations located one after the other along it and at the end of which a continuous strip of pods, that is to say, two superposed webs of filter paper heat sealed to each other and having interposed, at regular intervals, a plurality of infusion product charges, is divided up at a cutting station into individual single-use pods separated by waste material.
Downstream of the cutting station, the pod making machine has an end outfeed station equipped with pick and place means designed to pick up the pods one by one and place them on conveyors that transport them to packaging devices which wrap them in respective heat-sealed overwraps. In another solution, which this invention specifically refers to, the outfeed station comprises conveyor means for advancing the groups of pods, preferably stacked, towards packaging units where the groups of pods are picked up and fed by complex mechanical devices into forming assemblies which pack them in packages such as, for example, bag-like packets.
In other words, packaging the groups of pods requires conveyor means for handling and moving the pods from the machine that makes them to the bagging units which, in some cases, may be located some distance away.
A structure of this kind has considerable disadvantages due not only to the presence of the conveyor means required to transport the grouped pods to the packaging units, which greatly increase the overall dimensions of the pod making machine that mounts them, but also and above all to the complexity of the mechanical structural components of the packaging units themselves.
Other major difficulties are caused by the handling and positioning of the pod stacks since the pods are gravity fed into the bags in an uncontrolled manner leading to their being incorrectly arranged in the bags.
The aim of this invention is to provide a pod packaging machine that is free of the above mentioned disadvantages.
This invention accordingly provides a unit for packaging articles containing a product for infusion, of the type comprising at least one operating stacking station for stacking the articles in such a way as to form at least one stack of articles; the unit being characterised in that the stacking station comprises a device for handling the articles which guides and controls the stack of articles as it is fed into the bag-like packet.
The technical characteristics of the invention, with reference to the above aims, are clearly described in the claims below and its advantages are apparent from the detailed description which follows, with reference to the accompanying drawings which illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention provided merely by way of example without restricting the scope of the inventive concept, and in which:
With reference to the accompanying drawings, in particular
The pod 1, in this non-restricting embodiment of the invention, is of well-known type, comprising two lengths 2 and 3 of filter material placed face to face and joined to each other by sealing round the edges after a charge 4 has been placed on the surface of only one of the lengths to form the pod 1.
The pod making machine, labeled 5 as a whole in
The separating station 7 comprises a pusher element 7a located downstream of the station 6 and designed to push the individual pods 1 vertically under the feed table 50.
The separating station 7 also comprises a unit 7b for expelling the waste trimmings S1 downstream of the pusher 7a with respect to the production line A.
As illustrated in
The device 9 comprises means 10, 17 for guiding the stacked pods 1 along a vertical feed path section Z towards an end 11a of the packet 11 positioned at the bottom end 9a of the device 9 itself.
As clearly shown in
During use, the device 9 (
As shown in
Preferably, the conveying means 12 consist of a carriage-like bucket 12a reciprocatingly mobile along a horizontal path T transversal to the direction of the line A (
As shown in
The pusher element 17 moves between an idle position where the element 17 is away from the inlet opening at the top of the hollow element 14 (
In practice, the pusher element 17 is designed to accompany the pods 1 and to push them all the way into the bag-like packet 11.
As better shown in
Obviously, to be able to correctly control downfeed, the diameter D of the zones 15 and 16 is just a little smaller than the diameter D1 of the pods 1, taking into account the outer ring 1c of the pod 1 (surrounding the central portion defined by the coffee charge 4) formed by the superposed webs of filter paper which are flexible and easily deformed when the stacks 1a and 1b are pushed into the channel 13 but creating just enough interference (as shown by the detail view of
As illustrated in
For better and more even distribution of the fluid, the longitudinal conduit 18 leads into at least two opposite openings 19 and 20, one for each of the circular zones 15 and 16. The fluid flow is directed from the bottom up in the channel 13.
Further, each circular zone 15 and 16 has radial grooves 60 around its circumference extending for the full length of the circular zones 15 and 16 to enable air to escape in the direction opposite the downward direction of motion of the stacks 1a, 1b towards the packet 11.
The other component of the device 9 is the aforementioned pushing/accompanying element 17 which comprises a flat head 17a designed to come into contact with the pods 1 so as to push and guide the pods down the circular zones 15 and 16. The head 17a is preferably two-lobed to allow two stacks 1a and 1b of pods 1 to be pushed simultaneously (
The head 17a is also associated with a vertical rod 21 that slides along guides 22 associated with a vertical column 23 located above the hollow element 14.
The rod 21 is preferably driven by a variable-speed motor 24 (for example, a brushless motor) positioned at the top end of the column 23 (see
At the lower end 9a of the hollow element 14, there is a sealing and cutting device 25 designed to close the inlet opening 11a of the bag-like packet 11 and to simultaneously form the base 11b of the next packet 11 being formed around the hollow element 14 (
Below is a description of how the packaging unit 100 according to the invention works.
Once the stacks 1a, 1b of pods 1 have been made in the stacking station 8, the stacks 1a and 1b (defining the final quantity and arrangement to be accommodated in the packet 11) are transferred along T to the device 9.
At this point, the pair of stacks 1a and 1b are pushed downwards in guided manner along the vertical channel 13 by the element 17 (arrow F17C,
Once the stacks 1a, 1b are inside the packet 11, the pushing/accompanying element 17 can move back up (arrow F17B,
A packaging unit structured as described above therefore achieves the aforementioned aims thanks to two simple elements for positioning and controlling the downfeed of the pods and permitting accurate and steady placement of the pods, all in an extremely compact structure.
The solution according to the invention offers several advantages such as, for example, a reduction in the space required for transit between the area where the pods are made and the area where they are packaged, making it possible to integrate the packaging station into the pod making machine, an overall reduction in the number of working parts and stations making up the packaging station, thereby lowering the production cost of the machine as a whole, while at the same time allowing higher operating speeds to be achieved. Moreover, the packaging unit according to the invention makes it possible to significantly increase obtainable packaging speeds because the pod stacks are pushed down into the bags at a higher speed than can be achieved by gravity alone.
It will be understood that the invention as described herein can be modified and adapted in several ways without thereby departing from the scope of the inventive concept. Moreover, all the details may be substituted by technically equivalent elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
BO2004A0785 | Dec 2004 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/003982 | 12/14/2005 | WO | 00 | 10/17/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/067619 | 6/29/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090087294 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |