Method for manufacturing stoppers intended for bottling still wines and corresponding stoppers
20220097254 · 2022-03-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D39/0058
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2539/001
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C09J5/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B27K7/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Stopper intended for bottling still wines, characterized in that it includes
cork strips laterally joined by a polyurethane binder so as to form a plurality of cork strips, the cork strips being disposed such that the thickness thereof is perpendicular to the axis of the stopper,
at least one lateral cork strip joined by a polyurethane binder to each face of the plurality of cork strips revealing all cork strips,
the lenticels possibly present in the cork strips extending parallel to the thickness of the strips while those in the lateral cork strips extend perpendicular to the thickness of the strips, such that all lenticels of the stopper are disposed perpendicular to the axis of the stopper in order to limit the variation in oxygen permeability from one stopper to the other
Claims
1. A method for manufacturing stoppers intended for bottling still wines, comprising the following steps: cork strips and lateral cork strips are made from cork such that the lenticels possibly present in the cork strips extend parallel to the thickness of the blades while those in the lateral cork strips extend perpendicular to the thickness of the strips, the cork having been previously debarked from the tree then boiled, at least one parallelepiped is made by joining via a polyurethane binder, a plurality of cork strips as well as at least one lateral cork strip on each face of the plurality of cork strips revealing all cork strips, the polyurethane binder being polymerized by heating and under pressure, then at least one stopper is formed from the polymerized parallelepipeds such that the lateral cork strips are located at the ends of the stoppers.
2. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 1, wherein the cork strips and/or the lateral cork strips are inspected by an imaging technique before jointing so as to remove those having holes, dry veins or yellow spots.
3. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 1, wherein between making the blades and forming the parallelepipeds, a cleaning of the cork strips and the lateral cork strips is carried out with at least one compound selected from boiling water, steam, a mixture of steam and alcohol, a mixture of steam and carbon dioxide, a mixture of steam and nitrogen, and supercritical carbon dioxide.
4. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 3, wherein in order to clean the cork strips and the lateral cork strips by exposure to supercritical carbon dioxide, they are disposed in an autoclave allowing reaching a pressure of 100 bars and a temperature of 60° C. either for at least two hours, or until obtaining a residual rate of 2,4,6-trichloroanisole of less than 0.3 ng/l.
5. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 1, wherein the stoppers are formed by stamping or machining parallelepipeds.
6. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 1, wherein, in order to make a plurality of cork strips, cork strips are glued with a polyurethane binder, then the cork strips are disposed until reaching a predetermined thickness, then the cork strips which are glued normal to the length of the strips are cut to obtain the plurality of cork strips.
7. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 6, wherein the polyurethane binder comprises thermo-expandable microspheres and/or wax microspheres.
8. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 1, wherein, in order to make a plurality of cork strips, cork strips are glued with a wax emulsion, then the elimination of the water comprised in the wax emulsion is carried out by drying, they are glued with a polyurethane binder then the cork strips are disposed until reaching a predetermined thickness, then the cork strips, which are glued normal to the length of the strips are cut to obtain the plurality of cork strips.
9. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 6, wherein the predetermined thickness of the plurality of cork strips is comprised between 6 and 30 strips per stopper formed in a parallelepiped.
10. The method for manufacturing stoppers according to claim 1, wherein a lateral cork strip comprises a thickness different from the thickness of the cork strips.
11. A stopper intended for bottling still wines, characterized in that it comprises cork strips laterally joined by a polyurethane binder so as to form a plurality of cork strips, the cork strips being disposed such that the thickness thereof is perpendicular to the axis of the stopper, at least one lateral cork strip joined by a polyurethane binder to each face of the plurality of cork strips revealing all cork strips, the lenticels possibly present in the cork strips extending parallel to the thickness of the strips while those in the lateral cork strips extend perpendicular to the thickness of the strips, such that all lenticels of the stopper are disposed perpendicular to the axis of the stopper in order to limit the variation in oxygen permeability from one stopper to the other.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0031] Other aims, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the following description, given only by way of non-limiting example and made with reference to the appended drawings wherein:
[0032]
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[0034]
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[0038]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0039] The manufacturing method according to the invention allows solving the technical problems identified in the related art and is illustrated in
[0040] During a first step 1, cork strips 11 and lateral cork strips 13 are made from raised and boiled cork.
[0041] The cork strips 11 have a thickness comprised between 0.8 mm and 2 mm, and are cut such that the lenticels potentially present in these strips are implanted parallel to the thickness of the strips. The lenticels therefore potentially pass through the blades according to their thickness.
[0042] Likewise, the lateral cork strips 13 are cut such that the lenticels potentially present in these strips are implanted perpendicular to the thickness of the strips. No lenticels therefore pass through the thickness of these blades.
[0043] As will be seen below in the present description, the cork strips 11 and the lateral cork strips 13 are assembled in parallelepipeds wherein the stoppers are formed. The lateral cork strips 13 also allow limiting the contact of the wine with the used polyurethane binder, in particular in the absence of through lenticels.
[0044] In a particular embodiment, the cork strips 11 and/or the lateral cork strips 13 are subjected to an inspection by imaging, more particularly by optical observation and/or by the X-ray technique to identify the cork strips comprising dry veins, holes, or yellow spots. The presence of dry veins can make the affected cork strip brittle during compressions. The yellow spots denote a local rotting of the cork where a lot of anisoles are concentrated. If they are not filled with the polyurethane binder, the holes can constitute a reservoir of 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (acronym TCA) or of air modifying the permeability of the stopper. If they are filled with the polyurethane binder, they can help increase the relative amount of polyurethane compared to the relative amount of cork, such that the resulting stopper might not meet the ISO633 standard specifying that the relative amount of polymer binder in a stopper should be less than 35% m. The affected strips are thus removed.
[0045] The lateral cork strips 13 are also selected for their visual quality according to the traditional techniques of the related art.
[0046] During a second step 2, the cleaning of the cork strips 11 and the lateral cork strips 13 is carried out. This can be carried out with several compounds, in particular with at least one of boiling water, water vapor, water vapor combined with alcohol, water vapor combined with CO.sub.2, water vapor combined with nitrogen and supercritical CO.sub.2. It is recalled that a compound is said to be in a supercritical state when it is brought to a temperature above its critical temperature and/or to a pressure above its critical pressure. The critical temperature and the critical pressure differ for each compound.
[0047] In order to carry out such a cleaning of the cork strips 11 and of the lateral cork strips 13 before joining them, they are disposed in stainless steel cages whose bottoms consist of a fine mesh which can allow CO.sub.2 to pass in the supercritical state. The cages are then placed in an autoclave allowing reaching a pressure of 100 bars and a temperature of 60° C. for several hours. By way of reference, it is recalled that CO.sub.2 becomes supercritical beyond 73.8 bars and 31.1° C.
[0048] Several cages can be disposed on top of each other and intermediate cages containing activated carbon can be used in order to avoid recontaminating the cork with the volatile compounds extracted by the supercritical CO.sub.2 and its co-solvent water to cages located in the upper levels. The cycle times are defined, according to the initial contamination rate, to result in a residual rate of 2,4,6-trichloroanisole (acronym TCA) of less than 0.3 ng/l.
[0049] During a third step 3, pluralities 12 of cork strips are made by joining the cork strips 11, as illustrated in
[0050] Such thermo-expandable microspheres are described in the patent EP 0496687. The microspheres allow reducing any risk of migration of the wine into the internal structure of the future stopper which may weaken its mechanical properties of elasticity.
[0051] The cork strips 11 are disposed until reaching the desired thickness (generally between 6 and 30 strips per stopper to be formed). The cork strips 11 are then cut normal to the surface thereof to obtain a plurality 12 of cork strips.
[0052] In a particular embodiment, with the aim of reducing the capacity of the corks to absorb wine in contact therewith, the third step 3 begins with a spraying of a wax emulsion (in particular, natural wax or beeswax) on the cork strips 11 then their drying in order to eliminate water comprised in the wax emulsion, in particular in a furnace. The cork strips 11 then obtained are subsequently glued with the polyurethane binder.
[0053] As in the first embodiment, the cork strips 11 are then disposed until reaching the desired thickness of the plurality 12 of cork strips (generally between 6 and 30 strips per stopper to be formed).
[0054] During a fourth step 4, the faces of each plurality 12 of cork strips are glued, revealing all cork strips 11 in a manner similar to the gluing carried out in the fourth step 4.
[0055] One lateral cork strip 13, preferably 2 mm thick, is disposed opposite to each of these glued faces, so as to obtain a parallelepiped.
[0056] The gluing of the faces of the pluralities 12 of cork strips is thus preferred to the gluing of the lateral cork strips 13 to ensure that these strips, in contact with the content of the bottle, have not been exposed to the polyurethane binder. The lateral cork strips 13, whose lenticels are not through lenticels, thus act as a barrier to any potential migration of compounds derived from the binder.
[0057] The total height of the parallelepiped is made to correspond to a desired length of the stopper which will be stamped into this parallelepiped, such that at the ends of the stopper, referred to as mirrors, a non-reconstituted cork surface, formed by the lateral cork strip 13 which has been deposited, can be seen.
[0058] In a fifth step 5, the shaped parallelepipeds are disposed in a mold wherein they are compressed according to a volume compression ratio of 1.5 to 3 volumes in a volume according to the initial quality of the cork. The assembly is then heated to a temperature generally comprised between 80 and 120° C. for a duration time necessary for a good polymerization and, where appropriate, for the desired expansion of the microspheres. The heating can be carried out in an autoclave or a continuous furnace.
[0059] In a sixth step 6, the polymerized parallelepipeds are stamped or machined to obtain stoppers with the desired diameters. The stoppers are then machined by a few tenths of millimeters to obtain a perfect conformation in the marketable format.
[0060] Finally, in a seventh step 7, a washing of the obtained stoppers is carried out in order to eliminate any machining or stamping residues, then the quality thereof is checked by optical sorting and weighing. The compliant stoppers can then be marked by laser or induction and be satin-finished.
[0061] These different steps comprised in the seventh step 7 are applied as needed in an order specific to the desired finished product.
[0062] Studies of the evolution of the oxygen permeability of the stoppers thus produced have been carried out by chemiluminescence.
[0063] The used equipment is a Fibox 3 LCD Trace V6 from PreSens Precision Sensing GmbH. The system is composed of an emitter/receiver probe, which emits a blue luminous flux. This flux is directed to a sensor (also called a pad) glued inside a transparent bottle. These sensors are made of fluorescent compounds, which absorb the light energy sent by the probe then reconstitute it as red light. The measurement is based on the fact that the restitution time of this light is inversely proportional to the oxygen concentration in the bottle. The result is expressed in oxygen partial pressure inside the bottle (PO.sub.2). This includes several advantages: it allows follow the kinetics of oxygen inlet from the stoppering until the end of storage in bottle, it is non-destructive, and finally, the measurement is simple to perform and can be done under different conditions (temperature, humidity, oxygen pressure gradient) reproducing those of a cellar or of the storage. This method is widespread in the industry and has already been the subject of numerous publications for a better control of oxygen supply upstream and during bottling (Ugliano et al., 2015).
[0064] The studied stoppers are stabilized beforehand in a climate chamber for 48 hours at 20° C. and 50% relative humidity. The bottles are transparent, with a CETIE ring, the profile of which has been checked compliant before use.
[0065] Before stoppering, the bottles have been equipped with Pst6 pads allowing oxygen pressure measurements up to 41 hPa (=41 mbar) with a detection limit of 0.02 hPa. The bottles stoppered with natural stoppers have also been equipped with Pst3 pads to measure more significant amounts of oxygen (up to 500 hPa). All bottles were blanketed with nitrogen before stoppering then stoppered under vacuum with a GAI stoppering device, model 4040, which allowed us to achieve residual oxygen contents of less than 0.1 mg/bottle (value subsequently subtracted in the results).
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[0067] Ten stoppers have been the subject of measurements for this study. They have on average a partial pressure of 0.82 mg of O.sub.2 after one month with a standard deviation equal to 0.56.
[0068]
[0069] The natural cork stoppers produced by an ancestral manufacturing method have been selected for their high-end visual quality level involving a level of surface defects of the stopper reduced to a minimum.
[0070] Natural closures have on average a partial pressure of 4.7 mg of O.sub.2 after one month with a standard deviation equal to 10.8.
[0071] The stoppers prepared according to the manufacturing method described above correspond to the stoppers whose permeability measurements are illustrated in
[0072] It thus appears that the partial pressure of O.sub.2 after one month for bottles stoppered by a stopper produced according to the manufacturing method described herein is significantly lower than that measured for bottles stoppered by a conventional solid cork stopper.
[0073] Moreover, the dispersion of the oxygen partial pressure measurements is much more restricted, such that the stoppers thus produced allow checking the admitted oxygen, and therefore the homogeneous aging of the content from one bottle to the other. In contrast, the conventional solid cork stoppers expose the content to a very significant variability in the oxygen admitted from one bottle to the other, leading to a great disparity in the aging of the same wine in these bottles.
[0074] These tests show that the stoppers produced by the manufacturing method thus solve the technical problem of the related art by demonstrating a low average permeability to oxygen, while exhibiting a reduced dispersion of the permeability.
[0075] In addition, the manufacturing allows ensuring the contamination by anisoles is reduced or absent and avoiding the contact of the wine with the polyurethane binder both at the end of the manufacturing method and during the aging of the bottle.
[0076] Finally, the structuring of the stopper with lateral cork strips, possibly selected by visual inspection or by X-ray, allows ensuring a visual appearance during the bottling or upon stoppering close to that of a solid cork stopper.