Food container
10005573 ยท 2018-06-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D45/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D81/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D45/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A lunch box assembly having a main housing having a lid rotatably, hingedly attached to a base to provide access to an opened interior of one or more compartments is disclosed. The lid can have ferrously magnetic material and recesses to accept magnets. The magnets can be shaped to fit the recesses. The base can have compartments aligned with corresponding compartments in the lid. The base and the lid can form one or more closed food storage compartments that separate the contents from the neighboring compartments. A latch on the base and lid can produce a clamping force on a small lidded container or containers placed in one or more of the compartments. The clamping force can clamp the lidded container closed and prevent leakage of fluids in the container.
Claims
1. A method for containing food in a container comprising: closing a food container comprising a first housing; a second housing rotatably attached to the first housing, wherein the food container has a first configuration and a second configuration, and wherein in the second configuration the first housing is substantially closed upon the second housing; and a sub-container comprising a cup and a lid, wherein the sub-container is removably positioned between the first housing and the second housing; and wherein the first housing comprises a latch assembly comprising a clasp; wherein closing the food container comprises rotating the clasp, wherein rotating the clasp comprises exerting a clamping force by the clasp on a top exterior surface of the second housing; and wherein the exerting of the clamping force comprises clamping the cup to the lid, and wherein the cup has a circular mouth; and wherein the second housing comprises a first compartment and a second compartment, wherein the first compartment has a first compartment wall and the second compartment has a second compartment wall, wherein the first compartment wall is adjacent to the second compartment wall and also separated from the second compartment wall by a compartment gap, wherein the clasp exerts a clamping force simultaneously on the top exterior surface of the first compartment and the top exterior surface of the second compartment when the food container is in the second configuration.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the sub-container is fluid tight when the container is in the second configuration.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the sub-container comprises a seal.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein when the sub-container is in the food container, the food container exerts a clamping force on the sub-container when the food container is in the second configuration, and the food container exerts no clamping force on the sub-container when the food container is the first configuration.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the first housing comprises a compartment having a compartment floor and compartment walls, and wherein the compartment has a retention feature extending from the compartment floor, and wherein the retention feature abuts the sub-container when the food container is in the second configuration.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the first housing has a first compartment and a second compartment, and wherein the first compartment is adjacent to the second compartment, and wherein the first compartment has a first compartment wall adjacent to the second compartment, and wherein the second compartment has a second compartment wall adjacent to the first compartment, and wherein the first compartment wall is separated from the second extending wall by a compartment gap.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the second housing has a hinge rotatably attached to the first housing.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the second housing comprises a metal.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising attaching a magnet to the outside of at least one of the first housing or the second housing.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising constantly clamping the cup to the lid by the food container when the first housing and the second housing are in the second configuration.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the clamping comprises applying pressure concurrently to the cup and the lid.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the cup has a cup sidewall, and wherein the first housing has housing sidewalls adjacent to the cup and wherein there is a gap between the cup sidewalls and the nearest housing sidewall, wherein the top exterior surface of the second housing is substantially perpendicular to the housing sidewalls of the first housing.
13. The method of claim 1, further comprising laterally retaining the cup with retention elements, wherein the retention elements extend from a floor of the first housing and/or the second housing.
14. The method of claim 3, wherein the seal comprises an elastomer.
15. The method of claim 6, wherein the compartment gap has a compartment gap width of at least about 0.1 in.
16. The method of claim 9, wherein at least one of the first housing or the second housing comprises a raised boundary, and wherein the magnet is surrounded by the raised boundary.
17. A method for containing food in a container comprising: closing a food container comprising a first housing; a second housing rotatably attached to the first housing, wherein the food container has a first configuration and a second configuration, and wherein in the second configuration the first housing is substantially closed upon the second housing; and a sub-container comprising a cup, a lid, and an elastomeric seal, wherein the cup has a cup sidewall, wherein the sub-container is removably positioned between the first housing and the second housing; wherein the first housing comprises a latch assembly comprising a wire clasp; wherein closing the food container comprises rotating the wire clasp, wherein rotating the wire clasp comprises exerting a clamping force by the wire clasp on a top exterior surface of the second housing; and wherein the exerting the clamping force comprises clamping the cup to the lid; and wherein the first housing has housing sidewalls adjacent to the cup, and wherein there is a gap between the cup sidewall and the nearest housing sidewall; and wherein the second housing has a first compartment and a second compartment, and wherein the first compartment is adjacent to the second compartment, and wherein the first compartment has a first compartment wall and the second compartment has a second compartment wall, and wherein the second compartment wall is adjacent to the first compartment wall and also separated from the first compartment wall by a compartment gap, and wherein the wire clasp exerts a clamping force simultaneously on the top exterior surface of the first compartment and the top exterior surface of the second compartment when the food container is in the second configuration.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein when the sub-container is in the container, the container exerts a clamping force on the sub-container when the container is in the second configuration, and the container exerts no clamping force on the sub-container when the container is the first configuration.
19. The method of claim 17, further comprising constantly clamping the cup to the lid by the food container when the first housing and the second housing are in the second configuration.
20. The method of claim 17, wherein the clamping comprises applying pressure concurrently to the cup and the lid.
21. The method of claim 17, wherein the cup has a circular mouth.
22. The method of claim 17, further comprising laterally retaining the cup with retention elements, wherein the retention elements extend from a floor of the first housing and/or the second housing.
23. A method for containing food in a container comprising: closing a food container comprising a first housing; a second housing rotatably attached to the first housing, wherein the food container has a first configuration and a second configuration, and wherein in the second configuration the first housing is substantially closed upon the second housing; and a sub-container comprising a cup and a lid, wherein the sub-container is removably positioned between the first housing and the second housing; and a latch; and wherein the first housing comprises a latch assembly comprising a clasp; wherein closing the food container comprises rotating the clasp, wherein rotating the clasp comprises exerting a clamping force by the clasp on a top exterior surface of the second housing; and wherein the first housing has a first compartment and a second compartment, and wherein the first compartment is adjacent to the second compartment, and wherein the first compartment has a first compartment wall adjacent to the second compartment, and wherein the second compartment has a second compartment wall adjacent to the first compartment, and wherein the first compartment wall is separated from the second extending wall by a compartment gap; and wherein closing the food container further comprises clamping the cup to the lid in response to the clasp exerting the clamping force on the top exterior surface of the second housing; and wherein the cup has a circular mouth and a cup sidewall, and wherein the first housing has housing sidewalls adjacent to the cup and wherein there is a gap between the cup sidewall and the nearest housing sidewall, and wherein the top exterior surface of the second housing is substantially perpendicular to the housing sidewalls of the first housing.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein the second housing has a first container compartment and a second container compartment, and wherein the first container compartment is adjacent to the second container compartment, and wherein the first container compartment has a first container compartment wall and the second container compartment has a second container compartment wall, and wherein the second container compartment wall is adjacent to the first container compartment wall and also separated from the first container compartment wall by a container compartment gap, and wherein the clasp exerts a clamping force simultaneously on the top exterior surface of the first container compartment and the top exterior surface of the second container compartment when the food container is in the second configuration.
25. The method of claim 23, wherein when the sub-container is in the container, the container exerts a clamping force on the sub-container when the container is in the second configuration, and the container exerts no clamping force on the sub-container when the container is the first configuration.
26. The method of claim 23, further comprising constantly clamping the cup to the lid by the food container when the first housing and the second housing are in the second configuration.
27. The method of claim 23, wherein the clamping comprises applying pressure concurrently to the cup and the lid.
28. The method of claim 23, further comprising laterally retaining the cup with retention elements, wherein the retention elements extend from a floor of the first housing and/or the second housing.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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(15) The tray 10 can have dividing walls 11. The dividing walls 11 can divide the tray 10 into a plurality of compartments 111, 112, 113, 114, and 115. Each of the compartments 111, 112, 113, 114, 115 can have a depth for receiving food of various size and shape.
(16) The lid 20 can be formed with upwardly extruded volumes 211, 212, 213, 214, and 215 or compartments. The extruded volumes 211, 212, 213, 214, and 215 can be located in corresponding opposition to the downwardly extruded compartments 111, 112, 113, 114, and 115, respectively, of the tray 10. The extruded volumes in the lid can have an extruded volume height sufficient for food mounded up in the lower tray 10 to have space in the upper volume of the lid so as not to be displaced by the closure of the lid 20.
(17) The dividing walls 11 of the tray 10 can be formed by the downward extrusion of the compartments 111,112, 113, 114, and 15 so the top surface of the dividing walls 11 can be flush and with the top surface of the perimeter of the tray. The top surface of the dividing walls of the tray can seal against the dividing walls 21 of the lid 20. The seal can be water-tight or content-tight. For example, content tight can include when the lunch box is in a closed configuration, the top surface of the dividing walls of the tray can abut or approach the dividing walls 21 of the lid 20 to prevent or minimize shifting or moving of the contents (e.g., food) of the compartments from compartment to compartment during transport and use.
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(20) The latch hasps 302 can hold the latch bail 301 in tension in relationship to the tray 10 of the lunch box. The tension in the latch assembly 30 when closed can deliver or impart a closure force between the lid 20 and the tray 10. The closure force can prevent or minimize accidental dislodging of the latch assembly 30 during transport. The closure force can impart a sealing force to the lidded containers 50, 55 placed inside the assembly. For example, the sealing force can press the top surface of the dividing walls 11I against the top surface of the perimeter of the tray.
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(24) The hinge assembly 40 can be integrally formed by the meeting of the edges of the top lid 20 and the bottom tray 10 and the interposition of a hinge rod 413. The bottom tray can have one or more protruding tabs of bottom hinge wrap 412. The bottom hinge wrap 412 can wrap around the hinge rod 413. The top lid 20 can have one or more protruding tabs of top hinge wrap 411 that can wrap around the hinge rod 413. The hinge wraps 411 and 412 can create a piano hinge. The hinge assembly 40 can rotate by fixedly connecting the tabs 411 on the tray 10 to the hinge rod 413. The opposing tabs 412 attached to the lid 20 can be wrapped tightly around the hinge rod 413 but left with enough clearance such that they can freely move thus imparting a rotational and/or translational motion to the lid 20 in relationship to the tray 10.
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(26) The lidded container 50 assembled with its constituent parts 501,502,503 can be placed between the bottom tray 10 and the upper lid 20. The lidded container 50 can be closed. The seal 502 can be engaged with the lid 503 and the cup 501. The lidded container 50 is squeezed together by the interior surface of the compartment 113 and the interior surface of the upper compartment 213 which is in the lid 20. This compression of the lidded containers 50, 55 is maintained through the closure of the latch assembly 30 working in concert with the hinge assembly 40 to hold the lid 20 and the tray 10 in close contact to one another.
(27) The compartment gap 13 can vary along the side walls 15 of the compartments from a first, minimum compartment gap 13a to a second, maximum compartment gap 13b. The maximum compartment gap 13b can be from about 100% to about 300% of the minimum compartment gap 13a. For example, the maximum compartment gap 13b can be about 125%, 150% or 200% of the minimum compartment gap 13a.
(28) The compartment gaps can be outside or external of the volume formed by the closed lid and tray. The compartment gap can be open or exposed to the environment outside of the lunch box.
(29) The compartments can have side walls 15, bottom walls 16 and top walls 17. The container can have a container height 18. The container height 18 can be about equal, marginally greater than or marginally less than the distance from the inside of the bottom wall 16 to the inside of the top wall 17 when the lunch box is in a closed configuration. The top wall 18 and the bottom wall 17 can exert a compressive clamping force on the top and bottom of the containers.
(30) The lid can have a panel recess (shown as 713 and 714 in
(31) The magnetic panel 613 can be magnetic. The magnetic panel can be substantially flat. For example, the magnetic panel height 19 can be from about 0.02 cm (0.001 in.) to about 0.25 cm (0.10 in.).
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(33) The volume between the tray inner surface and the tray outer surface can be filled with a tray insulating material 72. The volume between the lid inner surface and the lid outer surface can be filled with a lid insulating material 73. The tray insulating material and the lid insulation material can be the same or different materials. The lid and/or tray insulating materials can be air, water, saline solution, Styrofoam, plastic, a plastic honeycomb, or combinations thereof.
(34) The tray inner surface 70a, tray outer surface 70b, lid inner surface 71a and lid outer surface 71b can be the same or different materials. For example, the tray and/or lid inner and/or outer surfaces 70a, 70b, 71a and/or 71b can be any of the insulating materials, or a metal such as a steel.
(35) The tray and/or lid inner and/or outer surfaces 70a, 70b, 71a and/or 71b and/or the insulation materials 72 and/or 73 can be ferromagnetic, for example containing steel or a ferromagnetic powder.
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(37) When assembled these containers will hold liquid foods without leaking provided that the lid 503, 553 is held in close contact with the gasket 502, 552 which in turn is pressing against the cup 501, 551.
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(39) The magnetic panel can have a top surface that can be configured to be written on by pen ink, pencil graphite, or provide a surface suitable for dry erase markers, or a combination thereof. The top surface (i.e., facing away from the compartment) of the magnetic panel can be printed with information corresponding to the contents of the compartment (e.g., beans, salad, soup). The top surface of the magnetic panel can be printed with promotional or decorative images.
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(41) The lunch box can store and transport foods while preventing the comingling of contents, sealing liquid food items within self contained lidded containers, and provide a personalization means through the use of magnets atop the lid of the assembly.
(42) The variations above are for illustrative purposes and it will be apparent to those skilled in this art that various equivalent modifications or changes according to the idea of and without departing from the disclosing and teaching of this invention shall also fall within technical scope of the appended claims.
(43) Any elements described herein as singular can be pluralized (i.e., anything described as one can be more than one), and plural elements can be used individually. Any species element of a genus element can have the characteristics or elements of any other species element of that genus. The term comprising is not meant to be limiting. The above-described configurations, elements or complete assemblies and methods and their elements for carrying out the invention, and variations of aspects of the invention can be combined and modified with each other in any combination.