Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to containers for dispensing liquids, more specifically baby bottles, and particularly to baby bottles that contain a venting system.
Description of the Related Art
Prior art baby bottles are typically comprised of a liquid storage container or bottle, a pliable nipple or teat containing a dispensing orifice, and a mounting ring used for attaching and sealing the nipple to the bottle. The prior art bottles are used by filling the bottle with a liquid, passing a portion of the nipple through the mounting ring, and then affixing the mounting ring to the bottle, thereby sealing the nipple against the bottle. This creates a baby bottle containing a single passage into or out of the bottle. This construction limits spills by requiring that all liquids must pass through the nipple's dispensing orifice. This orifice is typically quite small in order to contain the liquid when the container is repositioned or inverted. In order to withdraw the liquid contents from the bottle, the nipple portion of the baby bottle assembly is typically placed into an infant's mouth. The baby's suckling action draws the container's liquid contents through the orifice in the nipple and into their mouth.
Conventional baby bottles are typically air tight, except for the dispensing orifice located in the nipple. Since the bottle is otherwise sealed, as contents are withdrawn from the bottle, a partial vacuum is formed. When the baby stops suckling, suction is removed from the nipple's orifice and air returns to the container through the nipple, equalizing the pressure within the bottle to that of the atmosphere. If the liquid within the container is adjacent to the nipple's orifice when the infant's suction is withdrawn, the incoming air will pass through the container's liquid, aerating the liquid and creating bubbles therein. As the infant resumes suckling, the now aerated liquids and bubbles are drawn through the orifice in the nipple and are ingested by the infant. This is shown to cause digestive discomfort, colic, and even regurgitation of the ingested liquid contents. The invention described herein prevents the creation of air bubbles within the container by providing a novel venting system.
A vented baby bottle is disclosed herein and comprises a bottle, a nipple, a mounting ring and a vent assembly. The vent assembly further comprises a vent ring, and a vent valve, wherein the vent ring has a body portion, a flange, a liquid passage through both the body and flange, and a vent hole which passes through the body portion. When the vent ring is fitted to the bottle, and the flange positioned adjacent to the top of the bottle, an air passage is formed allowing atmospheric air to pass along the flange into the vent hole. The air passage ends adjacent to the vent valve, wherein the vent valve is positioned from a first position to a second position by creating a lower than atmospheric pressure in the interior volume of the bottle. In the first position, the vent valve blocks the air passage, and in the second position, the passage is opened allowing atmospheric air to enter the interior volume of the said bottle.
In one form, the vented baby comprises a bottle having a top portion forming a hollow container with an interior volume, the top portion and an interior diameter; a nipple; and an annular mounting ring having a body portion and a flanged top; a vent valve; and a vent assembly further comprising: a vent ring having a body, a flange attached to the body, a vent hole passing through the body, and a liquid passage passing through the body and the flange.
The vented bottle is then assembled by fitting the vent ring into the bottle until its flange is positioned adjacent to the top portion of the bottle. This creates an air passage allowing atmospheric air to pass along the flange, into the vent hole, and ending adjacent the vent valve. The vent valve is then positioned into a first or a second position, wherein in the first position it blocks the air passage; and wherein in the second position it allows atmospheric air located in the air passage to pass into the interior of the bottle. The position of the vent valve is controlled via the difference in pressures between the atmosphere and the interior volume of the bottle.
In another form of the invention, the vented baby bottle comprises a bottle, an annular mounting ring, and a vent assembly having a vent ring, a hemispherical shaped vent valve, and a vent tube. The bottle has a concave base portion, curved side walls, and an annular top portion forming a hollow container with an interior volume which is suitable for holding a liquid. The bottle's annular top portion has an external thread, and a single annular shaped opening passing into the interior volume of the bottle. The annular opening further comprises an interior diameter and a smooth wall.
The nipple is constructed of supple material and has a tip, a midsection, and a flanged base. A cavity extends inside the nipple from an interior portion of said tip, through said midsection and passing through said flanged base. The tip portion further comprises a dispensing orifice passing from the interior of the cavity through the tip to the exterior surface of the nipple.
The annular mounting ring has a body portion connected to a flanged top; the interior wall of the body portion is threaded with internal threads which are sized to mate with the bottle's external threads. The annular mounting ring's internal threads further comprise at least one interruption which passes completely from the body portion to a point on the lower surface of the flanged top. An opening is also formed in the flanged top, which is sized to receive and retain said nipple.
The vent ring has a cylindrical body with a circumferential groove having an o-ring. An annular flange is attached to the top of the cylindrical body and includes a vent hole. Adjacent to the vent hole is a channel which passes from an exterior surface of the annular flange to the hole. The vent ring also includes a cylindrical shaped liquid passage passing through the center ring. The annular flange is sized to be diametrically smaller than the bottle's external threads, while also sized to be diametrically larger than the singular annular shaped opening. This difference in size between the exterior surface of the flange and that of the external threads creates a diametrical difference where air may flow.
A hemispherical shaped vent valve is also provided, comprising an inner surface, an outer surface, a dispensing slit, a deformable closure member, and at least one petal shaped protrusion. The dispensing slit passes between the inner and outer surfaces of the vent valve, forming a first wall and second wall within the dispensing slit.
A rigid vent tube is affixed to the vent ring adjacent the vent hole on one end, and is attached to the hemispherical shaped vent valve adjacent to the dispensing slit at the other. The rigid vent tube has an inner diameter and is sized in length to extend into the base portion of the bottle when fully assembled.
The vented baby bottle is assembled by fitting the cylindrical body of the vent ring into the single annular shaped opening in the bottle and depressing it until its annular flange is positioned adjacent to the bottle's annular top portion. The mounting ring's internal threads are then mated to the bottle's external threads, creating an air passage which allows atmospheric air to pass through the interruption in the threads, pass along the diametrical difference between the annular flange and the external threads, pass through the channel, and into the vent ring's vent hole, passing down the inner diameter of the vent tube, and ending adjacent the interior surface of the vent valve's dispensing slit.
The vent valve operates between two positions. When in the first position, the valve is held closed by the deformable closure which places the first wall and the second wall into contact with one another. This blocks the air passage. When in the second position, the first wall and the second wall of the dispensing slit are separated allowing air to pass through the valve into the interior of the bottle. The position of the vent valve is moved from the first position to the second position by creating a lower than atmospheric pressure in said interior volume of the bottle. The vent valve is then returned to the first position by the deformable closure when the pressure is equalized.
Other advantages of the present invention will be readily understood by reference to the following detailed description in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein:
For purposes of the following description, the terms “upper,” “lower,” “left,” “rear,” “front,” “vertical,” “horizontal,” and derivatives of such terms shall relate to the invention as oriented in
A first preferred embodiment of a vented baby bottle 28 is shown in
One form of a bottle 30 for use with the invention is best shown in
The bottle 30 may also include side walls 66 which are formed with rounded features 68 which strengthen the sidewall 66 against flexure and further aid the infant in grasping the bottle 30. Additionally, the base portion 44 contains a concave surface 70 which strengthens the bottle against impact loads. The transitions 72 between the base 44 and the sidewall 42 are radiused 74 to remove any sharp edges, and the preferred material for the construction of the bottle is polypropylene, though similar materials may be substituted.
One form of a nipple 32 is shown in
The base portion 84 of the nipple 32 also preferably includes a retention feature 90 which in one form of the invention comprises a slot 92 passing circumferentially around the nipple 32. This slot 92 is sized to mate with the mounting ring 34 and is preferably sized to match the diameter of an opening 94 in the mounting ring 34. The width of the slot 92 is preferably sized to match that of the material thickness 96 at the mounting ring's opening 94. Further, the retention feature 90 may also include a flange portion 98 near the base 84 of the nipple 32. This flange portion is preferably sized to prevent the entirety of the nipple from passing through the mounting ring 34, and lies flush with a surface of the mounting ring 34. One preferred form of the nipple 32 may also include a ridge 100 that is adjacent to the slot 92. This ridge 100 is designed to be passed through the opening 94 of the mounting ring 34 engaging a surface of the mounting ring 34 opposite the surface engaged by the flange potion 98 of the nipple. This ridge and flange combination retains the nipple 32 on the mounting ring 34. A preferred material for the nipple is silicone, though other materials may be suitable for use with this invention.
One form of a mounting ring 34 for use with the invention is shown in
In one preferred form of the mounting ring 34, the exterior surface 172 of the mounting ring contains gentle radiuses 124 so as to present no sharp edges to the user of the vented baby bottle 28. The mounting ring 34 may further include a slot or recess 126 able to receive and retain optional features such as handles 128 for grasping the bottle 28. The preferred material for the mounting ring 34 is polypropylene though similar materials may be substituted.
A first form of a vent assembly 36 is best shown in
One form of a vent ring 130 is shown in
The body 142 of the vent ring 130 is sized to mate with the interior 48 of the opening 46 in the bottle's 30 top 50, and is preferably slightly smaller in diameter than the bottle's opening 46. In this embodiment, the vent ring is preferably constructed of polypropylene, though similar materials may be substituted.
The body portion 134 of the vent ring 130 may also be fitted with a seal 144 on its exterior 146 surface. A preferred form of the seal 144 is an O-Ring 148 which is fitted to a circumferential groove 150 in the exterior surface 146 of the vent ring 130. The body portion 134 of the vent ring 130 is sized to fit into the opening 46 in the bottle 30 retaining the vent ring 130 to the bottle 30 and preventing liquids within the container from bypassing the seal 144. In this embodiment, the seal 144 is preferably constructed of silicone or a thermoplastic elastomer.
On top of the body portion 142 of the vent ring 130 is a flange 152. The flange 152 has a flange thickness 156 and is diametrically sized such that its diameter 152 is greater than that of the opening 46 of the bottle 30, but less than that of the exterior diameter 52 of the external thread 62. This flange is best shown in
When the bottle 30, vent ring 130, nipple 32 and mounting ring 34 are combined, a venting system 174 is created which allows atmospheric air to pass through the interruption 110 in the interrupted threads 108 of the mounting ring, enter the air passage 168 and pass through the channel 172 and vent hole 170 into the bottle 30; however, a structure such as a valve is needed to prevent liquids contents from exiting the bottle through the venting system.
One form of a valve suitable for use with the system is a vent valve 132 as shown in
The vent valve 132 further contains an attachment structure 192 for mounting the valve to the mounting ring 34, preferably via a hollow vent tube 194 passing between the vent hole 170 in the vent ring 130, and the attachment structure 192 of the vent valve 132. In the embodiment shown in
The vent valve 132 operates via a differential pressure created between atmosphere and the pressure within the bottle 30. As the pressure within the bottle 30 is lowered via the dispensing orifice 78, as occurs when an infant withdraws liquid from within the bottle, atmospheric pressure is provided though the mounting ring 34, to the vent ring 130, down the vent tube 194 and to the inner surface of the vent valve 182, within the attachment structure 192. The outer surface 180 of the vent valve 132 is exposed to the reduced pressure environment within the bottle 30. This differential pressure causes the first 188 and second walls 190 of the deformable closure member 178 to separate, allowing the slit 186 to open and atmospheric air to enter the bottle 30 through the vent valve 132. As the pressure equalizes, the pressure difference required to open the slit 186 is removed, allowing the deformable closure member 178 to force the first 188 and second 190 walls against each other closing the slit 186, and preventing liquids from entering the vent assembly.
The length, shape and diameter of the vent tube 194 is variable, as is the rigidity of the tube; however in one preferred form of the system, the vent tube 194 is constructed of a rigid polypropylene having a length sufficient to place the vent valve 132 into the base 44 of the bottle 30. Since most uses of a baby bottle involve the tipping or inversion of the bottle 30 during use, placement of the vent valve 132 into the bottom most portion of the container is desirable, as it minimizes aeration of the fluids contained within the bottle 30 as atmospheric air is added to the system. The vent valve 132 is ideally hemispherical in shape 200 to aid the functioning of the deformable closure member 178, as a hemispherical shape 200 better resists leakage during a pressure inversion. Pressure inversions are created when the pressure inside of the bottle 30 exceeds that of atmospheric pressure. A typical cause is when an infant chews on the nipple 32 pressurizing the container. In these instances, the first 188 and second walls 190 within the slit 186 of the hemispherical shape 200 are forced together by the pressure inversion, preventing leakage better than when compared to a slit placed into in a flat surface.
In other forms of the invention, the vent tube 194 may be semi rigid, or even flexible. In these instances, the vent valve 132 may also be modified either by adding a weight 206 or a float 208 to the vent valve 132, preferably on its interior surface 182. If a float 208 is added to the vent valve 132, the flexure of the vent tube 194 allows the vent valve to float on the surface of the liquid; thereby orienting the vent's slit 186 away from the liquids within the container. However, if a weight 206 is added to the vent valve in combination with a flexible vent tube, the vent valve 132 will tend to sink below the surface of the liquids within the bottle 30 maximizing its exposure with the liquid.
Additional features for the vent valve 132 may also include radial protrusions, preferably shaped as petals 202 formed onto the outer surface 180 of the vent valve 132. In the form of the invention shown in
A second form of the vented baby bottle is shown in
Additional features may include handles 128 shown in
Another optional feature is a cap 340 shown in
The principle advantage offered by this invention includes an air passage through a mounting ring of a baby bottle into the interior of a bottle, allowing atmospheric air to pass through a self closing one way valve, thereby venting the interior of the baby bottle when a lower than atmospheric pressure is created within the bottle.
The above description is considered that of the preferred embodiments only. Modifications to the invention will occur to those skilled in the art and those who make use of the invention. Therefore, it is understood that the embodiments shown in the drawings and the examples set forth herein are described merely for illustrative purposes, and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention as interpreted according to the principles of patent law, including the doctrine of equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160262985 A1 | Sep 2016 | US |