CAP FOR PACKING CONTAINERS INCLUDING AN INTEGRAL POWDER OR LIQUID
20200198860 ยท 2020-06-25
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D51/2821
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D47/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D51/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D47/36
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A cap for use with a container having a liquid food, the cap including a spout sealed at one end by a lid and at the other end by a foil and including a blister pack containing a component to be added to the liquid food at the time of consumption, the fully assembled cap adapted to be sealingly attached to the container having an opening sealed by a foil. Various mechanisms are proposed to break the foils of both the cap and the container to allow the component to be mixed with the liquid food. The cap may further include a seal to prevent ingress of particulates and/or water.
Claims
1. A cap adapted to be sealingly attached to a container having a top wall and with an opening sealed by a first foil, the first foil extending under the top wall; the container holding a liquid food, the cap including a spout sealed at one end by a lid and at the other end by a second foil or rupturing material and including a component to be added to the liquid food at the time of consumption; whereby when the cap is attached to the container the first foil and the second foil are not in contact, there being a gap thereinbetween.
2. The cap as in claim 1 including a means to perforate both foils to allow the component to be mixed with the liquid food.
3. The cap as in claim 1 whereby the component is contained in a blister pack located in the cap.
4. The cap as in claim 3 whereby the bottom of the blister pack acts as the second foil.
5. The cap as in claim 1 whereby the cap includes a foot adapted to be sealingly attached to the top wall of the container.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] Preferred features, embodiments, and variations of the invention may be discerned from the following Detailed Description which provides sufficient information for those skilled in the art to perform the invention. The Detailed Description is not to be regarded as limiting the scope of the preceding Summary of the Invention in any way. The Detailed Description will make reference to a number of drawings as follows.
[0011]
[0012]
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[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
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[0018]
LIST OF COMPONENTS
[0019] 10 cap [0020] 12 top wall [0021] 14 opening [0022] 16 foil [0023] 18 spout [0024] 20 lid [0025] 21 needle [0026] 22 blister [0027] 24 tamper ring [0028] 26 component [0029] 28 ring pull [0030] 30 cutting collar [0031] 32 fin [0032] 34 teeth [0033] 36 flip cap lid [0034] 39 top cap [0035] 40 film [0036] 42 extension [0037] 44 cutting blade [0038] 46 skirt [0039] 48 inside wall [0040] 50 sealing lip [0041] 52 foot
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0042] The following detailed description of the invention refers to the accompanying drawings. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings and the following description to refer to the same and like parts. Dimensions of certain parts shown in the drawings may have been modified and/or exaggerated for the purposes of clarity or illustration.
[0043] Referring to
[0044] The cap 10 includes a cylindrical spout 18 and a lid 20 that seals across the top of the spout 18 with a blister pack 22 sandwiched between the spout and the container extending so as to seal across the bottom of the spout and adapted to match the footprint of the opening 14. The blister pack includes an integral needle 20 and is filled with a desired component to be added to the liquid food in the container.
[0045] The lid 20 includes a tamper ring 24 as is well known in the industry. When the lid 20 is removed by unscrewing it from the spout the user presses on the blister pack causing the needle 21 to perforate both through the blister pack and the foil 16 thus causing the desired component 26 to flow into the container. The needle 21 can be integral or a separate component within the blister.
[0046] A ring pull 28 is then used to remove the blister pack and can also be adapted to remove the foil to enable the liquid food to be easily dispensed.
[0047] Illustrated in
[0048] Yet an alternative embodiment is illustrated in
[0049]
[0050] In a further embodiment illustrated in
[0051] It is to be understood that whilst the above embodiments illustrate the foil of the cap as extending beyond the bottom opening of the spout it is not intended to limit the extent of the foil to any size. All that is required is for the foil of the cap to seal it and different design solutions will achieve this.
[0052] Also whilst we refer to foil it is also to be understood that it may be made of any other suitable material that can seal and also be perforated such as epoxy coated foil, plastics as examples only.
[0053] Current packaging of liquids for human consumption include using aseptic packaging where the product and the package are sterilized separately and then combined and sealed in a sterile atmosphere, in contrast to canning, where product and package are first combined and then sterilized. When filled with ultra-heat treated (UHT) foodstuffs (liquids like milk and juice or processed food like vegetables and preserved fruits), the aseptic packages can be preserved without being chilled for up to one year, with the result that distribution and storage costs, as well as environmental impact, is greatly reduced and product shelf life expanded.
[0054] Aseptic technology enables food to stay fresh for more than 6 months without the risk of contamination, loss of nutrition or changes to the taste of the product. The entire filling process is performed in a sterile environment, the packaging material is sterilised on both sides and the packages are sealed under the liquid level to avoid contamination.
[0055] In that case the cap as described above can be effectively sterilised before it is placed onto the container. Although such as step is not absolutely necessary when using a dry component, it may be desirable when using a liquid component that may not have sufficient preservatives to ensure longevity.
[0056] The reader will now appreciate that in a manufacturing line a pre-filled cap may be used to be attached to liquid food containers. This gives the manufacturer options into what type of component may be attached to the container greatly increasing consumer choice and alleviating the need to post-manufacture try and to fill the cap with a desirable component. This is able to be achieved given that the cap itself is sealed and the container is sealed and that the two seals are simultaneously broken to enable the component to be added to the liquid food.
[0057] Thus in its simplest form the invention teaches a dispensing cap including a top, spout, and base that attaches to the container that stores liquid food and that is sealed to contain a component to be mixed with the liquid food at the time of consumption. Of course the cap can also be used to seal the container after it has been activated enabling the liquid food to be consumed over several days.
[0058] Whilst the cap as described above can be used to attach to a container already pre-filled with a component it may in some cases be desirable, especially if the component is not in a blister pack, to ensure that the cap is sealed against the environment to prevent dust and/or moisture to enter the cap. This can be achieved by an embodiment illustrated in
[0059] Thus in
[0060]
[0061] Although not illustrated, the liquid food may be a carbonated beverage. In these products the storage component of the container has direct contact with the liquid or gas in the container and the material used to make the foil is often selected on the basis of barrier properties against moisture and gas for ease of puncture by the user. The parameters that can affect the physical strength of the base material includes surface area and base thickness and the consequence of increasing the thickness of the base material increases the difficulty of puncturing it. When the liquid in the bottle contains gas, for example in the case of carbonated beverages, a significant amount of pressure can develop within the sealed container which can physically damage the base material in the blister pack, potentially causing rupture during storage.
[0062] A disk may be positioned below the spout the disk having a central aperture to accommodate the passage of the pin therethrough. The disk provides the mechanical strength necessary to ensure that the container foil remains integral and does not perforate simply through pressure from the carbonated beverage.
[0063] Further advantages and improvements may very well be made to the present invention without deviating from its scope. Although the invention has been shown and described in what is conceived to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is recognized that departures may be made therefrom within the scope and spirit of the invention, which is not to be limited to the details disclosed herein but is to be accorded the full scope of the claims so as to embrace any and all equivalent devices and apparatus. Any discussion of the prior art throughout the specification should in no way be considered as an admission that such prior art is widely known or forms part of the common general knowledge in this field.
[0064] In the present specification and claims (if any), the word comprising and its derivatives including comprises and comprise include each of the stated integers but does not exclude the inclusion of one or more further integers.