Method of hot-filling a plastic container having vertically folding vacuum panels
09688427 ยท 2017-06-27
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65B7/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B61/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B67C3/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D1/0207
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D79/0084
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D2501/0036
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/086
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B7/2835
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65B3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65B7/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D1/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D79/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A semi-rigid collapsible container has a side-wall with an upper portion, a central portion, a lower portion and a base. The central portion includes a vacuum panel portion having a control portion and an initiator portion. The control portion is inclined more steeply in a vertical direction, i.e. has a more acute angle relative to the longitudinal axis of the container, than the initiator portion. On low vacuum force being present within the container panel following the cooling of a hot liquid in the container the initiator portion will flex inwardly to cause the control portion to invert and flex further inwardly into the container and the central portion to collapse. Raised ribs provide an additional support for the container in its collapsed state. In another embodiment the telescoping of the container back to its original position occurs when the vacuum force is released following removal of the container cap.
Claims
1. A method of filling a plastic container comprising: (i) Providing a plastic container having: a longitudinal axis extending through an opening at a first end of the container to a base at a second end of the container, the first end opposing the second end, the base providing a standing support for the container, at least one substantially vertically folding vacuum panel, the vacuum panel being substantially transversely disposed relative to the longitudinal axis, the vacuum panel having a first portion and a second portion, the second portion having a more acute angle of inclination relative to the longitudinal axis and one of said ends of the container than the first portion, wherein the first portion comprises an initiator portion and the second portion comprises a control portion, and a sidewall having a plurality of circumferential ribs; (ii) Filling the container with a heated or heatable liquid, with the vacuum panel in a filling position; (iii) Applying a closure to the container; and (iv) Applying a longitudinal force to the closed container, so that the vacuum panel flexes and at least partially inverts in a direction substantially parallel with the longitudinal axis, to reduce vacuum pressure within the container prior to opening the container.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the initiator portion initiates flexing of the control portion when the longitudinal force is applied.
3. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the longitudinal force is applied by a pressure change in the container.
4. A method according to claim 3, wherein the pressure change is caused by a heated liquid within the container cooling after the closure has been applied.
5. A method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the longitudinal force is applied by a mechanical force.
6. A method according to claim 5, wherein said inversion of the vacuum panel results in substantially all the vacuum pressure created as a result of cooling being relieved.
7. A method according to claim 6, wherein the vacuum panel resists being flexed back after opening the container.
8. A method according to claim 1, wherein said applying a longitudinal force to the closed container causes the vacuum panel to flex and invert to change the volume of the container.
9. A method according to claim 1, including the pre-step of applying an initial mechanical longitudinal force to move the vacuum panel from a first position to an inverted position before filling the container.
10. A method according to claim 1, including the pre-step of applying an initial mechanical longitudinal force before capping of the container to move the vacuum panel to the filling position.
11. A method according to claim 1, including the step of providing for cooling of the heated liquid contents to cause the vacuum pressure to increase within the closed container.
12. A method according to claim 1, wherein said inversion of the vacuum panel when the container is closed results in an increase in internal pressure of the container.
13. A method according to claim 1, including the step of applying a longitudinal force to decrease the pressure within the closed container, the longitudinal force caused by the heated contents.
14. A method according to claim 13, wherein the vacuum panel is moved from the filling position to a position further from said one end of the container.
15. A method according to claim 14, wherein the vacuum panel moves from a first position prior to filling, to a second position after closing the container, and to a third position after cooling of the heated liquid contents.
16. A method according to claim 15, wherein the first and third positions are closer to said one end of the container than the second position.
17. A method according to claim 1, wherein the initiator portion is located nearer to the longitudinal axis than the control portion.
18. A method according to claim 1, wherein the control portion is located nearer to the longitudinal axis than the initiator portion.
19. A method according to claim 1, wherein the container comprises two opposing vacuum panel portions.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(15) The present invention relates to collapsible semi-rigid containers having a side-wall with at least one substantially vertically folding vacuum panel section which compensates for vacuum pressure within the container.
(16) Preferably in one embodiment the flexing may be inwardly, from an applied mechanical force. By calculating the amount of volume reduction that is required to negate the effects of vacuum pressure that would normally occur when the hot liquid cools inside the container, a vertically folding portion can be configured to allow completely for this volume reduction within itself. By mechanically folding the portion down after hot filling, there is complete removal of any vacuum force generated inside the container during liquid cooling. As there is no resulting vacuum pressure remaining inside the cooled container, there is little or no force generated against the sidewall, causing less stress to be applied to the container sidewalls than in prior art.
(17) Further, by configuring the control portion to have a steep angle, expansion from the collapsed state when the container is uncapped is also prevented. A large amount of force, equivalent to that mechanically applied initially, would be required to revert the control portion to its previous position. This ready evacuation of volume with negation of internal vacuum force is quite unlike prior art vacuum panel container performance.
(18) The present invention may be a container of any required shape or size and made from any suitable material and by any suitable technique. However, a plastics container blow moulded from polyethylene tetraphalate (PET) may be particularly preferred.
(19) One possible design of semi-rigid container is shown in
(20) The central portion 6 provides a vacuum panel portion that will fold substantially vertically to compensate for vacuum pressure in the container 10 following cooling of the hot liquid.
(21) The vacuum panel portion has an initiator portion 1 capable of flexing inwardly under low vacuum force and causes a more vertically steeply inclined (a more acute angle relative to the longitudinal axis of the container 10), control portion 2 to invert and flex further inwardly into the container 10.
(22) The provision of an initiator portion 1 allows for a steep, relative to the longitudinal, angle to be utilised in the control portion 2. Without an initiator portion 1, the level of force needed to invert the control portion 2 may be undesirably raised. This enables strong resistance to expansion from the collapsed state of the bottle 1. Further, without an initiator portion to initiate inversion of the control portion, the control portion may be subject to undesirable buckling under compressive vertical load. Such buckling could result in failure of the control portion to fold into itself satisfactorily. Far greater evacuation of volume is therefore generated from a single panel section than from prior art vacuum flex panels. Vacuum pressure is subsequently reduced to a greater degree than prior art proposals causing less stress to be applied to the container side walls.
(23) Moreover, when the vacuum pressure is adjusted following application of a cap to the neck portion 4 of the container 10 and subsequent cooling of the container contents, it is possible for the collapsing section to cause ambient or even raised pressure conditions inside the container 10.
(24) This increased venting of vacuum pressure provides advantageously for less force to be transmitted to the side walls of the container 10. This allows for less material to be necessarily utilised in the construction of the container 10 making production cheaper. This also allows for less failure under load of the container 10, and there is much less requirement for panel area to be necessarily deployed in a design of a hot fill container, such as container 10. Consequently, this allows for the provision of other more aesthetically pleasing designs to be employed in container design for hot fill applications. For example, shapes could be employed that would otherwise suffer detrimentally from the effects of vacuum pressure. Additionally, it would be possible to fully support the label application area, instead of having a crinkle area underneath which is present with the voids provided by prior art containers utilising vertically oriented vacuum flex panels.
(25) In a particular embodiment of the present invention, support structures 3, such as raised radial ribs as shown, may be provided around the central portion 6 so that, as seen particularly in
(26) In the expanded views of
(27) In the expanded views of
(28) In a further embodiment a telescopic vacuum panel is capable of flexing inwardly under low vacuum force, and enables expansion from the collapsed state when the container is uncapped and the vacuum released.
(29) Preferably in one embodiment the initiator portion is configured to provide for inward flexing under low vacuum force. The control portion is configured to allow for vacuum compensation appropriate to the container size, such that vacuum force is maintained, but kept relatively low, and only sufficient to draw the vertically folding vacuum panel section down until further vacuum compensation is not required. This will enable expansion from the collapsed state when the container is uncapped and vacuum released. Without the low vacuum force pulling the vertically folding vacuum panel section down, it will reverse in direction immediately due to the forces generated by the memory in the plastic material. This provides for a tamper-evident feature for the consumer, allowing as it does for visual confirmation that the product has not been opened previously.
(30) Additionally, the vertically folding vacuum panel section may employ two opposing initiator portions and two opposing control portions. Reducing the degree of flex required from each control portion subsequently reduces vacuum pressure to a greater degree. This is achieved through employing two control portions, each required to vent only half the amount of vacuum force normally required of a single portion. Vacuum pressure is subsequently reduced more than from prior art vacuum flex panels, which are not easily configured to provide such a volume of ready inward movement. Again, less stress is applied to the container side-walls.
(31) Moreover, when the vacuum pressure is adjusted following application of the cap to the container, and subsequent cooling of the contents, top load capacity for the container is maintained through side-wall contact occurring through complete vertical collapse of the vacuum panel section.
(32) Still, further, the telescopic panel provides good annular strengthening to the package when opened.
(33) Referring now to
(34) This increased venting of vacuum pressure provides advantageously for less force to be transmitted to the side-walls 100 and 300 of the container 100. This allows for less material to be necessarily utilised in the container construction, making production cheaper.
(35) This allows for less failure under load of the container 100 and there is no longer any requirement for a vertically oriented panel area to be necessarily deployed in the design of hot-fill containers. Consequently, this allows for the provision of other more aesthetically pleasing designs to be employed in container design for hot-fill applications. Further, this allows for a label to be fully supported by total contact with a side-wall which allows for more rapid and accurate label applications.
(36) Additionally, when the cap is released from a vacuum filled container that employs two opposing collapsing sections, each control portion 104, 106 as seen in
(37) Further embodiments of the present invention may allow for a telescopic vacuum panel to be depressed prior to, or during, the filling process for certain contents that will subsequently develop internal pressure before cooling and requiring vacuum compensation. In this embodiment the panel is compressed vertically, thereby providing for vertical telescopic enlargement during the internal pressure phase to prevent forces being transferred to the side-walls, and then the panel is able to collapse again telescopically to allow for subsequent vacuum compensation.
(38) Although two panel portions 101 and 102 are shown in the drawings it is envisaged that less than two may be utilised.
(39) Where in the foregoing description, reference has been made to specific components or integers of the invention having known equivalents then such equivalents are herein incorporated as if individually set forth.
(40) One possible design of semi-rigid container is shown in the accompanying drawings
(41) An initiator portion 201 may be capable of flexing inwardly under low vacuum force while the initiator portion 201 causes a more steeply inclined controlled portion 202 to invert and flex further inwardly into the container 210.
(42) The provision of an initiator portion 201 allows for a steep angle to be utilised in the control portion 202. Without an initiator portion 201, the level of force needed to invert the control portion 202 may be undesirably raised. This enables strong resistance to expansion from the collapsed state of the bottle 201. This causes far greater evacuation of volume without increased internal vacuum force than from prior art vacuum panels. Vacuum pressure is subsequently reduced to a greater degree than prior art proposals causing less stress to be applied to the container side walls.
(43) Moreover, when the vacuum pressure is adjusted following application of a cap to the neck portion 204 of the container 210 and subsequent cooling of the container contents, it is possible for the collapsing section to cause ambient or even raised pressure conditions inside the container 210.
(44) This increased venting of vacuum pressure provides advantageously for less force to be transmitted to the side walls of the container 210. This allows for less material to be necessarily utilised in the construction of the container 210 making production cheaper. This also allows for less failure under load of the container 210, and there is much less requirement for panel area to be necessarily deployed in a design of hot fill containers, such as container 210. Consequently, this allows for the provision of other more aesthetically pleasing designs to be employed in container design for hot fill applications.
(45) In a particular embodiment of the present invention, support structures 203 may be provided around the central portion 206 so that as seen particularly in
(46) Although this invention has been described by way of example and with reference to possible embodiments thereof, it is to be understood that modifications or improvements may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.