Method for packaging liquid products under pressure in plastic bottles or similar containers
10766754 · 2020-09-08
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C49/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B67C7/0073
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2049/6653
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B63/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/0005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/42824
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B67C2003/227
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B3/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/66
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2949/0715
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2067/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B67C7/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B3/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B63/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C49/66
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method for packaging liquid products under pressure in thermoplastic containers includes blow-molding a container from a sterilized preform, exposing an exterior of the container to a mixture that includes liquid coolant and either a sterilizing agent or a disinfectant, pressure-filling the container with liquid product, and sealing the filled container.
Claims
1. A method comprising packaging a liquid product under pressure in containers, wherein said containers are thermoplastic containers, wherein packaging said liquid product under pressure comprises: blow-molding a container from a sterilized preform, wherein said container is a thermoplastic container; exposing an exterior of said container to a mixture; spraying said mixture toward said container from a plurality of spray nozzles that are located in series along a direction of transport of said container; after having exposed said exterior of said container to said mixture, pressure-filling said container with said liquid product; and sealing said filled container; wherein said mixture comprises: a liquid coolant, a disinfectant, an additive to reduce surface tension of said liquid coolant, and an additive to promote drying of cooled and disinfected containers prior to filling thereof.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein there exists a disinfection rate that has been defined to be an industrially-relevant disinfection rate, wherein said additive to promote drying comprises alcohol, wherein said alcohol is present in an amount such that a concentration of said alcohol is insufficient to function as a disinfectant at said industrially-relevant disinfection rate, and wherein said alcohol is present in an amount that is sufficient to promote cooling.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after exposing said container to said mixture, placing said container on a rotating transfer star to cause centrifugal force that arises from rotation of said transfer star to force residual mixture to be flung away from said container.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein exposing an exterior of said container to a mixture comprises atomizing said mixture and spraying said atomized mixture toward said container.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after having exposed said exterior to said mixture and before pressure-filling said container, causing said container to be carried by a first transport star, wherein said first transport star receives said container after said container's exterior has already been exposed to said mixture.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after having exposed said exterior to said mixture and before pressure-filling said container, causing said container to be carried by a succession of at least three transport stars.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein said containers comprise a bottle that was formed from a preform, wherein there exists an area on said bottle that was formed from a corresponding area on said preform, wherein said corresponding area on said preform was not sterilized, wherein said disinfectant is contained in said liquid coolant at a concentration that is sufficient to effectively sterilize and disinfect said bottle at said area.
8. The method of claim 1, further comprising selecting a concentration of said disinfectant to be sufficient to achieve a log reduction of between 4 and 6 on drink pests while causing no ascertainable adverse impact on an internal surface of said container.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising selecting said liquid product to be a liquid product that contains carbon dioxide.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising sterilizing at least a portion of the preform prior to entry of the preform into a blow-molding machine.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein exposing is carried out while said container is on a transport path that begins at a blow-molding machine.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein exposing said exterior of said container to said mixture comprises exposing said exterior to a mist.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein exposing said exterior of said container to said mixture comprises exposing said container to said mixture at a first point along a transport path along which said container travels and exposing said container to said mixture at a second point along said transport path after having exposed said container to said mixture at said first point.
14. The method of claim 1, wherein said exterior of said container comprises a base and an outer surface, wherein exposing said exterior of said container to said mixture comprises exposing said base to said mixture and exposing said outer surface to said mixture.
15. The method of claim 1, further comprising exposing an exterior of another container to a disinfectant-free mixture that comprises a liquid coolant and a surfactant.
16. The method of claim 1, further comprising spraying said mixture toward said container from a spray device that is underneath a transport path that precedes a transport star.
17. The method of claim 1, further comprising causing a delay between completion of blow-molding and initiation of pressure filling, wherein causing a delay comprises causing said container to traverse a series of transport stars, said stars comprising a first star that receives said container after said container has been exposed to said mixture and a last star that provides said container to a filling machine.
18. The method of claim 1, wherein said containers are PET containers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) These and other features of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description and the accompanying figures, in which
(2)
(3)
(4)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(5)
(6) The bottle 2, which is shown in
(7) To carry out these tasks, the installation 1 includes a supply unit 4, a blow-molding machine 5, a filling machine, and a sealing machine 9. The supply unit 4 provides the preforms 3. The blow-molding machine 5 is of a rotating type to which an oven 6 with a pre-heating section 7 has been assigned. The filling machine is a rotating type filling machine having a plurality of filling positions on a rotor and being driven to rotate about a vertical machine axis. The sealing machine 9 follows the filling machine 8 in the direction of transport of the bottles 2 through the installation 1 or at a corresponding sealing unit.
(8) The installation 1 has conveying section 4.1 that carries preforms 3 from the supply unit 4 to the blow-molding machine 5. At the blow-molding machine 5, the preforms 3 are blow-molded into bottles 2. They are then moved toward an outlet 10 of the installation 1. In the course of traveling toward the outlet 10, the bottles 2 pass through a space that is separated from the environment by a housing 11. A sterile medium is passed through this space thus making it a sterile space or hygiene space. The sterile medium is a sterile vaporous and/or gaseous medium at slight over-pressure, preferably with sterile air at slight over-pressure.
(9) In operation, preforms 3 are fed by means of the conveying section 4.1 to the pre-heating section 7, where they are pre-heated. While still hot, the preforms 3 are then fed to an inlet of the blow-molding machine 5. Before being transferred to the blow-molding machine, the preforms 3 are sterilized with an appropriate medium. The medium can be a gaseous medium, a vaporous medium, and/or a liquid medium.
(10) The empty bottles 2 thus produced are moved over a transport section 12, which can be seen in
(11) When transferred to the transport section 12, the empty bottles 2 have just been blow-molded. They are therefore still quite hot. In fact, they are at a temperature of at least 75 C. to 80 C.
(12) Before the pressure-filling in the filling machine 8, the bottles 2 need to be cooled down to a temperature at which the thermoplastic plastic used for the bottles is adequately stable. For example, the temperature should be brought down to a temperature of 55 C. or lower.
(13) To bring down the temperature, the apparatus features at least one spray device 14 with at least one spray nozzle 15, both of which are shown in
(14) The spray nozzle 15 emits a coolant mist 16 that is made of finely distributed or atomized droplets of a liquid coolant. The liquid coolant is preferably water at a temperature that is well below 55 C., for example at a temperature of no greater than 20 C. This coolant mist 16 comes from below the bottles 2. As a result, it directly impinges on the bottle bases 2.2. This is particularly advantageous because the bottle base 2.2 has an enlarged wall thickness. As a result, the bottle base 2.2 cools more slowly. It is therefore expedient to direct considerable coolant mist 16 directly onto the bottle base 2.2.
(15) In those embodiments in which the nozzle arrangement has multiple spray nozzles 15 in series along the direction of transport of the bottles 2, the nozzles 15 are offset relative to each other along an arched transport section of the transport star 13.
(16) In some embodiments, the spray nozzles 15 are atomizer nozzles. Liquid coolant, such as water, together with an optional sterile medium is applied under pressure so that the coolant mist 16 forms an aerosol that is directed toward the undersides of the containers 2. Embodiments include those in which the sterile medium is a gaseous medium and those in which it is a vaporous medium.
(17) Preferably, the liquid coolant includes disinfectant, such as chlorine dioxide. The concentration of chlorine dioxide is selected to be sufficient to effectively sterilize and disinfect the bottles 2 at areas that were not sterilized when the bottle 2 was still a preform 3.
(18) A critical range of chlorine dioxide concentration in the liquid coolant is the range from 0.5 ppm to 10 ppm. Another critical range of chlorine dioxide is that between 0.5 ppm to 3 ppm. Both of these are sufficient to achieve sterilization or disinfection that reduces a microorganism reduction level sought of Log 4-6 for the product-related drink pests while causing no ascertainable adverse impact of the internal surfaces of the bottles 2 and on the quality of the bulk product filled into the bottles 2 occurs. Depending on the kinds of microorganisms, it is advantageous to select a chlorine dioxide concentration that is in another critical range, namely the range between 3 ppm and 10 ppm.
(19) In some embodiments, as shown in
(20) In
(21) An advantage of this arrangement is that even when the number of molded, filled and sealed bottles 2 processed per unit time is high, enough time remains for any residual coolant applied onto the bottles 2 to be removed from the bottles 2. Moreover, as the bottles 2 traverse the various stars 13 following exposure thereof to liquid coolant, they are subjected to considerable centrifugal forces that arise from being transported by rapidly rotating transport stars 13. This promotes shedding of liquid coolant from a bottle 2 prior to entry of that bottle 2 into the filling machine 8.
(22) Additionally, because coolant liquid that is applied onto the bottles 2 is a finely atomized coolant mist 16, a large area of the bottle 2 is cooled. In particular, not only the bottle base 2.2, but also the entire or substantially the entire outer or jacket surface of the particular bottle 2 is impacted with the cooling liquid.
(23) In some embodiments, the liquid coolant is mixed with the gaseous or vaporous medium under pressure. An example of such a medium is sterile compressed air. By passing this mixture through a spray nozzle 15, it is possible to achieve a particularly fine atomization of the coolant, as well as to promote additional cooling by evaporation.
(24) Mixing disinfectant with coolant makes it possible to both cool the bottles 2 and to sterilize or disinfect the bottles 2 on their exterior surfaces at one and the same working position, in one and the same process step, with one and the same medium. This avoids spreading any microorganisms adhering to the exterior of the bottles 2 into the filling machine 8 and, in particular, into product-carrying areas of the filling machine 8. It does so while maintaining a compact design of the installation 1 and its transport section 12.
(25) The installation 1 as described herein thus permits execution of a method for packaging liquid products under pressure into bottles 2 that have just been molded from sterilized preforms 3 by blow-molding, and that have just been cooled with a liquid coolant and furthermore sterilized at the same time, and that are then filled under pressure with the bulk product and sealed.
(26) An alternative method includes adding an additive to reduce the liquid coolant's surface tension. A suitable additive is a surfactant. In some cases, the surfactant and disinfectant are both added to the coolant. The surfactant promotes broader wetting of the surfaces, which in turn promotes faster evaporation and cooling.
(27) Other alternative methods include adding a slightly volatile additive to improve the drying of the cooled and disinfected containers 2. This can be added along with the surfactant. An example of a volatile additive that can be added to the liquid coolant before the filling is alcohol, such as methanol and isopropanol. The concentration of alcohol is insufficient to function as a disinfectant operating at an industrially relevant disinfection rate. However, the alcohol is used at a concentration that is sufficient to promote cooling.
(28) In yet other alternative methods, chlorine dioxide is replaced by a comparably effective disinfectant. Suitable substitutes for chlorine dioxide are peracetic acid and H.sub.2O.sub.2 (hydrogen peroxide). These substitutes can be used with a surfactant, a volatile additive, or any combination thereof.
(29) In those cases where hygiene requirements are reduced, the coolant is not mixed with any disinfectant. However, to improve cooling performance, an agent to reduce the surface tension of the liquid coolant is added. A suitable agent would be a surfactant.
(30) Alternatively or in addition to a surfactant, the coolant can be mixed with one or more slightly volatile additives to improve the drying and cooling of the containers 2 before filling, such as for example an alcohol (methanol, isopropanol etc.).
(31) Moreover, these two types of coolant (with and without disinfectant) can be used for a manufacturing and filling method for containers alone or alternatively, i.e. they are used where necessary.
(32) The foregoing embodiments are provided as examples only and are not intended to be limiting. The invention is defined solely by the claims.