Child resistant storage container
11358763 · 2022-06-14
Inventors
- Michael Markarian (Tiverton, RI, US)
- Colette BAZIRGAN (West Warwick, RI, US)
- Edward BENJAMIN (Cranston, RI, US)
Cpc classification
B65D77/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2215/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D50/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D5/4216
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2215/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D77/0486
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D5/4208
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D77/0426
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D77/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D5/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A child-resistant storage container comprising two rigid boxes of relatively equal height and width manufactured from or coated with materials that produce enough friction between the contact points of the boxes to retain the inner box in the outer box when shook.
Claims
1. A storage container comprising an outer box having an interior space, an inner box capable of being inserted into and contained in the interior space of said outer box, and a means of accessing the inner box when the inner box is inserted into the outer box provided that there is sufficient friction between the contact surfaces of the inner box and the outer box to retain the inner box within the outer box; wherein said outer box is comprised of five walls and an opening in which to insert the inner box into the interior space of the outer box and the inner box is comprised of four vertical side walls and a bottom horizontal wall, further wherein the length of the inner box is shorter than the length of the outer box provided that when the inner box is inserted into the outer box, the inner box cannot be retrieved by reaching into the outer box and pulling the inner box out of the outer box wherein said means of accessing the inner box when the inner box is inserted into the outer box is one or more slots formed within one or more of the walls of the outer box provided said slots are not large enough for a child's finger to access said inner box; and further provided that the means of accessing the inner box is the only means in which to extract the inner box from the outer box.
2. The storage container according to claim 1, where said container is compliant with The Poison Prevention Act and Title 16, Part 1700 of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations.
3. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein said outer and inner boxes are rigid.
4. The storage container according to claim 3, wherein said the height and width of the inner box is slightly less than the height and width of the outer box provided that when the inner box is inserted into the outer box the inner box is retained in the outer box.
5. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein said one or more slots are no wider than the width of and no longer than the length of a U.S. quarter, U.S. nickel or U.S. penny.
6. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein the outer box and the inner box are constructed from a material having a static co-efficient of friction greater than its dynamic co-efficient of friction or coated with a material having a static co-efficient of friction greater than its dynamic co-efficient of friction.
7. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein the outer box or the inner box is coated with a material having a static co-efficient of friction greater than the dynamic co-efficient of friction wherein said coating is polyurethane charcoal foam die cut into one or more affixed to one or more inner wall of the outer box or one or more outer wall of the inner box or one or more walls of either the outer or inner boxes using an adhesive.
8. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising a sleeve that fits over the inner box prior to insertion into the outer box wherein said sleeve is manufacture from or is coated with a material having a static co-efficient of friction greater than its dynamic co-efficient of friction.
9. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein said boxes are rectangular, cylindrical, octagonal or triangular.
10. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising means in which to reinforce the outer box and the inner box.
11. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein said boxes are manufacture from a material selected from the group consisting of board, cardboard, reinforced cardboard, paper, paperboard, chipboard, wood, plastic, PVC, ceramic, glass, tin and aluminum.
12. The storage container according to claim 1, wherein said boxes are manufactured by hand, machining, die cutting, an additive manufacturing process (“3D printing”), laser cutting, molding, vacuum forming, thermal forming, stamping, casting or extrusion, or any combinations thereof.
13. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising an attached tool used to access said inner box when said inner box is inserted into said outer box wherein said tool is a detachable pin or a perforated section of the outer box that is torn off from the outer box prior to use.
14. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising means in which to prevent access to said inner box contained in said outer box after said outer box is deformed wherein said means in which to prevent access to said inner box when said outer box is deformed comprises a flap affixed to the vertical side wall of the inner box that is parallel with the wall of the outer box containing the one or more slots; further wherein said flap is formed by folding a crease formed into vertical side wall of the inner box that is parallel with the wall of the outer box containing the one or more slots, wherein when said flap is formed, access to the interior of the inner box by reaching into the opening in the outer box is restricted.
15. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising a tear-resistant, laminate coating wherein said tear-resistant, laminate coating is applied as a film to all or a part of one or more of the boxes.
16. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising means in which to extract the inner box after said inner box is installed in said outer box wherein said means in which to extract the inner box is a rope, tassel, loop or pull affixed to the horizontal wall of the inner box that is parallel with the wall of the outer box having the one or more slots, provided that when the user of the storage container desires the container to be child resistant, the user inserts the inner box with the wall having the rope, tassel, loop or pull facing the wall of the outer box having the one or more slots.
17. The storage container according to claim 1, further comprising means in which to indicate unauthorized access of the inner box wherein said means in which to indicate the unauthorized access of the inner box comprises a cellophane film.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(16) In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings. The examples in the description and drawings should be considered illustrative and are not intended as limiting to the specific example or element described. Multiple examples can be derived from the following description and drawings through modification, combination or variation of the different elements.
(17) The instant invention solves several problems found in prior art child resistance storage containers. Most utilize “locking means,” such as flaps or plastic clips, to make the container child resistant. These additional locking means tend to break, fall off or tear destroying the child resistant capability. Other prior art child resistance storage containers are large and not easily contained in a purse, knapsack or briefcase. Other prior art child resistance storage containers are flat, folding cartons that are complicated and difficult to use. The claimed container is rigid, does not use “locking means” that tend to break while being small enough to put in a purse, knapsack, brief case and the like. The instant invention is inconspicuous and retains its child-resistant properties throughout its lifetime.
(18) As the cannabis industry is legalized and grows, there is a legitimate demand in the industry for brandable, child resistant packaging that better promotes a company's cannabis-based products. In addition, states that have legalized recreational cannabis use have compliance requirements that sellers of cannabis-based products use child resistant packaging. There are few options available for sellers that are both child resistant, yet aesthetically pleasing to potential customers.
(19) As illustrated in
(20) It should be appreciated that the slot may be formed of varying shapes, sizes or combinations of different shapes and sizes, provided that the slot does not allow a child to access the inner box once it is properly installed in the outer box.
(21) The inner rectangular box 108 is designed to fit snugly in the interior of the outer rectangular box 100. It consists of a bottom wall 109, two vertical walls 110, 111, a front horizontal wall 112 and a back horizontal wall 113. The top wall is missing to provide access to the interior space 114 of the interior rectangular box 108 to store cannabis cigarettes or cartridges and other objects that the user wishes to keep from small children. The inner rectangular box 108 may also contain a pre-formed insert 115 with the shape of the object or objects 115a the user wishes to store embedded into said insert 115. In the preferred embodiment, an insert 115 formed with the shape of a cannabis cigarette/cartridge cutout/indentation 115a is used to secure said cigarette/cartridge in the claimed device in place without movement. The preferred insert 115 is made from plastic or foam and is made using injection molding, thermal forming, or vacuum forming processes or any other processes known in the art to manufacture mechanical parts.
(22) It is important that the inner rectangular box 108 have a slightly smaller width and height than the outer rectangular box 100 to ensure that the inner rectangular box 108 remains within the outer rectangular box 100 even when the claimed device is shaken by an infant or toddler. The length of the inner rectangular box 108, however, is relatively much shorter than the length of the outer rectangular box 100 to prevent a toddler or small child from reaching within the outer rectangular box 100 to retrieve the inner rectangular box 108 when the device is being used. To maintain the child-resistant properties of the claimed device, the various components are, preferably, manufactured from high friction, rigid materials having a static co-efficient of friction that is greater than said material's dynamic co-efficient of friction. One or more of the bottom wall 109 and/or the two vertical walls 110, 111 of the inner rectangular box 108 (or in an alternative embodiment one or more of the top wall 101, bottom wall 102 and/or two vertical side walls 103, 104 of the outer rectangular box 100) is coated with a high-friction material such as foam 116. The additional foam layers 116 insure that the inner rectangular box 108 is retained within the outer rectangular box 100 even when the claimed invention is aggressively shaken. By design, the inner rectangular box 108 is only accessed by inserting a coin or tip of a knife through the narrow slot 107 in front horizontal wall 105 and further within the outer rectangular box 100 until the inner rectangular box 108 extends outward from the outer rectangular box 100 in which it was previously situated.
(23) It should be appreciated that if the boxes are constructed from materials that create sufficient friction between the inner rectangular box and the outer rectangular box to maintain the inner rectangular box within the outer rectangular box when the claimed device is shaken, then there is no need for additional coating or layers of foam.
(24) Various types of “coating” material may be used including plastics, rubbers, foams and the like. In the preferred embodiment, a layer of foam 116 is affixed to the bottom wall 109 of the interior rectangular box 108. Various types of foams, such as open cell polyurethanes, polyethylenes, polystyrenes, and latex rubber, preferably “polyurethane charcoal foam” traditionally found in camera cases, may be employed. The foam may be applied in situ. The foam may be pre-made as a thin strip, preferably by die cutting, that is affixed to a wall. Pre-formed strips may be affixed to one of the boxes using any known type of adhesive including, but not limited to, acrylics, contact adhesives, cyanoacrylics, epoxies, ethylene-vinyl acetate-based hot-melts, glue, hot melt adhesives, neoprene, paste, polymer dispersion adhesives, pressure sensitive adhesives, resins, polyimides, polyols, polyurethane, pressure sensitive adhesive, rubber cement, thermoset epoxies, thermosetting polymers, ultraviolet light curing adhesives, and urethanes.
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(31) The preferred embodiment is represented by
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(34) In yet another embodiment as depicted in
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(38) It should be appreciated that all of the aforementioned embodiments may also have boxes that are generally equal in size, like those embodiments depicted in
(39) In yet another embodiment, the child resistant container may be designed as a “box-in-a-box”, wherein the outer box contains a number of smaller inner boxes. The outer box would be formed with a number of access slots capable of accessing inner boxes retained therein. Both the inner and outer boxes would be formed consistent with the description of the single boxes as discussed above.
(40) All of the aforementioned embodiments, the boxes may be reinforced with additional materials. For instance, a polymer film may be affixed to the outer walls of the inner and outer boxes to prevent tears. The film need not cover the entire outer walls as a strip of said film may need only cover the outer to edges and still make the boxers tear-resistant. Any commercially-available polymer may be used, however, a polymer that increases the static co-efficient of friction between the boxes, as well as being resistant to being torn, is preferred. Ideally, the polymer used should be transparent, able to be formed into a thin layer and not be “tacky” to the touch. The tear-resistant polymer may be applied prior to the assembling of the boxes or thereafter using any procedures known in the art used to coat materials. The film may be comprised of any known materials meeting the aforementioned requirement, such as, but not limited to SEEPS block copolymers, polyurethane, epichlorohydrin, polyester, latex rubber and any combination thereof
(41) The claimed device may also comprise an additional tamper-indication feature. In this embodiment, the device is affixed with means in which to indicate to the user that the contents of the inner box have been accessed. In one example, the device further comprises a cellophane sheet situated between the access slot of the outer rectangular box and the outer vertical wall of the inner rectangular box. When the tamper-indication feature is put in place, any attempt to access the inner rectangular box using the access slot would perforate the tamper-indication cellophane film alerting the user of the attempt. It should be appreciated that means to indicate unauthorized use of the device, not specifically described herein, may be employed.
(42) A “rigid” type box is used in the preferred embodiment. It should be appreciated, however, that the claimed invention may be practiced using other types of boxes. Other box types that may be employed include, but are not limited to, match book, Simplex®, folding, folding carton, drawer style, lid-off, slipcase, paperboard, paperboard carton, set-up, window, one-piece, two-piece, nut and the like. In addition, the outer box and the inner box need not be of the same box type. For illustrative purposes only, it would be possible to use a drawer style box as the inner box and a rigid style box as the outer box.
(43) The various boxes made be manufactured using a variety of materials, including but not limited to, board, cardboard, reinforced cardboard, paper, paperboard, chipboard, wood, plastic such as PVC, ceramic, glass, and/or metals such as tin and aluminum. The “boxes” of the claimed child resistant storage device of the instant application can made by hand or machine or using an additive manufacturing process (“3D printing”), laser cutting, molding, vacuum forming or thermal forming, or any other known processes used to manufacture such items, as one unit. The walls of the “boxes” may also be individually formed and later assembled. For example, each wall can be individually constructed using one or more of stamping, machining, working, casting, extrusion, or any combinations of these. Various types of adhesives may be used to assemble the parts into the components. It is preferable, however, to integrally form the box as one complete unit as depicted in
(44) The boxes may be formed with two layers. The inner layer consists of a flat folding “box,” like boxes that hold standard tubes of toothpaste, with a rigid “box”, like those discussed above, on the outside. The user would be able to extract the inner box, discard after use, and insert a new flat folding box into the original rigid box of the present invention.
(45) The sizes and dimensions of the boxes may vary provided that the inner rectangular (or other shape) box must fit snugly within the outer rectangular (or other shape) box so that it neither be removed by simple shaking nor grasped and pulled out. The objective of the instant invention is that the inner “box” can only be extracted from the outer “box” by inserting a thin object inserted into the slot of the outer “box” and pushing the inner “box” out of the outer “box”, however, the slot is not large enough to allow a child's finger to be able to access the inner “box”.
(46) The narrow slot 107 embedded in the front horizontal wall 105 may be formed when the outer “box” is originally constructed or may be “punched out” after the outer “box” is constructed. The width and length of the slot may vary. The thickness of the walls may vary.
(47) The exterior of the outer rectangular box may be decorated or embossed with a company's trademark or logo (
(48) In another embodiment, the outer box does not have a slot. The inner box is formed with a “hooking” means, such as an outward circular extension or slot. The device contains a relatively long hook like device. When the user wants to extract the inner box from the outer box, he/she uses the hooking device to engage the hooking means, i.e. circular extension or slot, and pulls the inner box out of the out box.
(49) It should be appreciated that the claimed device need not utilize components of the same shape. For instance, the inner box may be replaced with a glass or tin tube coated with foam or other high-friction material, provided that said tube remains completely within the outer housing when the claim device is shaken. The user would access the inner glass/tin tube by inserting a coin or other flat time into the slot in the outer casing. In this example, the inner glass/tin tube can contain processed cannabis leaves or liquids, such as cannabis oils and the like. The claimed storage container may also be designed to secure a clam shell case. It may also be designed to accommodate more than one interior box.
(50) The instant invention does not use clips or tab cutouts to be found in prior art child-resistant containers. Clips tend to break and fall out of other child-resistant products whereas tabs tend to rip. Once these components become non-functional, the prior art devices are no longer child-resistant. The claimed device does not utilize similar components, remaining child-resistant for the life of the product, not just for the initial use.
EQUIVALENTS
(51) While specific embodiments of the subject invention have been discussed, the above specification is illustrative and not restrictive. Many variations of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon review of this specification. The full scope of the invention should be determined by reference to the claims, along with their full scope of equivalents, and the specification, along with such variations.
(52) Features described in the preceding description may be used in combinations other than the combinations explicitly described.
(53) Although functions have been described with reference to certain features, those functions may be performable by other features whether described or not.
(54) Although features have been described with reference to certain examples, those features may also be present in other examples whether described or not.
(55) Whilst endeavoring in the foregoing specification to draw attention to those features of the disclosure believed to be of particular importance, it should be understood that the Applicant claims protection in respect of any patentable feature or combination of features hereinbefore referred to and/or shown in the drawings whether or not particular emphasis has been placed thereon.
(56) Unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing quantities of claimed features, and so forth used in the specification and claims are to be understood as being modified in all instances by the term “about.” Accordingly, unless indicated to the contrary, the numerical parameters set forth in this specification and attached claims are approximations that may vary depending upon the desired properties sought to be obtained by the present invention.
(57) The above discussion is meant to be illustrative of the principle and various embodiments of the present invention. Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.