The present invention relates generally to vented fluid closures and containers and, more particularly, to a vented closure for a fluid container with a non-pouring type fluid passage when the closure is open.
Water and other non-carbonated beverages, and particularly sports drinks, are sold in individual servings in the form of deformable plastic bottles which are squeezable. Such bottles typically have caps in the form of a pull open/push close type closure, which typically provides a single fluid passage which is not vented. The lack of a vent in the closure causes the deformable container to collapse as a consumer draws a beverage from the container while drinking, due to a pressure differential that is created between the fluid and the exterior of the container, since the external pressure is higher as the exiting liquid causes the internal pressure to decrease. At some point during the drinking process, depending on the size of the container, no additional liquid can be withdrawn from the container until the pressure is equalized by stopping the drinking process and allowing air to rush in through the single fluid passage in the closure. This equalization can cause a reflux or backwash from the consumer's mouth into the container, which tends to contaminate the fluid in the container. Because of these problems, consumers frequently equalize pressure by holding the bottle away from the mouth and squeezing the deformable bottle in a series of squirts, with pressure equalization taking place between each squirt. This procedure often results in spills of the fluid, and results in the consumer drinking less than were it easier to dispense fluid. The lack of a vent in these closures also limits the freedom of design and materials for the container due to the fact that the deformable container must be able to collapse.
Conventional fluid containers are sometimes vented, but the vent typically is part of the container itself, and not part of the closure. Vented closures intended for pouring are known, but are undesirable for use in non-pouring type closures in which fluid will not continuously pour out of the bottle when the bottle is tilted downwardly. Sports bottles are an example of a non-pouring type closure which are intended to be left open for quick drinks during an activity, and can be easily knocked over. Furthermore, most pouring-type closures require the user to hold the container with particular orientation, often with the spout oriented downwardly for pouring, and such pouring closures are not suitable for sports bottles or the like in which the user may raise the closure without regard to any particular orientation to the closure. In general, pouring type closures are not suitable for sports bottles and other deformable containers in which the liquid exits in spurts due to squeezing of the container and/or placing the user's mouth around the closure opening to draw liquid out of the container.
Other non-pouring type closure systems have utilized a flap valve or diaphragm to regulate the equalization pressure and/or prevent liquid from leaking through vent passages for the closure. The additional components and assembly processes required to incorporate a flap valve or diaphragms or washers in a closure adds prohibitive expense and complexity to the closure. Containers designed for the application of drinking while moving are designed to allow the user to drink without tilting the head back. Such devices may use a straw to draw liquid from the bottom of an essentially rigid container and operate similar to a pouring-type container. Further, such devices may use a flap valve or other complex mechanism to vent the rigid container. Such approaches are not suitable for a standard beverage container and add prohibitive expense and complexity to the closure.
The manufacturing cost of closures used on sports drink containers and the like is critical. An increase of fractions of one cent can severely impact marketability by the closure manufacturer since consumers usually are focused on the sports beverage or supplier and are generally unwilling to pay more for the bottle and closure which contains the beverage. Likewise, it is very important that any closure should be compatible with existing bottling and assembly equipment and should be usable in connection with standard bottling and assembly processes. The types of closures proposed in the past have been incompatible with these requirements.
One objective of the present invention is to provide an improved vented fluid container closure of the non-pouring type that is adaptable to a standard beverage container.
It is another objective of the present invention to provide fluid container closures that are readily manufactured using molding and other equipment currently used for beverage container closures and which are easily adaptable to current beverage filling and processing equipment.
It is a further objective of the present invention to solve the problem of contamination of fluid while drinking due to reflux in a squeezable plastic container which dispenses liquid in squirts when held overhead in no particular orientation.
It is yet another objective of the present invention to provide improved push-pull type closures and improved flip-top rotatable type closures that allows drawing of fluid out of containers and provide new closure features adaptable to standard beverage filling and processing equipment.
It is still another objective of the present invention to provide a liquid closure that is vented to air and has vent passageways that self-seal using the surface tension of liquid in direct liquid contact with one or more vent apertures and which eliminates valves, flaps and other sealing mechanisms.
In order to achieve the foregoing objectives, the vented closures of the present invention provide non-pouring type closures with a fluid passage and one or more vent passages of predetermined dimensions and placement in an annular collar adaptable to a standard beverage container. The fluid passage and the one or more vent passages may be opened and closed by the same cap. When the cap is open and inverted to a drinking position, surface tension of the liquid will seal the one or more vent passages which are in direct contact with the liquid, and eliminate special sealing structure previously necessary for the vent passageways. The vent openings are sufficiently small size and placement relative to the main fluid exit so that the weight of the liquid which is in direct contact with the vent openings does not exert sufficient force to overcome surface tension and substantially prevents equalizing air from entering the vent passageways. The resulting pressure differential prevents liquid from exiting the bottle during equilibrium even when the closure is open and inverted.
When liquid is drawn out a main liquid passageway, as in the act of drinking due to squeezing the container and/or sucking on an open cap, sufficient additional force is applied to overcome the surface tension sealing the vent apertures, and equalizing air is drawn into the vent passage for as long as the drawing force is present. When the drawing force is removed, the surface tension of the liquid substantially reseals the vent and allows only a few drops of liquid to exit before differential pressure stops the flow.
The air bubbles entering the vent passageway are desirably separated from the flow of exiting liquid by a divider to prevent the air bubbles from becoming entrained. Several embodiments for the dividers are disclosed which are sufficiently open in configuration to allow the self-sealing action during equilibrium, and when a destabilizing force is present permits entry of air bubbles in a manner to minimize interaction between the vent air and the liquid in the container.
Certain embodiments consist of push-pull type caps that engage an annular collar. The cap is movable along the collar between open and closed positions, and when in the open position, the vent passage and fluid passage are both open. A divider which isolates the equalizing venting air from the exiting fluid can take several forms which generally are partially open in profile or at the side such that the open portions or sides are away from the main fluid passageway.
Other embodiments consist of flip-type caps of generally U-shape which rotate about a pivot base. One or more air vents formed on one side of the rotatable cap can take several forms which each provide direct liquid contact of sufficiently small size and placement to self-seal when the liquid in the container is in equilibrium with outside pressure. A divider which isolates the equalizing venting air bubbles from the liquid flow can take several forms including a curved and serpentine path with side exits.
The operational features of the present invention are explained in more detail with reference to the following drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like elements, and in which:
a to 7c are bottom perspective views of alternate dividers usable with any of the closures;
a illustrates test apparatus for determining the size and locations of the vent apertures relative to the liquid dispensing aperture, and
Turning to
One molded part which forms the closure consists of a cap 20 which includes a top planar surface 22 containing a central circular aperture or bore 24 for the passage of fluid. An annular skirt 26 extends downwardly from the top 22 to define an open interior space. A rim or lip 28 extends around the periphery of the top surface 22 to provide a convenient surface for a user to grasp the cap for pull movement upwardly to move the cap to an open position or for a push movement downwardly to a closed position.
The second molded part which forms the closure consists of a base annular collar 30 which can be secured to a beverage container. In one preferred embodiment, the collar 30 consists of a series of increasingly smaller diameter and connected annular rings and shelves. A first bottom annular ring of the greatest diameter is formed by a first side wall 32 extending in a longitudinal direction and terminating in a top annular shelf 34 with an upright annular rim 35. The shelf 34 extends radially inward from the annular rim 35. Side wall 32 has an interior surface which includes interior threads 36 for mating engagement with a beverage container. Side wall 32 has an exterior surface which includes a large plurality of vertical ribs or splines 38 which are engagable by standard packaging machinery for filling the containers during manufacture to provide gripping surfaces to assist in threading the interior threads 32 onto the beverage container after the container has been filled. These external ribs 38 also assist the user in attaching or detaching the closure from the container.
A second annular ring of intermediate size consists of a second side wall 40 which mates with the shelf 34 and extends longitudinally upward to a top annular shelf 42 which is slightly tapered. The annular shelf 42 extends generally transversely inward and slightly upward to mate with a third or top annular ring having the smallest diameter.
A top annular ring includes a third side wall 44 seen best in
The base collar 30 and the cap 20 which is slidably captured thereon are adapted to mate with a standard fluid container 50 which may be any container for containing a fluid, such as a bottle for a single serving of a liquid sport drink or water. The beverage container 50 preferably has thin plastic side walls 52 which are squeezable or deformable along arrows 53 in order to increase pressure within the closed container when liquid is to be dispensed from the container. The container 50 forms a closed vessel having deformable side walls, a bottom wall, and a top wall 54 having an upright annular neck 56 which is hollow and serves as the sole opening for the passage of fluid out of the container.
The upright annular neck 56 includes an annular rib 57, see
The cap 20 can slide in a tight, frictionally-sealing motion along the second and third rings of the base collar 30 to open and close the closure. As seen in
To open, a user pulls longitudinally upward to slidably move the cap 20 along the second and third rings of the collar 30 to an open position as seen in
Preferably the cap 20 and base collar 30 are each molded as a single piece of plastic. For example, cap 20 can be injection molded of low density polyethylene (LDPE) or PPL, but any suitable material may be used. The base collar 30 is preferably a one piece injected-molded material, such as high density polyethylene (HDPE) or polypropylene (PPL), but any suitable material may be used.
To the extent described above, the cap 20 and base collar 30 are generally of known construction and form a non-pouring, push-pull type closure for squirting or dispensing liquid in bursts out of a standard deformable beverage container 50. As will now be described, the closure has been modified to provide a unique vented closure which solves numerous problems with prior closures for non-pouring type liquid containers. Furthermore, these modifications are adaptable to existing molding as well as assembly and filling machinery so as to minimize the cost of providing a vented closure for a liquid container.
One or more small diameter vent apertures 70 are located in a middle region of the collar 30, such as in the second ring shelf 42, see
A divider baffle 72 extends through the hollow interior of the base collar 30, and is spaced from the side walls 32 and 40 by a sufficient distance to create a secondary liquid passageway 74 for conveying liquid from the container into direct contact with the vent apertures 70 when the container is tilted. The longitudinally extending divider 72 attaches at its upper end 76 to the third ring side wall 44, see
When cap 20 is closed and fully retracted down along the base collar 30, as seen in
Cap 20 includes a lower skirt 80 beneath the lower ridge 60 which is spaced radially outward and forms an air passageway 82 underneath the skirt 80. This air passageway 82 is contiguous with a third air passageway 84 formed under the bottom edge of the skirt 80 and which bends upwardly inside the rim 35 and is open to external air.
As the cap 20 is pulled outward, the cap upper ridge 62 slides along the collar side wall 44, and the cap lower ridge 60 slides along the collar side wall 40, until reaching a fully open position as seen in
Importantly, the cap lower ridge 60 is located to clear contact with the second side wall 40 and opens a narrow annular gap as seen in
The relationship which creates the self-sealing action by surface tension will be further explained in connection with
When the closure and container is tilted to dispense liquid, the effective column height of liquid between vent aperture 70 and dispensing aperture 24 increases as seen in
As a pressure differential is created by a user placing his or her mouth over the cap 20 and sucking to create a vacuum, liquid in the tilted container will flow in a squirt or burst through the primary fluid passageway 46 along the direction of the arrow 68 in
Liquid will continue to be dispersed from the container and venting air will continue to flow into the container as seen in
The divider 72 can take a variety of other configurations such as seen in
The push-pull type closure of
Each divider 72 in
As the offset length C between the cap top 22 and the vent apertures 70 increases, the diameter D and/or the cross-sectional area of the vent openings 70 must decrease in order to maintain self-sealing by surface tension of the liquid. The vent apertures 70 in
a shows test apparatus used to determine the relationships regarding one or more vent apertures 70 and the main fluid dispersing opening 24. A tubular container 112 of PVC plastic having rigid sides was constructed of a height H and an internal diameter W, and was sealed at both ends. A liquid dispensing bore 24 was drilled of various diameters A. One or more vent apertures 70 were drilled into the plastic tube 110 at various heights which correspond to dimension C, i.e., the offset distance between the liquid dispensing opening 24 and the top of the vent aperture 70. Also, the vent aperture 70 was formed with several diameters D.
In one set of tests, the container 112 had a height H of approximately 10 inches and a diameter W of approximately 1 inch. A total of sixteen small diameter vent apertures 70 were drilled, each at 0.100 inch spacing from the bottom end of the container. To provide sufficient distance between each test aperture, the sixteen vent apertures were located along a spiral path around the external diameter of the tube so that each vent diameter could be drilled to a larger diameter. Vent holes 70 initially were all of the same 0.025 inch diameter. All sixteen holes were covered to form an airtight seal. The container 110 was filled with water. The apparatus was oriented with the dispensing opening 24 at the bottom as illustrated in
In other tests, the container 112 had a height H of 8.25 inches and a diameter W of 1.0 inch. The dispensing opening 24 had a diameter A of 0.125 inches for one set of tests, and 0.250 inches for another set of tests, and 0.315 inches for further tests. It was determined that the fluid dispensing opening 24 can be varied in diameter A within a range without affecting the self-sealing feature. However, once the diameter A is greater than approximately 0.4 inches, the fluid opening 24 will self-vent and admit air through the opening 24 itself. Thus, the primary liquid dispensing opening 24 preferably should be less than about 0.4 inches in diameter, or less than an equivalent cross-sectional area if the liquid dispensing opening 24 is irregular in shape.
The term equilibrium means that a flow of liquid will stop in a short time, such as less than one second, after an external disabling force is removed. The term non-pour means that when a container is inverted, with the vent aperture obstructed and also with the vent aperture open, the same amount of liquid will escape the closure before it reaches a static state.
b is a graph which plots the results of several experiments and also illustrates the relationship between the offset C and the diameter D for these experiments and the
The points 120 and 124 in
Liquid 1 is water at room temperature, and the resulting plots for dimensions C and D are shown in
When the different test points for liquid 1 in Table A are plotted, the resulting dots 120 form a curve 130 seen in
For containers designed to hold other liquids, a plot can be made of test points to produce a curve similar to curve 130 in order to establish the desired combination of vent diameters D and maximum offsets C to create apertures 70 and 24 which will self-seal by surface tension for the specific liquid to be stored in the container. Thus, the placement and size of the vent apertures 70 in the base collar 30 can be empirically determined for the liquid to be dispensed. As vent apertures 70 are moved further away from the dispensing bore 24, the diameter or cross-sectional area of each vent aperture must be decreased in order to maintain a self-sealing relationship using the surface tension of the liquid in the container.
The dispensing aperture 24 and the vent apertures 70 can have shapes other than circular. The dispensing aperture 24 shown in the embodiments of
To allow for manufacturing tolerances and material variations, it is preferable to select dimensions for C and D which are spaced away from the transitional curve 130 which is the dividing line between a self-sealing closure and a flow closure. For example, the following Table B provides the dimensions in inches for one specific embodiment for the closure of
1/Calculated for 40°
The calculated dimension C of 0.68 inches represents a tilt angle of about 40°, and is close to the maximum offset to be experienced when water is to be dispensed from the tilted container 50 seen in
The dimensions given in Table B can be varied so long as the dimensions plot away from the transition curve 130 and fall within the self-seal regions of
Base collar 30 includes a lower annular ring having a side wall 32 with internal threads 36 for screwing attachment to the external threads 58 on the upright neck 56 of the fluid container 50, see
Near the bottom of the central neck are a pair of pivot pins 160, each extending outwardly from the side to form an axis for the rotatable cap 20. Each pivot pin 160 includes an enlarged head 162 and a neck of reduced diameter. A pair of circular bores 164 in the cap 20 can be snap fit over the pivot heads 162 during assembly of the closure. As seen in
Cap 20 is formed of a generally U-shaped cover 170 having a central bight 172 and a pair of extending legs 174 terminating in circular disks 176 each containing the circular bearing holes 164. The cap cover 170 can rotate between an open position, as seen in
Various modifications can be made to the cap 170 if desired to provide additional features. For example, a resilient compliant sealing material such as food grade polyvinyl chloride (PVC) can be molded or inserted into an inner surface of the bight 172 (not illustrated). To further improve sealing of the main liquid passageways 154 when in the closed position, the top bight 172 of the U-shaped cover 170 can have an angled shape for the respective mating surfaces of the rotating cap and the top surface of the central raised portion 150. By way of example, an inner surface 172 of the cap can form a ramp angle from a tangent of a swing arc, such as an angle between seven degrees and fifteen degrees. Such a ramped surface (not illustrated) would create a positive seal stop as the cap 20 is rotated to a closed position.
One or more vent apertures 70 are located in the collar 30. In the illustrated embodiments, a pair of vent aperture 70 are utilized, each of which has a small area and is offset relative to the dispensing openings 154 so as to fall within the self-seal region of
As seen in
As seen in
As seen best in
The present invention has been described in an illustrative manner. It should be understood that modifications may be made to the specific embodiments shown herein without departing the spirit and scope of the present invention. Such modifications are considered to be within the scope of the present invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of my application Ser. No. 10/267,306, filed Oct. 9, 2002, entitled “Vented Fluid Closure and Container”, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,779,694 which is a continuation-in-part of my application Ser. No. 09/994,303, filed Nov. 26, 2001, entitled “Vented Fluid Container Closure”, now abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part of my application Ser. No. 09/736,350, filed Dec. 14, 2000, entitled “Vented Fluid Container Closure”, now abandoned.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040262337 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10267306 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 10869603 | US | |
Parent | 09994303 | Nov 2001 | US |
Child | 10267306 | US | |
Parent | 09736350 | Dec 2000 | US |
Child | 09994303 | US |