This invention relates to a valve assembly with a control mechanism for varying the characteristics of flow through the valve, and to a method for evacuating gas from a fluid containing reservoir.
It is known to prepare a replaceable refill assembly incorporating a fluid reservoir by filling the reservoir with fluid to be dispensed, applying a valve assembly across the only outlet from the reservoir and then evacuating air or other gases from the reservoir by applying a vacuum across the valve assembly. Once all of the air is evacuated from the reservoir, the refill assembly incorporating the reservoir and its valve assembly is ready for coupling in a dispensing apparatus. The refill assembly has the advantage that it is ready to use in dispensing of the fluid without the need to evacuate further air or other gas from the reservoir. The valve mechanism attached to the outlet of the reservoir typically includes a one-way valve permitting air to be drawn outwardly from the reservoir, however, preventing air or other materials to flow into the reservoir. Advantageously, the one-way valve permits air or other gas to be drawn outwardly from the reservoir under a first vacuum pressure below atmospheric, however, an increased second vacuum pressure farther below atmospheric pressure, is required to draw the fluid outwardly pass the one-way valve. By selecting an evacuating vacuum which is between the first vacuum pressure but not as great as the second vacuum pressure, all of the air may be drawn out and once the air is drawn out, the fluid to be dispensed is not drawn out since the evacuating vacuum while adequate to draw out the air is not adequate to draw out the fluid.
The applicant has appreciated a difficulty which can arise when under certain circumstances, the vacuum which is required to draw air from the reservoir is approximately the same as or is less than the vacuum required to draw fluid from the reservoir. For example, under some circumstances, a one-way valve may be desired to have a sufficient inherent resiliency against opening that the vacuum necessary to be applied to draw air out is substantially equal to the vacuum required to draw fluid out. For example in some circumstances, a very strong bias against opening of the one-way valve may be desired when the fluid to be dispensed is a very low viscosity such as alcohol. In other circumstances, the resistance of the one-way valve to flow outwardly therepast may be desired to be very high as, for example, when the material may comprise viscous fluids or pastes such as soaps with granular particles such as pumice and a strong inherent bias of the valve member to move to a closed position is necessary to create a proper seal on normal closing of the valve member.
To at least partially overcome these disadvantages of previously known devices, the present invention provides a control mechanism to control the opening and/or closing characteristics of a valve member.
An object of the invention is to provide a one-way valve whose inherent tendency to assume an open or closed position can be selectively controlled.
Another object is to provide an improved piston for a pump incorporating a resilient one-way valve having a control mechanism to move the valve away from an inherent configuration to which it is biased to assume.
Another object is to provide an improved method of withdrawing air or gas from a reservoir.
The present invention provides a valve and a control mechanism to change a characteristic of the valve, preferably, its tendency to open. The valve may preferably comprise a disc which extends radially outwardly to resiliently engage the wall of a chamber. The control mechanism preferably provides an access port communicating axially out an opening of the chamber. In a preferred embodiment, the control mechanism comprises a bladder with a flexible side wall which can be moved from an inherent uncollapsed position to a different position and which bladder is inherently biased to return to its uncollapsed position. The bladder may be moved by applying a pressure to its interior, either a vacuum pressure below atmospheric to collapse the bladder or a pressure above atmospheric to expand the bladder. The bladder may also function as an access passageway for a push rod to deflect the disc as with the bladder suitably deformed from its inherent condition by a push rod which enters the bladder axially via the access port. A segment of the disc may be moved or deflected axially and/or radially to alter its sealing characteristics in the chamber. The valve may comprise a stopper for a bottle or a portion of a piston pump reciprocally slidable to dispense fluid from a reservoir.
In one aspect, the present invention provides a valve element comprising:
an axially extending stem,
disc extending radially outwardly therefrom to a resilient outer edge portion,
a collapsible bladder carried on the stem having an interior cavity enclosed but for being open to an access port,
the bladder coupled to the outer edge portion of the disc,
the bladder having an inherent resiliency biasing the bladder to assume an uncollapsed condition, the resiliency of the bladder providing for the bladder to assume a collapsed condition when a relative vacuum is applied to the interior cavity sufficient to over coming the inherent bias and with the inherent bias urging the bladder to assume the uncollapsed condition when such a relative vacuum is not applied to the interior cavity,
in moving from the uncollapsed condition to the collapsed condition, the bladder moving a segment of the outer edge portion radially inwardly.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a method of preparing a replaceable fluid reservoir for insertion into a dispenser housing, wherein said reservoir has coupled thereto a pump assembly which when activated dispenses fluid from said reservoir,
said pump assembly including,
a chamber-forming element having a chamber, said chamber having chamber wall, an outer open end and an inner end in fluid communication with said reservoir, and
one-way valve means disposed across said chamber permitting fluid flow therepast through the chamber only from the reservoir outwardly towards the outer open end, said one-way valve means permitting air to be drawn therepast towards the outer open end under a first negative pressure while permitting fluid to be drawn therepast under a second negative pressure which is further below atmospheric pressure than said first negative pressure,
said method comprising the steps of:
substantially filling said reservoir with fluid, and
evacuating air from said reservoir by applying a vacuum to a portion of said chamber which is spaced outwardly from said one-way valve means,
said vacuum providing vacuum pressure at least as far below atmospheric pressure as said first negative pressure to draw out air from said chamber and said reservoir.
wherein said pump assembly includes a piston forming element configured to be slidably received in the chamber, and wherein axially inward and outward sliding of said piston forming element in said chamber dispenses said fluid,
said piston element comprising:
an axially extending stem,
a disc extending radially outwardly therefrom to a resilient outer edge portion,
the piston element coaxially slidably received in the chamber with the outer edge portion of the disc engaging the chamber side wall to restrict fluid flow through the chamber past the disc having regard to the pressure differential across the disc,
the method further including during the step of evacuating air, deforming the disc to alter the engagement of the outer portion of the disc with the chamber side wall and temporarily change the extent to which the disc restricts fluid flow through the chamber past the disc having regard to the pressure differential across the disc.
Further aspects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description taken together with the accompanying drawings in which:
Reference is made first to
The chamber 22 in the preferred embodiment is illustrated as having an inner chamber 32 and an outer chamber 33. The inner chamber 32 and outer chamber 33 are coaxial with an outer end of the inner chamber 32 opening into the inner end of the outer chamber. The inner chamber 22 is defined within a cylindrical inner side wall 31. The outer chamber 33 is defined within a cylindrical outer side wall 35 which ends at the inner end of the outer chamber 33 as a stepped shoulder 36. The chamber 22 is thus formed as a stepped chamber with the inner chamber 32 having a lesser diameter than the outer chamber 33.
As seen in
The piston 10 is generally cylindrical and, in the preferred embodiments, is preferably formed as a unitary element entirely of a plastic as by injection moulding. The piston 10 has a hollow stem 41 extending along a central longitudinal axis 40 of the piston 10. A circular resilient flexing inner disc 42 is located at the inwardmost end of the piston 10 and extends radially therefrom. The inner flexing disc 42 is sized to circumferentially abut the cylindrical inner side wall 31. The inner disc 42 has a resilient outer edge portion 43 which is inherently biased to extend radially outwardly into engagement with the inner side wall 31. The inner disc 42 is configured so as to prevent fluid flow inwardly therepast within the inner chamber 32. The outer edge portion 43 of the inner disc 42 has an inherent resiliency such that it may be deflected from engagement with the inner side wall 31 so as to permit fluid flow outwardly therepast within the inner chamber 32. An outer disc 44 is provided on the stem 41 outwardly of the inner disc 42. The outer disc 44 has an outer edge portion 45 which engages the outer side wall 35 to at least prevent fluid flow outwardly therepast, however, preferably to also substantially prevent fluid flow inwardly therepast. The piston stem 41 has a central hollow passageway 46 extending along the axis of the piston 10 and is closed at a blind inner end 47 and open to the discharge opening 37 at an outer end. Inlets 48 extend through the wall of the stem 41 located between the inner disc 42 and the outer disc 44 to provide communication from the chamber 22 between the inner disc 42 and the outer disc 44 into the passageway 46.
An engagement disc 50 is provided on the stem 41 outwardly of the outer disc 44. The engagement disc 50 is secured to the stem 41 by three radially and axially extending support vanes 51 best seen in
The refill unit 20 is adapted to be placed inside a dispenser with the cap 16 removed, with the piston chamber forming member 12 fixed to the dispenser and with an activation mechanism to engage the engagement disc 50 and move the piston 10 inwardly and outwardly relative to the piston chamber forming member 12 in cycles of operation. On outward movement of the piston 10 to a retracted position, fluid in the bottle 14 is drawn outwardly through the inlet openings 24 past the one-way valve 28 into the annular space between the one-way valve 28 and the inner disc 42. On inward movement of the piston 10 in a retraction stroke, fluid between the outer disc 44 and the inner disc 42 is pressurized and travels via the inlets 48 into the passageway 46 and hence out the discharge opening 37 at the same time that fluid between the one-way valve 28 and the inner disc 42 is forced outwardly past the inner disc 42 into the space between the inner disc 42 and the outer disc 44. The stepped nature of the chamber 22 is not necessary but can provide some advantageous drawback from the passageway 46 in an extension stroke.
Reference is now made to
Reference is made to
Reference is made to
The port 58 extends through a central portion of the outer disc 44 and the side wall 57 of the bladder 56 is integrally coupled with this central portion about the port 58. This central portion is not required to deflect in operation. Thus, the connection of the bladder 56 to the disc 44 does not impair the operation of the outer disc 44 in providing sealing within the outer chamber 33.
The link arm 60 is an elongate member having an outer end 70 and an inner end 71. The outer end 70 is coupled to the side wall 57 of the control bladder 56 at a location centrally of the front wall portion 67. The inner end 71 is coupled to the outer edge portion 43 of the inner disc 42 at a radially inward portion of the outer edge portion 43. A longitudinal centrally through the link arm 60 from the outer end 70 to the inner 71 is disposed in a flat plane which extends radially and axially relative the central axis 40 of the piston 10. The link arm 60 extends radially relative the central axis and, as well, axially.
The side wall 57 of the control bladder 56 is selected to have suitable thickness over its front wall portion 67 and end wall portion 65 and 66 such that when a vacuum is applied to the interior cavity 62 of the control bladder, the front wall portion 67 will be deflected in a manner illustrated in
In use in accordance with one aspect of the present invention, the bottle 14 is prepared by first substantially filling the bottle 14 with fluid to be dispensed. The pump assembly comprising the piston chamber forming member 12 and piston 10 are then applied to the bottle 14 by threadably coupling the pump assembly to the neck 18 of the bottle 14. With the bottle 14 preferably in a vertical position such as shown in
Referring to
In the context, for example, of the embodiments illustrated in
In another manner of operation, with the control bladder 56 in a collapsed position, the outer edge 43 of the inner disc is drawn substantially out of engagement with the inner side wall 31 in which case gas or fluid is relatively free to be drawn outwardly past the inner disc 42. The one-way valve 28 therefore will substantially determine the vacuum pressures desired to be applied to the evacuation tube 72 to withdraw air past the one-way valve 28 but to not draw fluid therepast. In many embodiments, it is the combined ability of the one-way valve 28 and the inner disc 42 to permit air to pass therethrough under a certain first vacuum pressure condition but to not permit fluid to pass therepast unless a greater second vacuum pressure condition exists needs to be considered to provide for proper evacuation.
The particular construction of the piston element 10 shown permits the piston element 10 to advantageously be manufactured as by injection moulding as a unitary element, although this is not necessary. It is to be appreciated that most pumps involve at least two one-way valves. A piston for a pump may advantageously carry at least one of these one-way valves on the piston to have a control bladder as described so as to assist in the control of the functional characteristics of the valve carried by the piston.
The preferred embodiments illustrate but a single control bladder 56 provided to assist in controlling the inner disc 42. It is to be appreciated that a mirror image second control bladder (not shown) could be provided on the opposite side of the stem 41 thus providing a second link arm to draw the inner disc 42 back at a second location. It is believed that for most instances there is no need for a second or third or more control bladders for the same disc.
In the first embodiment illustrated in
The intermediate disc 100 has an intermediate control bladder 104 associated therewith whose access port 105 opens outwardly. The inner disc 42 has its control bladder 56, however, extended such that its side wall 57 extends through the intermediate disc 100 to present its access port 58 on the outer side of the outer disc 44. By suitable application of vacuum pressure to the intermediate disc control bladder 105, the outer edge portion 102 of the intermediate disc 100 may be drawn radially inwardly to lower the pressure differential required for flow outwardly past the intermediate disc 100. Similarly, by suitable application of vacuum pressure to the inner disc control bladder 56, the outer edge portion 43 of the inner disc 42 may be drawn radially inwardly to lower the pressure differential required for fluid flow outwardly past the inner disc 42.
Reference is made to
In the preferred embodiments of
Rather than apply vacuum to the interior cavity 62 of the bladder 57, it is possible to apply a relatively increased pressure with the bladder, for example, to assume an expanded condition which could modify the characteristics of a valve disc carried on the piston. For example, a bladder could be provided underneath the outer disc 44 open axially outwardly about the stem 41 and which when expanded might, for example, increase the resistance of the central portion of the outer disc 44 from deflecting axially outwardly. The bladders 56 illustrated in
While the bladder, whether collapsible or expandable, may be coupled to a portion of a disc by a link member such as link arm 60 shown in
Reference is made to
The valve member 210 is coaxially received within the chamber 232. The valve element 210 is a generally cylindrical configuration and is preferably formed as a unitary element entirely of plastic as by injection molding. The valve element 210 has a hollow stem 41 extending along a central longitudinal axis 40 of the valve element 210. A circular resilient flexing disc 42 is located at the innermost end of the valve element 210 and extends radially therefrom. The inner flexing disc 42 is sized to circumferentially abut the cylindrical side wall 231. The inner disc 242 has a resilient outer edge portion 43 which is inherently biased to extend radially outwardly into engagement with the side wall 231. The inner disc 42 is configured so as to prevent fluid flow inwardly therepast within the chamber 232, that is, from the outlet 17 into the bottle 214.
The outer edge portion 43 of the inner disc 42 has an inherent resiliency such that it may be deflected from engagement with the side wall 231 so as to permit fluid flow outwardly therepast within the chamber 232.
An outer disc 44 is provided on the stem 41 outwardly from the inner disc 42. The outer disc 44 has an outer edge portion which engages the side wall 231 to at least prevent fluid flow outwardly therepast, however, preferably to also substantially prevent fluid flow inwardly therepast. The stem 41 has a hollow central passageway 46 extending along the axis 40 enclosed at a blind inner end 47 and open to a discharge opening 37 at an outer end. Inlets 48 extend through the wall of the stem 41 located between the inner disc 42 and the outer disc 44 to provide communication from a chamber 22 defined between the inner disc 42 and the outer disc into the passageway 46.
The closure cap member 212 is provided with an end wall 251 from which an annular flange 252 extends axially. The annular flange has internal threads adapted to mate with the external threads on the threaded neck 218 of the bottle 214. The cap member 212 is adapted to be threaded down onto the threaded neck 218 to form a seal between the outer end of the threaded neck and the inside surface of the end wall 251 of the cap member. A discharge orifice 256 is provided coaxially centered within the cap member providing communication through the cap member from the discharge opening 37 at the outer end of the piston 41. A portion 252 of the end wall of the cap member is provided annularly about the discharge aperture to sealably engage the outer end of the stem 41 about the discharge opening 37 so as preferably to form a seal therewith. A bladder access aperture 254 is also provided through the end wall 251 of the cap member for communication with the interior of a control bladder 56 carried on the stem 41. The control bladder 56 has a side wall 57 forming a control bladder as an enclosed vessel closed but open at an outwardly directed access port 58 directed outwardly through the outer disc 42 and in communication with the aperture 254. A link arm 60 joins the side wall of the control bladder 56 to the outer edge portion 43 of the inner disc 42. The bladder access aperture 254 is open to an annular space about the stem 41 between outer disc 42 and the end wall of the cap member 212 and, thus, in any rotational position of the cap member, the aperture 254 is in communication with the interior of the bladder 56, however, in a preferred orientation as shown in
As will be appreciated, by the use of similar reference numerals for similar elements, the valve element 210 in
In use of the bottle after it has been filled with fluid and the air dispensed, fluid could be dispensed from the bottle 214 by merely squeezing the bottle insofar as it is a compressible bottle. When squeezed, pressure within the bottle will discharge fluid past the inner disc and out the discharge outlet and hence through the central aperture 256 in the cap member. Alternatively, the cap member may be removed permitting removal of the valve element 210.
In the embodiment shown in
While the invention has been defined with reference to preferred embodiments, many modifications and variations will now occur to a person skilled in the art. For a definition of the invention, reference is made to following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2591046 | Jun 2007 | CA | national |
2617202 | Jan 2008 | CA | national |
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5011046 | Graf et al. | Apr 1991 | A |
5282552 | Ophardt | Feb 1994 | A |
5373970 | Ophardt | Dec 1994 | A |
5676277 | Ophardt | Oct 1997 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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0 289 854 | Nov 1988 | EP |
0 289 855 | Nov 1988 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080304978 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |