Vessel
20210245911 · 2021-08-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D71/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B35/50
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B57/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G06Q10/08
PHYSICS
B65B21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D65/46
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/0231
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/0201
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B21/245
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2501/0081
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/0223
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/0202
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B35/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B57/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G06Q10/04
PHYSICS
International classification
B65B57/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B35/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D65/46
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D71/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present application relates to a new vessel, such as a bottle that may be used to hold, store, or transport matter, such as particulates or fluids, and vessel assembly system. The vessel is constructed of a unique nesting design. Multiple vessels may be stacked together and to form a cohesive interrelated structure.
Claims
1. A vessel comprising: a body having a first side, second side, third side, fourth side, a top, and a bottom; each side is substantially rectilinear with substantially equal dimensions, the first side is connected to the second and fourth sides, the third side is connected to the second and fourth sides, opposite the first side such that the four sides form a three-dimensional rectilinear shape, the bottom is connected to each of the four sides, and the top is connected to each of the four sides opposite the bottom such that the four sides, top, and bottom form a fluid impermeable cavity; the top comprises a protrusion that extends away from each of the four sides; and and access hole in the protrusion that allows matter to enter and exit the cavity; and a cap that covers and seals the access hole; the bottom comprises a bottom indentation, wherein the shape of the bottom indentation comprises the negative image of the shape of the top such that an object having the shape of the top nests within the bottom indentation; the first side further comprises a side protrusion extending from an exterior surface plane of the first side and extending either a) perpendicular to the exterior surface plane; or b) at an acute inward angle to the exterior surface plane such that the protrusion does not extend over the any portion of the first side; wherein the side protrusion exhibits a three dimensional shape; and the third side further comprises a side recess extending inward, into the cavity, wherein the wall recess exhibits a shape that comprises the negative image of the shape of the side protrusion such that an object having the shape of the side protrusion nests within the wall recess.
2. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein, the wall recess is formed in the third side in a location that is directly opposite and aligned with the location of the side protrusion formed in the first side.
3. A vessel as in claim 2 wherein the wall recess and the side protrusion are located closer to the bottom than to the top.
4. A vessel as in claim 3 wherein the wall recess is located in the bottom third of the third side and the side protrusion is located in the bottom third of the first side.
5. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the second side and the fourth side are each substantially smooth and do not contain any protrusions or indentations.
6. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the side protrusion and wall recess are each circular in cross-section.
7. A vessel as in claim 6 wherein the side protrusion has a diameter of approximately 13/16 of an inch and the side protrusion protrudes from the side wall no more than approximately 1/16 of an inch; and wherein the side recess has a diameter of approximately ⅞ of an inch and the side recess extends into the cavity approximately ⅛ of an inch.
8. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the top protrusion includes a portion that is pyramidal.
9. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the side protrusion and wall recess are sized such that an object having identical dimensions to the side protrusion fits within the wall recess but does not frictionally engage the wall recess.
10. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the top and bottom indentation are sized such that an object having identical dimensions to the top fits within the bottom indentation but does not frictionally engage the bottom indentation.
11. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the volume of the cavity is substantially equal to the volume of a three-dimensional space defined by a rectangular prism having a first planar side with a perimeter equal to a perimeter of the first side; a second planar side with a perimeter equal to a perimeter of the second side; a third planar side with a perimeter equal to a perimeter of the third side; and a fourth planar side with a perimeter equal to a perimeter of the fourth side.
12. A vessel as in claim 1 wherein the side protrusion comprises a base, an upper portion, a protrusion wall and a mating surface wherein a) The upper portion is the area of the protrusion where the protrusion wall transitions to the mating surface, which area defines an upper circumference; b) The base is the area of the protrusion where the protrusion wall transitions to the first side, which area defines a base circumference; c) the protrusion wall separates the mating surface from the first side and joins the mating surface to the first side; wherein at no point along the protrusion wall is a cross-sectional circumference of the protrusion wall greater than the base circumference.
13. An arrangement of vessels comprising: at least a first vessel, a second vessel, a third vessel and a fourth vessel, wherein each of the a first vessel, a second vessel, a third vessel and a fourth vessel have substantially the same dimensions and each comprises: a body having a first side, second side, third side, fourth side, a top, and a bottom; each side is substantially rectilinear with substantially equal dimensions, the first side is connected to the second and fourth sides, the third side is connected to the second and fourth sides, opposite the first side such that the four sides form a three-dimensional rectilinear shape, the bottom is connected to each of the four sides, and the top is connected to each of the four sides opposite the bottom such that the four sides, top, and bottom form a fluid impermeable cavity; the top comprises a protrusion that extends away from each of the four sides; and and access hole in the protrusion that allows matter to enter and exit the cavity; and a cap that covers and seals the access hole; the bottom comprises a bottom indentation, wherein the shape of the bottom indentation comprises the negative image of the shape of the top such that an object having the shape of the top nests within the bottom indentation; the first side further comprises a side protrusion extending from an exterior surface plane of the first side and extending either a) perpendicular to the exterior surface plane; or b) at an acute inward angle to the exterior surface plane such that the protrusion does not extend over the any portion of the first side; wherein the side protrusion exhibits a three dimensional shape; and the third side further comprises a side recess extending inward, into the cavity, wherein the wall recess exhibits a shape that comprises the negative image of the shape of the side protrusion such that an object having the shape of the side protrusion nests within the wall recess; wherein the vessels are arranged such that a) the side protrusion of the first vessel is nested within the side recess of the second vessel; b) the top of the third vessel is nested within bottom indentation of the first vessel; c) the side protrusion of the third vessel is nested within the side recess of the fourth vessel; and d) the top of the fourth vessel is nested within the bottom indentation of the second vessel.
14. A arrangement of vessels as in claim 13 wherein none of the first vessel, second vessel, third vessel, or fourth vessel is frictionally engaged with any one of the first vessel, second vessel, third vessel, or fourth vessel.
15. An arrangement of vessels as in claim 13 wherein, without altering the orientation of any of the second vessel, third vessel, or fourth vessel, and without deforming the structure of any of the vessels, the first vessel cannot be removed from the arrangement without tilting the top of the first vessel away from the side recess of the second vessel.
16. An arrangement of vessels as in claim 13 wherein no side protrusion of any vessel frictionally engages any side recess of any of the other vessels.
17. An arrangement of vessels and in claim 16 wherein no top of any vessel frictionally engages any bottom indentation of any of the other vessels.
18. An arrangement of vessels as in claim 13 wherein no side protrusion of any vessel mechanically connects to any side recess of any of the other vessels.
19. An arrangement of vessels and in claim 18 wherein no top of any vessel mechanically connects to any bottom indentation of any of the other vessels.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0028] A preferred embodiment of the invention, illustrative of the best mode in which the applicant has contemplated applying the principles, is set forth in the following description and is shown in the drawings and is particularly and distinctly pointed out and set forth in the appended claims.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0045] As required, a detailed embodiment of the present invention is disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiment is merely exemplary of the principles of the invention, which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
[0046] Referring to
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[0050] The triangular and/or rectilinear cross section of some embodiments of the vessel allows for increased strength and space-saving/shipping/shelving benefits.
[0051] Referring to
[0052] Based upon initial examination of the inventive concept, it is understood that the human hand is able to grip a slightly bigger cross section of a triangle than square because the human hand is able to grip an angle less than 90 degrees easier than that of a round or square surface devoid of external irregularities, such as the Iconic Coke bottle. In some embodiments, based upon the average size of a human hand, and volume of contents desired within a vessel, an ‘ideal’ formula of height to cross section is obtained. A triangular form is observed to ‘fit’ the junction of the ‘opposable thumb’ and ‘first digit’ that most readily assumes a triangular nexus. Realizing that volumes of varying forms with the manifestations of their resulting mathematical geometric cross sectional formularies, the intention some embodiments of the WellWater Compangineering of the instant invention is to glean a favorable cross sectional-to-volume strategy. As such, it is conducive that some embodiments of the instant invention of the WellWater bottle is Compangineered concomitant with advantages over prior art in the area of conserving both energy and entropy with regards to consumable products, such as polymer vessels for potable water. Nevertheless, it will be appreciated that various embodiments of the inventive concept will be utilized for containment of other liquids, solids, or other substances now known or hereinafter discovered.
[0053] It is noted that the filler/use portal (e.g. the opening at the top of the bottle), and transition area (e.g. the bottle neck) to the filler/use portal (which traditionally combine to function as transition from the bulk container portion of the vessel to the end use, such as a user's mouth) with overall form of the instant invention, in some embodiments will itself be the subject of other invention and not contingent to/of the form or function of those of the prior art shown herein. Indeed, in some embodiments the filler/use portal and transition at all times will be the subject of a Compangineered strategy for the instant invention. As such, a vessel of some embodiments of the instant invention is complete with the filler/use portal and transition area to the filler/use portal will be an additional strategy in conserving energy and entropy of the entire lifecycle of WellWater containment vessels and product beyond that of similar vessels of prior art. In some embodiments, the filler/use portal is a tab or removal seal/label positioned along a generally flat surface of the vessel (similar to that of a soda can).
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[0055] It will be appreciated that any dimensions shown in
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[0073] Several exemplary embodiments of the inventive concept are further described in the number paragraphs below:
[0074] 1. A method for optimizing space and/or resource allocation for, and utilization requirements of material, packaging, storage, transport, use, reuse and/or disposal and/or collectively a product of same, said method comprising the steps of:
[0075] determining materialization of the product to minimize wasted space and/or optimize product conveyance(s); and
[0076] designing the product with the materialization based upon said determining step.
[0077] In some such embodiments, the product is a vessel. In some embodiments, the vessel is a container. In some such embodiments, the container is a bottle for containing water or other liquid that is conveyed from the vessel. In some embodiments determining materialization is determining a grouping of vessels. For purposes of the inventive concept “Materialization” includes a determination as to elements, compounds, or substances for making the product (collectively “material characteristics”), groupings, placements, and/or adjacency relating to the product and other like or coordinated products.
[0078] Some embodiments of the inventive concept include method of reimagining the relationship of oxidation and respiration as it relates to the carbon cycle. In this manner, the inventive concept accounts for the entire life cycle of a product, from the original materials used in the product to the final disposal of the product. The inventive concept utilizes concepts similar and/or consistent to Michaelis-Menten kinetics and/or superseding principles. In that regard, embodiments of the methods of the inventive concept are intended to design/develop products that go full circle, e.g. from seed to bottle and with the purpose of an end material(s) (post use of the product—e.g. upon disposal of an empty water bottle) back to at least help the seed (either through oxidation or respiration), and start the cycle over again for new products. In some embodiments, the inventive concept lifecycle results in a disposal of the product that goes back into the original lifecycle (e.g. by breaking product down to components that help replenish the original resource used). In other embodiments, the inventive concept lifecycle results in a reuse of the product for other purposes (e.g. a water bottle is filled with dirt and used as a construction component).
[0079] For purposes of the instant invention, the term “renewable” is reimagined and redefined such that oil or other resources are considered “renewable” products. For example, oil is “renewable” over a long enough period of time. In some embodiments, the inventive concept utilizes oil or other resources, taking into account the life cycle and renewability of oil as part of the optimization process. The inventive concept differs from “renewable” resources of the prior art in that the entire life cycle is considered as part of the process. For example, in prior art methods plastic may be made from corn byproducts, and corn is considered a “renewable” resource because it can be grown and regrown. Notwithstanding, method of making bottle form corn based plastic fail to take into account the other resources that may be plundered or overused in the process, including resources for growing/fertilize the corn, harvesting, etc., and resources for hauling manufactured product, storage, and disposal of the product at the end of its use. The inventive concept considers one or more (in some embodiments, more than one, in some embodiments, all or close to all) aspects in the life cycle of the product from design/structure, use of materials, manufacture, transport, storage, use, disposal post use, interrelation of multiple products together with each other, etc., to optimize the life cycle and use of resources. The inventive concept in some embodiment considered the elements of a product itself—e.g. the way the carbons line up (carbon chain)—reimagining making and breaking carbon chains in a carbon based universe. Embodiments of the inventive concept provide a method of indexing and conserving and/or accounting for the use of carbon and/or other resources. Some embodiments of the inventive concept index all components of the product or product design, manufacturing, use, disposal, process, such as substrates (or carbon), catalysts/agents, by-products, and energy(s), in terms of total energy and entropy requirements (through the entire lifecycle of the product). In some embodiments, components of the product of the inventive concept are designed based on product lifecycle to perform more than one function (e.g. conveyance portal also functions as interlock for mating vessels).
[0080] For purposes of the inventive concept the term “conveyance” broadly includes the materials of which the product and/or its packaging are made, as well as the purpose, delivery, transport, storage, use, reuse and/or disposal of the product itself. For example, in some embodiments in which the product is a water bottle, conveyance includes the adjacency of two bottles group together and how they related to one another. In some water bottle embodiments, conveyance includes how the contents (e.g. the water within the bottle) are conveyed from the interior space of the bottle to the user. In some water bottle embodiments, conveyance includes how the grouping (e.g. pallet) of bottles are conveyed from the manufacturer to a retail point of sale location. In some embodiments, conveyance includes how the bottle is disposed of after the contents have been conveyed from the bottle.
[0081] Products of the instant inventive concept are Compangineered to be formed, and/or deformed, by organic intention, by intrinsic particles, inert or active or activatable, internal or external elements, microbes, organisms, compounds, materials, methods and/or other means (defined herein as “Constituency”).
[0082] 2. The method as set forth in embodiment 1 wherein the product comprises a group of vessels, wherein said determining step comprises determining groupings of vessels to minimize wasted space and/or optimize vessel conveyance(s); and wherein said designing step comprises designing individual vessels within the group based upon said determining step.
[0083] 3. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of optimizing vessel conveyance(s), and wherein said vessel conveyance(s) comprises a vessel shape.
[0084] 4. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of optimizing vessel conveyance(s), and wherein said vessel conveyance(s) comprises a vessel purpose.
[0085] 5. The method as set forth in embodiment 4, wherein said vessel purpose comprises the delivery of a conveyable substance.
[0086] In some embodiments, the conveyable substance is potable water.
[0087] 6. The method set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of optimizing vessel conveyance(s), and wherein said vessel conveyance(s) comprises a vessel life cycle and/or shelf life for a vessel
[0088] 7. The method as set forth in embodiment 6 wherein in said optimizing step recycling, repurposing and/or disposal of the vessel is determined.
[0089] 8. The method as set forth in embodiment 7 wherein in said optimizing step a preferred material for optimizing recycling, repurposing and/or disposal of said vessel is determined.
[0090] 9. The method as set forth in embodiment 8 wherein in said optimizing step a preferred trigger for initiating said recycling, repurposing and/or disposal of said vessel is determined in coordination with said vessel material.
[0091] 10. The method as set forth in embodiment 9 wherein said trigger is an agent that decomposes said vessel material.
[0092] For purposes of the inventive concept the term “agent” includes element, enzyme, compound, microbe, microbial, microplasm, energy, bacteria, accelerant, retardant, activator, catalyst, organism, etc. or anything that ingests or digests the product (or part thereof), or reproduces or replicates the product (or part thereof), or otherwise facilitates anabolic and/or catabolic existence of the product (or part thereof) and/or internal or external reductive processes relating to the product.
[0093] 11. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of optimizing vessel conveyance(s), and wherein said vessel conveyance(s) comprises a vessel contents.
[0094] 12. The method as set forth in embodiment 11 wherein in said optimizing step vessel contents are enhanced, modified, contributed to and or amplified by said vessel.
[0095] 13. The method as set forth in embodiment 12 wherein said optimizing of vessel contents is performed on demand.
[0096] 14. The method as set forth in embodiment 12 wherein said optimizing of vessel contents is performed in a progressive manner.
[0097] 15. The method as set forth in embodiment 12 wherein said optimizing of vessel contents is performed in a controlled and/or triggered manner.
[0098] 16. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein contents of at least one vessel contribute to the determining step and wherein said determining step includes determining of form, function, and/or purpose of vessels, groupings of vessels, vessel packaging, and/or packaging systems.
[0099] 17. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises defining preferred adjacency(s) of adjacent vessels within the group of vessels.
[0100] For purposes of the inventive concept “adjacency” means that products are Compangineered to be compatible, conforming, or competing with other products. Adjacency includes category, class or group strategies. For example, adjacency of a water bottle in some embodiments includes how the individual bottle stacks horizontally and/or vertically with other similar bottles into a case or pallet of bottle. In some embodiments, adjacency includes how packages of multiple bottles are grouped together into a pallet, container, retail shelf, or other area.
[0101] 18. The method as set forth in embodiment 17 wherein said preferred adjacency(s) comprises one or more symbiotic surface(s) of adjoining vessels' walls.
[0102] 19. The method as set forth in embodiment 18 wherein said one or more symbiotic surface(s) includes inter-relating elements of reciprocating form(s) and/or function(s).
[0103] 20. The method as set forth in embodiment 19 wherein said inter-relating elements comprise a male element on the surface of a first vessel and a female element on the surface of a second vessel for receiving said male element of the first vessel.
[0104] 21. The method as set forth in embodiment 19 wherein said inter-relating elements comprise a strategically placed planar surface, portion of a planar surface, or feature of a planar surface
[0105] 22. The method as set forth in embodiment 21 comprising a feature of a planar surface, wherein said feature is a vessel base, portion of a vessel base, sidewall, and/or top of a vessel.
[0106] 23. The method as set forth in embodiment 17 wherein said preferred adjacency(s) are an accommodation of or for an otherwise usual and customary functional element of the vessel.
[0107] 24. The method as set forth in embodiment 23 wherein said usual and customary functional element of the vessel is a vessel cap or a portion of a vessel portal covering.
[0108] For purposes of the inventive concept, portal covering includes a cap, lid, or other closure for the vessel portal/opening.
[0109] 25. The method as set forth in embodiment 17 wherein said preferred adjacency(s) function as an element to optimize an individual vessel and/or contributes to optimization of a grouping of vessels.
[0110] 26. The method as set forth in embodiment 25 wherein said preferred adjacency(s) comprising adjacent sidewalls, or portions of sidewalls of adjacent vessels.
[0111] 27. The method as set forth in embodiment 17 where said determining step further comprises determining concomitantly adjacencies of one or more vessels for purposes of minimizing space between vessels and/or containers of multiple vessels, minimizing and/or optimizing packaging, and/or minimizing and/or optimizing packaging systems.
[0112] 28. The method as set forth in embodiment 27 wherein groups of vessels, or containers of multiple vessels are positioned horizontal to one another and/or vertical to one another.
[0113] 29. The method as set forth in embodiment 17 wherein said preferred adjacency(s) comprises one or more surface features on a surface of adjacency for enhancing the vessel, packaging of the vessel, storage of the vessel, and/or transport of the vessel.
[0114] 30. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of determining space requirements in terms of volume, mass and/or entropy of internal containment(s) and/or external adjacency(s) of one or more of said individual vessels.
[0115] 31. The method as set forth in embodiment 30 wherein internal containment(s) comprise the contents of the vessels.
[0116] 32. The method as set forth in embodiment 30 wherein internal containment(s) comprise one or more surface feature(s) on an internal surface of one or more of said individual vessels.
[0117] 33. The method as set forth in embodiment 23 wherein external adjacency(s) comprise one or more surface feature(s) on an external surface of one or more of said individual vessels.
[0118] 34. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of advantaging concomitantly form and function of individual vessels through coordinated adjacency(s) of one or more vessels and/or containers of vessels.
[0119] 35. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of advantaging concomitantly form and function of individual vessels through coordinated adjacency(s) of one or more planar surface, portion of a planar surface, or functional element of a planar surface, of one or more vessels.
[0120] 36. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein said determining step comprises the step of designing and/or modeling packaging systems, groupings of packaging for vessels and individual vessels with preferred adjacency(s) and/or symbiotic interrelationships, for purposes of a collective gestalt of form, function and materiality of and for more than one vessel.
[0121] 37. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 wherein the vessel(s) are individually sized single-use potable water bottles.
[0122] 38. The method as set forth in embodiment 1 wherein the vessel(s) are of any size and purpose. In some such embodiments, the vessel include a box, car, bike, etc.
[0123] 39. The method as set forth in embodiment 2 further comprising the step of determining a material for manufacturing the vessels based upon the contents, intended purposes of contents, and/or vessel purpose.
[0124] 40. The method as set forth in embodiment 1 wherein the product comprises a group of vessels, wherein said determining step comprises determining material characteristics to minimize wasted space and/or optimize vessel conveyance(s); and wherein said designing step comprises designing individual vessels within the group based upon said determining step.
[0125] 41. A method for the simultaneous and/or coordinated sequential use of conceptual and computerized modeling methods for space and material allocation, award and assignment in pursuit of preferred packaging systems, packaging, and individual vessels of and/or for packaging, the method comprising the steps of: assessing, grading and employing viscoelastic properties of materials of packaging systems, packaging and vessels of and for containment; identifying, allocating and coordinating available space for purposing all adjacent and/or coincident space and concomitantly optimizing vessel form and function within said space.
[0126] 42. The method as set forth in embodiment 40 further comprising the steps of employing concomitant static and dynamic analysis of materials, material characteristics and material capabilities to optimize material and space allocation and performance of packaging systems, packaging and/or vessels of said packaging.
[0127] 43. The method as set forth in embodiment 40 further comprising the steps of purposing concomitantly local, regional and/or system-wide material consistency(s), thickness(s), cross sectional profile, shape(s), form(s) and function(s) of one or more vessels in context of space allocation via computer modeling, and/or artificial intelligence.
[0128] 44. The method as set forth in embodiment 43 wherein said purposing step utilizes an adaptive learning mechanism.
[0129] 45. The method as set forth in embodiment 40 further comprising the steps of promulgating advantages of adjacency(s) of more than one vessel via modeling optimization.
[0130] 46. The method as set forth in embodiment 45 wherein said modeling optimization comprises, computer and/or CAD/CAM modeling.
[0131] 47. The method as set forth in embodiment 40 further comprising the steps of perpetuating advantages of material and space allocation from individual vessel design origination through all matters of adjacency(s) of more than one vessel and associated packaging and/or packaging systems.
[0132] 48. A method of companion sizing, orienting and purposing vessels, vessel walls, vessel surfaces and features to cooperatively and collectively conserve resources of space of vessel making, maintenance, storage and transport and that of vessel contents, the method comprising the steps of: assessing preferred ergonomics of vessel form and function associated with end use in context of vessel passive and/or active content containment, storage, transport, and/or lifecycle; integrating active ergonomics of an individual vessel with collective adjacencies of more than one other vessel to advantage all vessels within the space; and increasing opportunities of form, surface and/or element adjacencies of like vessels to reduce wasted internal and external vessel space in common.
[0133] 49. The method as set forth in embodiment 48 further comprising the steps of advantaging conservancy of time, space, energy and/or material for the lifecycle of vessels through original conceptionalization, modeling and making of vessels.
[0134] 50. The method as set forth in embodiment 48 further comprising the steps allowing for planned formation, deformation and/or reformation lifecycle of one or more vessels as part of original design determinations.
[0135] 51. A method of designing a vessel, the method comprising the steps of: allowing flow-able contents to assume the transient shape and form of a vessel and/or concomitantly lend structural integrity, shape, form and intended metrics to the vessel.
[0136] 52. A method for designing a vessel and grouping of like vessels comprising the steps of achieving and maintaining vessel intended shape, form, mass and usefulness throughout a programmed period of containment under external loading of one or more grouped vessels; and allowing vessel shape, form, mass and usefulness to discontinue following said programmed period.
[0137] For example, in some embodiments the contents of the vessel shape physically help to form the shape of the vessel (e.g. water within a flexible vessel adds some rigidity to the vessel). In some embodiments the contents of the vessel provide physical characteristics to the vessel, such as rigidity. In some embodiments, the contents of the vessel provide elemental characteristics to the vessel (e.g. the material from which the vessel is made is designed to break down its chemical bonds wen the contents are no longer present).
[0138] 53. The method as set forth in embodiment 52 wherein said vessels include a programmed material lifecycle beyond containment.
[0139] 54. The as set forth in embodiment 52 or embodiment 2 further comprising the steps of purposing vessels in groupings of one or more vessel to maintain 3-dimensional integrity under loading in usual and customary axes, and or off axes (e.g if the vessel is titled, off center or not level, it still has integrity), of orientation for storage, use and/or transport. Some embodiments apply to the structure of the vessel itself and/or the contents, while others apply to the structure of the vessel plus the contents.
[0140] 55. A method of designing a vessel that includes one or more axes of nesting of more than one vessel for purposes of maintenance and/or enhancement of the continuity of structural integrity and/or intended spatial orientation of any individual vessel and/or mission capability of groupings of like vessels, the method comprising the steps of: considering symbiotic adjacencies of one or more planar surface, surface elements and/or features of adjacent vessels to achieve and maintain nesting; designing adjacencies to provide nesting of more than one vessel and/or groupings of vessels, packaging, and/or packaging systems.
[0141] 56. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 further comprising the steps of employing adjacency nestings to reduce the need for external, exophytic and/or supplemental means of maintaining continuity of intended adjacencies of more than one vessel and contents within vessels.
[0142] 57. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 further comprising the steps of resisting and/or accommodating forces (including on or off axes) of random, intermittent, constant and/or consistent spatial disruption of groupings of like vessels.
[0143] 58. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 further comprising the steps of reducing the lifecycle energy requirements of making, maintaining, and/or transporting individual vessels through a gestalt of group functioning nesting adjacencies of more than one capabilities of vessel.
[0144] 59. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 further comprising the steps of reducing the material, energy and massing requirements of an individual vessel through planned partitioning of space and time by preferred adjacencies and associated nestings.
[0145] 60. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 wherein vessels are made from and/or relative to one or more, and/or a combination of materials from the group consisting of polymeric, composite, rigid, semi-rigid, viscoelastic materials, multi-phasic, multi-layered material, and energy force field(s) acting as a material. Embodiments of the inventive concept include products made from any known or invented materials, including those set forth above, now known or developed in the future, as well as layers, composites, aggregate, aggregate associations of materials.
[0146] 61. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 wherein like vessels are made of the same material(s).
[0147] 62. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 wherein like vessels are made of differing material(s).
[0148] 63. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 wherein the vessel is a single-use or reusable water bottle.
[0149] 64. The method as set forth in embodiment 55 wherein the vessel is made from one or more agent, ions, elements, enzyme, microbial, microplasm, energy particles, precipitates, compounds, peptides or polypeptides, plastics, polymers, and/or composites of natural, recombinant and/or synthetic origin.
[0150] 65. A method of initiating the making of vessels, perpetuating and/or terminating a lifecycle of vessels, groupings of vessels, packaging, and/or packaging systems that originates from historic and/or progressively/adaptively updated and learned data points, analyses, and of compendiums of relevant information, data points and/or references, the method comprising the steps of: storing, analyzing, applying and/or devolving metrics and data points regarding vessels, groups of vessels, packaging, and/or packaging systems for vessels; storing, analyzing, applying and/or devolving data points of preferred and disparate adjacencies and groupings of more than one vessel and/or nesting, materiality lifecycle, groupings of vessels and/or packaging, or packaging systems for vessels and/or groups of vessels; storing, analyzing, applying and/or devolving packaging dynamics, interactions of and between vessels, groupings of vessels and packaging systems in the making, storage, transport and/or use of vessels and contents of vessels; storing, analyzing, applying and/or devolving requirements of energy(s), massing(s), spacing(s) for individual vessels and grouping of vessels, packaging, and/or packaging systems; and storing, analyzing, applying and/or devolving realized contributions of adjacency(s), nesting(s), materiality(s), containment methods and means, principles and practices of conception, realization, manufacture, utility, recovery and/or recycling necessary and desirable for optimizing designed vessels, groupings of vessels, packaging, and/or packaging systems, and vessel lifecycles.
[0151] In the foregoing description, certain terms have been used for brevity, clearness and understanding; but no unnecessary limitations are to be implied therefrom beyond the requirements of the prior art, because such terms are used for descriptive purposes and are intended to be broadly construed. Moreover, the description and illustration of the inventions is by way of example, and the scope of the inventions is not limited to the exact details shown or described
[0152] Although the foregoing detailed description of the present invention has been described by reference to an exemplary embodiment, and the best mode contemplated for carrying out the present invention has been shown and described, it will be understood that certain changes, modification or variations may be made in embodying the above invention, and in the construction thereof, other than those specifically set forth herein, may be achieved by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, and that such changes, modification or variations are to be considered as being within the overall scope of the present invention. Therefore, it is contemplated to cover the present invention and any and all changes, modifications, variations, or equivalents that fall within the true spirit and scope of the underlying principles disclosed and claimed herein. Consequently, the scope of the present invention is intended to be limited only by the attached claims, all matter contained in the above description and shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
[0153] Having now described the features, discoveries and principles of the invention, the manner in which the invention is constructed and used, the characteristics of the construction, and advantageous, new and useful results obtained; the new and useful structures, devices, elements, arrangements, parts and combinations, are set forth in the appended claims
[0154] It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention herein described, and all statements of the scope of the invention which, as a matter of language, might be said to fall therebetween.