Bottle with pressurizing feature under lateral load and associated method
10279975 ยท 2019-05-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Gregory M. Soehnlen (North Canton, OH, US)
- Alexander Campana (Lorain, OH, US)
- Daniel P. Soehnlen (Canton, OH, US)
Cpc classification
B65D21/0209
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D1/0246
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D71/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D79/0084
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D23/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D23/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D41/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D71/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A bottle is provided for storing an associated fluid product when filled. The bottle includes a first wall having an opening therein that is selectively opened and closed to allow the associated fluid product to be dispensed therethrough or stored in the bottle, respectively. A second wall is spaced from the first wall, and a third wall extending between the first and second walls. A compliant pleat extends along substantially an entirety of the first wall, second wall, and third wall and divides the bottle into first and second portions. The compliant pleat allows the first and second portions to move toward one another in response to a predetermined force and thereby increase pressure in the closed bottle.
Claims
1. A bottle for storing an associated fluid product when filled, like bottles are positioned in a stacked array, the bottle comprising: a first wall having an opening therein that is selectively opened and closed to allow the associated fluid product to be dispensed therethrough or stored in the bottle, respectively; a second wall spaced from the first wall; a third wall extending between the first and second walls; and a compliant pleat that extends continuously in a closed loop around the first wall, second wall, and the third wall along substantially an entirety of the first wall, second wall, and third wall and divides the bottle into first and second bottle portions, the compliant pleat having a reduced wall thickness less than a wall thickness of the first wall, the second, and the third wall allowing the first and second bottle portions to move toward one another in response to a predetermined force and thereby increase pressure in the closed bottle.
2. The bottle of claim 1 wherein the pleat extends in a plane that is substantially perpendicular to the first wall.
3. The bottle of claim 1 wherein the pleat extends in a plane that is substantially perpendicular to the second wall.
4. The bottle of claim 1 wherein the pleat is formed by a creased fold in the first wall, second wall, and third wall, wherein in the absence of the predetermined force, the first and second portions of the bottle are spaced apart by the pleat, and in response to a lateral force at least as great as the predetermined force imposed on the bottle, the pleat collapses and the first and second portions of the bottle abut one another.
5. The bottle of claim 1 further comprising a wrap encompassing outer, perimeter surfaces of filled, closed bottles in a stacked array, the wrap imposing a first preload force on the stacked array of bottles so that the pleats on individual bottles collapse and allow the first and second bottle portions thereof to move toward one another and increase the pressure in the individual bottles.
6. The bottle of claim 5 wherein the bottle is formed to include at least one region extending outwardly from one of the first, second, and third walls, the region configured to collapse inwardly toward the respective wall in which the region is formed when the bottle is filled and in response to a preload imposed on the respective wall.
7. The bottle of claim 1 further comprising a resin gram to volume ratio of 75 grams/gallon.
8. The bottle of claim 1 wherein the bottle has a parallelepiped conformation and the third wall is a sidewall that includes first, second, third, and fourth sidewall portions in which the first and third sidewall portions are substantially parallel to each other and substantially perpendicular to the second and fourth sidewall portions, and the second and fourth sidewall portions are substantially parallel to each other.
9. The bottle of claim 8 wherein the first wall and the second wall of the bottle each has a planar area for engagement with a second wall and first wall, respectively, of an adjacent like bottle in stacked relation.
10. The bottle of claim 1 wherein the third wall is a sidewall that includes first, second, third and fourth sidewall portions, a first corner region formed by an intersection of the first and second sidewall portions has a tapered contour at one end adjacent the opening, and the opening is located closer to a vertical center of the bottle than to non-tapered portions of the third wall.
11. The bottle of claim 10 wherein the third wall includes a handle formed therein at a second corner region formed by an intersection of the third and fourth sidewall portions and generally opposite the first corner region.
12. The bottle of claim 11 wherein the handle is a non-pass-through handle.
13. The bottle of claim 8 wherein the bottle has a handle formed along an interface of the third and fourth sidewall portions.
14. A bottle for storing an associated fluid product when filled, the bottle comprising: a first wall having an opening therein that is selectively opened and closed to allow the associated fluid product to be dispensed therethrough or stored in the bottle, respectively; a second wall spaced from the first wall; a third wall extending between the first and second walls, wherein the third wall includes first, second, third and fourth sidewall portions, a first corner region formed by an intersection of the first and second sidewall portions, and a second corner region, formed by an intersection of the third and fourth sidewall portions and generally opposite the first corner region; and a compliant pleat that extends along substantially an entirety of the first wall, second wall, and third wall and divides the bottle into first and second bottle portions, the compliant pleat having a reduced wall thickness less than a wall thickness of the first wall, the second, and the third wall allowing the first and second bottle portions to move toward one another in response to a predetermined force and thereby increase pressure in the closed bottle, and the compliant pleat extending along the first wall at a location between the opening and the handle.
15. The bottle of claim 14 wherein the compliant pleat extends continuously in a closed loop around the first wall, second wall, and the third wall.
16. The bottle of claim 14 further comprising a wrap encompassing outer, perimeter surfaces of filled, closed bottles in a stacked array, the wrap imposing a first preload force on the stacked array of bottles so that the pleats on individual bottles collapse and allow the first and second bottle portions thereof to move toward one another and increase the pressure in the individual bottles.
17. The bottle of claim 16 further comprising a flexible label that extends about the third wall and is dimensioned to impose a second preload force on each bottle and increase the pressure in the bottle.
18. The bottle of claim 16 wherein the bottle is formed to include at least one region extending outwardly from one of the first, second, and third walls, the region configured to collapse inwardly toward the respective wall in which the region is formed when the bottle is filled and in response to a preload imposed on the respective wall.
19. The bottle of claim 14 wherein the third wall includes first, second, third and fourth portions, a first corner region formed by an intersection of the first and second portions has a tapered contour at one end adjacent the opening, and the opening is located closer to a vertical center of the bottle than to the non-tapered portions of the third wall, and the compliant pleat extends from the first wall to the second wall along the third wall, and a portion of the compliant pleat proceeds at an angle that is roughly parallel with the tapered contour of the first corner region.
20. The bottle of claim 1 wherein the third wall includes first, second, third and fourth portions, a first corner region formed by an intersection of the first and second portions, and a second corner region, formed by an intersection of the third and fourth portions and generally opposite the first corner region, the opening in the first wall is adjacent the first corner region, and the bottle further comprising a handle in the third wall along the second corner region, wherein the compliant pleat extends along the first wall between the opening and the handle.
21. A bottle for storing an associated fluid product when filled, the bottle comprising: a first wall having an opening therein that is selectively opened and closed to allow the associated fluid product to be dispensed therethrough or stored in the bottle, respectively; a second wall spaced from the first wall; a third wall extending between the first and second walls, a taper region of the third wall extending toward a central axis of the bottle as the third wall extends toward the opening in the first wall; and a compliant pleat that extends along substantially an entirety of the first wall, second wall, and third wall and divides the bottle into first and second bottle portions, the compliant pleat having a reduced wall thickness less than a wall thickness of the first wall, the second, and the third wall allowing the first and second bottle portions to move toward one another in response to a predetermined force and thereby increase pressure in the closed bottle, and the compliant pleat extending along the first wall at a location between the opening and the handle, and the compliant pleat extending parallel to the third wall and including an angle that is parallel to the taper region of the third wall.
22. The bottle of claim 21 wherein the third wall is a sidewall that includes first, second, third, and fourth sidewall portions in which the first and third sidewall portions are substantially parallel to each other and substantially perpendicular to the second and fourth sidewall portions, and the second and fourth sidewall portions are substantially parallel to each other, a first corner region formed by an intersection of the first and second sidewall portions has a tapered contour at one end adjacent the opening and the handle located at a second corner region opposite the first corner region formed by an intersection of the third and fourth sidewall portions.
23. The bottle of claim 22 wherein the compliant pleat extends along the first wall at a location between the opening and the handle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(28) Turning to
(29) The sidewall portions 106a, 106b are adjacent one another and together with the region of cavity 108 enclosed by these sidewall portions 106a, 106 and those portions of the upper (top) and lower (bottom) walls 102, 104 joining them, form a first compartment or front portion 130 of the bottle 100. Likewise, sidewall portions 106c, 106d are adjacent one another and together with that region of cavity 108 enclosed by these sidewall portions 106c, 106d and those portions of the top and bottom walls 102, 104 interconnecting the sidewall portions 106c, 106d, form a second compartment or rear portion 132 of bottle 100. The front and rear portions or compartments 130, 132 of the bottle 100 are in fluid communication with one another to form the single, continuous internal volume or cavity 108 enclosed or defined by the first, second, and third walls 102, 104, 106 (i.e., the top wall, bottom wall, and sidewall) of the bottle 100. The walls enclosing the first and second compartments 130, 132 are separated/joined by a compliant pleat or hinge 140 (sometimes referenced herein as a mechanical arrangement) that when collapsed in response to a lateral load imposed on the bottle 100 urges the first and second portions/compartments 130, 132 toward one another and thereby pressurizes the bottle when the opening 110 is sealed or closed by cap 120.
(30) In a preferred arrangement, the mechanical hinge 140 extends all the way around the bottle 100. More specifically, sidewall portion 106a is joined to the sidewall portion 106d via the hinge 140 and likewise sidewall portion 106b is joined to the sidewall portion 106c via the hinge. Similarly, the hinge 140 divides the top wall 102 into first and second portions 102a, 102b, and the bottom wall 104 is similarly divided into first and second portions 104a, 104d by the hinge. As will be described in greater detail below, the hinge/pleat 140 is substantially continuous or in a preferred arrangement is continuous around the bottle 100 and allows the top, bottom, and sidewall portions 102a/102b, 104a/104b; 106b/106c, and 106a/106d forming the first and second compartments 130, 132 to be spaced apart when the bottle is formed and originally filled with fluid under ambient pressure conditions. As evident in the top plan view of
(31) Once a predetermined amount of the fluid is introduced into the bottle 100 through the opening 110, the bottle is sealed or closed by the cap 120. The cap 120 is threaded onto the externally threaded neck 112 around the opening 110 and the cap forms a fluid tight seal of the opening, and/or a foil seal may be heat fused or sealed around the perimeter of the opening. A preload or lateral force is then imposed on the sealed, filled bottle 100 to collapse the pleat 140 and allow the top, bottom, and sidewall portions forming the first and second compartments 130, 132 of the bottle to move toward one another and thereby reduce the volume of the internal cavity 108. Since the filled bottle 100 is sealed, the lateral force increases pressure inside the bottle as a consequence of the internal volume of the cavity 108 being reduced as the first and second compartments 130, 132 are moved toward one another when the pleat/hinge 140 is collapsed. The increased internal pressure adds further strength and rigidity to the sealed bottle 100.
(32) A preferred manner of increasing the internal pressure of the sealed bottle 100 by collapsing the first and second compartments 130, 132 relative to one another is to apply a preload or lateral force by tightly bounding a group or array of sealed bottles with a surrounding stretch or shrink wrap 150. As a result of this preload or lateral force applied by the wrap 150 on the bottle 100, pressure above ambient is created in the sealed bottle. A pre-stretch can be induced in the wrap 150 whereby the wrap wants to relax to its original stretch length thereby shrinking the internal cavity 108 of the bottle by urging the first and second compartments 130, 132 together as the hinge/pleat 140 is collapsed.
(33) The bottle 100 may further include a flexible label (not shown) that extends about the third wall or sidewall 106 and is dimensioned to impose a second preload force on each bottle and increase the pressure in the bottle.
(34) To facilitate the movement of the first and second compartments 130, 132, the wall thickness of the bottle 100 in the hinge/pleat 140 is different than a wall thickness of other portions of the bottle, e.g., wall thickness of the wall portion 106. In a preferred arrangement, the wall thickness of the pleat/hinge is approximately 0.020 inches while the associated wall thickness of the sidewall 106 (or sidewall portions) is approximately 0.015 inches, of course other dimensions may be used without departing from the scope and intent of the present disclosure but a relative percentage differences wall thickness facilitates initial movement of the first and second compartments 130, 132 in response to a lateral load applied to a filled, sealed bottle 100 that results in increased pressure in the sealed bottle.
(35) The bottle 100 of the present disclosure has improved pouring features. Specifically, the opening 110 is moved away from the sidewall 106 and closer to a central axis of the bottle. As particularly evident in
(36) A handle 170 is provided in the bottle 100. The handle 170 is a non-pass-through handle in the embodiment of
(37) The unique configuration or shape of the handle 170 is dimensioned to conform to a generally C-shape contour formed by a user's thumb and index finger when the fingers of a user's hand are stretched and shaped over a virtual cylindrical or hemispherical surface. Thus, the thumb and index finger (as well as the remaining fingers) are received over the cylindrical conformation portion 172 of the handle 170. The palm of the user's hand is received over the circumferential region 174 of the handle 170, and likewise conforms to the convex contour 124b of the handle defined along the apex of the sidewall portions 106c, 106d. The fingers and thumb of the user grip the handle 170 along the cylindrical conformation 172 disposed in each of the first and third sidewall portions 106c, 106d, respectively,depending on whether the user grips the handle 170 with the right or left hand. Interconnecting portions 190, 192 of the first and third sidewall portions 106c, 106d each have a compound, curvilinear conformation in a generally horizontal plane where the sidewall curves outwardly from the respective depressed regions 178, 180 toward the sidewall 106 and where the curvilinear conformation smoothly merges into the large planar sidewall portions 106c, 106d, respectively.
(38) The upper wall 102 has an arch shape (see
(39) The upper wall 102 has a stepped configuration in which a first portion 102a includes the externally threaded neck 112 extending outwardly therefrom. The upper perimeter edge of the neck 112 is essentially flush or even in a horizontal plane with a second portion 102b of the upper wall (see
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(41) A diameter of the opening 110 is also substantially reduced in the present disclosure over that of the caseless bottle of the prior art shown and described in commonly owned U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,068,161; 6,247,507; and 6,371,172. For example, the diameter of the opening in the prior art is 48 mm whereas the new diameter is 43 mm. Although the precise dimensions can vary, by reducing the diameter of the opening 110 and the cap 120, a greater amount of pressure can be held in the bottle 100. Of course the ability to hold greater pressure in the bottle 100 allows the lateral force to be applied or increased to the sidewall 106 which, in turn, allows the first and second compartments 130, 132 to move toward one another, i.e. the hinge/pleat 140 collapses. The individual bottle 100 and array of bottles preclude plastic deformation of the bottle walls and allow the sealed bottles to build pressure and advantageously and effectively carry the vertical.
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(47) These various arrangements provide for increased stability of the bottles 100, particularly when in a stacked array and subjected to a dynamic situation such as shipping and handling. The various designs shown and described above provide for a stronger bottle 100 and therefore allow for a reduction in material since the sealed bottle is able to handle increased pressure. Since the thickness of the walls 102, 104, 106 of the bottle 100 are controlled via the blow molding operation, the walls can flex as desired in response to the lateral or vertical loads which reduces the interior volume of the cavity 108 and increases the pressure of the sealed bottle. Moreover, the walls 102, 104, 106 will not encounter a permanent change in the conformation of the bottle 100, i.e., when the bottle is subsequently opened for use, the bottle will reshape to its original contour since the elastic yield strength of the plastic will not have been exceeded. The hinge/pleat 140 is designed to form first and second compartments 130, 132 that can move relative to one another under load when the bottle 100 has been sealed by the cap 120. Moreover, the design provides for improved pouring, the smaller diameter cap 120 allows greater pressure to be held, and less resin or plastic material is required to form the new bottle. For example, the ratio of resin (measured in grams) per bottle volume (measured in gallons) is on the order of 75 grams/gallon. The bottle 100 can also be advantageously used with a conventional filler with only minor modification thereto.
(48) This written description uses examples to describe the disclosure, including the best mode, and also to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the disclosure. The patentable scope of the disclosure is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. Such other examples are intended to be within the scope of the claims if they have structural elements that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, or if they include equivalent structural elements with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims. Moreover, this disclosure is intended to seek protection for a combination of components and/or steps and a combination of claims as originally presented for examination, as well as seek potential protection for other combinations of components and/or steps and combinations of claims during prosecution.