Eco-friendly beverage container holder and dispenser and methods of use thereof
09850050 · 2017-12-26
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D2571/00635
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D65/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D75/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A beverage container holding device and methods for the storage and dispensing of beverages. Embodiments of the beverage container holder include two spaced apart parallel and aligned triangular planes each with rounded vertices and with three equal side lengths between the rounded vertices. The corresponding sides of the triangular planes are connected by sides extending across the space between the triangular planes and perpendicular to them. One corner of the three sides extending in the spaced apart location comprises an articulated panel opening into an interior region of the beverage container holder. In some embodiments the parallel planes are trapezoidal in shape. Beverage containers are arranged, perpendicular to the triangular planes, in rows within the beverage container holder. The beverage container holder is filled by inserting beverage containers through the opened articulated panel and beverages are dispensed through the same portal. In some embodiments the beverage containers can be stacked.
Claims
1. A method of storing and retrieving beverage containers, the method comprising: (a) providing a beverage container holder comprising: first and second curved triangular planar sides, said first and second triangular planar sides being parallel and aligned, and being spaced apart from each other, each of said first and second triangular planar sides having rounded vertices and three side lengths between said rounded vertices; three sides extending between said first and second parallel and aligned triangular planes connecting said parallel and aligned triangular planes to each other, wherein each of said three sides is fixedly attached at one edge thereof to said first triangular planar side and at an opposing edge thereof to said second triangular planar side, wherein said three sides each further comprise at least one curved corner each corresponding to one of said rounded vertices of said curved triangular planar sides; wherein one curved region between two of said three sides, extending in a spaced-apart location between said first and second triangular planar sides, comprises an articulated panel opening into an interior region or outwardly to an exterior region of said beverage container holder, (b) opening said articulated panel of said beverage container holder; (c) placing elongated beverage containers in said beverage container holder in a manner such that a most elongated side of each said beverage container is oriented perpendicularly to each said curved triangular plane of said holder, wherein said beverage containers are inserted into said holder via a portal formed by said opening said articulated panel; (d) closing said articulated panel by moving or causing to move said articulated panel until at least a portion of a side of said articulated panel substantially engages at least part of at least one of said side lengths of each said curved triangular planar side; and opening said articulated panel of said holder and removing a beverage container.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said beverage container holder further comprises a latching mechanism on the unattached end of said articulated panel wherein said latching mechanism holds the panel closed, and wherein after the desired number of beverage containers is removed, the articulated panel is closed by engaging said latching mechanism.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein said beverage containers are arranged in said holder in a pyramid structure.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the beverage containers are placed into said holder along the side opposite said articulated panel, creating a first row of said beverage containers each touching, or being in close proximity, on three of its sides, to the holder's side or an adjacent beverage container; creating a second row of beverages by placing another row of beverage containers along said first row of beverage containers, each beverage container of said second row touching, or in close proximity, on three of its sides, to the holder's side or adjacent beverage containers and said second row has one less beverage container than the first row; creating successive rows of beverage containers substantially similar to the method of creating the second row of beverages, wherein each successive row of beverages has one less beverage container than the preceding row; continuing filling said holder until the last row is comprised of one beverage container that completely or substantially fills the space between the preceding row of beverages, sides of said holder and said articulated panel.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein said— placing elongated beverage containers comprises placing said elongated beverage containers in said holder in a manner such that two layers or levels of beverage containers are formed and the end of a beverage container in one layer is contiguous to the end of a beverage container in the other layer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE DISCLOSED TECHNOLOGY
(11) Embodiments of the beverage container holder include equilateral triangular and substantially planar top and bottom surfaces of equal dimensions. The edges of the top and bottom surfaces are aligned and connected along their entire perimeters by sides, perpendicular to the top and bottom surfaces, having a uniform height and forming a unitary and continuous structure. The vertices of the three-dimensional triangular structure are curved. One of the vertices comprises a closable panel which is pivotably attached along the entirety of its length between the top and bottom surfaces, forming an articulated corner panel.
(12) Embodiments of the disclosed technology will become clearer in view of the following discussion of the figures.
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
(20) While the disclosed technology has been taught with specific reference to the above embodiments, a person having ordinary skill in the art will recognize that changes can be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and the scope of the disclosed technology. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects, only as illustrative and not restrictive. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalence of the claims, are to be embraced within their scope. Combinations of any of the methods and apparatuses described hereinabove are also contemplated and within the scope of the invention.
(21) The advantages of the disclosed technology and devices are derived from the curved or rounded corners of the said devices as compared to the existing rectangular beverage holders, in that the savings result from the cut out materials of the vertices and may be in terms of millions of trees every year. Since the consumption of beverages, for example, coke, runs into billions of cans every day (estimated 1.7 billion cans/day) in the world, the disclosed triangular beverage container holder with curved cornerscan save at least 15% of packaging materials, which amounts to a saving of at least 1 million trees/year. The following calculations show the scope and amount of savings resulting from the use of the disclosed design.
(22) Existing Rectangular Soda Can Box (12-can) with a length, 1=15 inches, width, w=5 inches, and height, h=4.75 inches,
(23) Volume=(l) (w) (h)=(15)(5)(4.75)=356.25 cu. in.
(24) Surface Area (SA)=2(lw+wh+hl)=2(15×4.75+15×5+5×4.75)=340 sq. in.
(25) New Curved Triangular Beverage Holder (12-can)
(26) Considering one vertex of one of the parallel planes, which is an equilateral triangle, named ABC when its vertex B is not cut or curved, but marked for cutting: the area between the curved, circular mark and the corner is the actual saving of paperboard from one corner of one parallel plane. Now we join any two sides of the equilateral triangle with two radii of the circle/circular mark at one corner that represents the cross section of a beverage can placed in that corner. The radii FD and FE and the sides meet perpendicularly and the sides become tangent to the circle at D and E, respectively. When we join the center F of the circle with the vertex B of the equilateral triangle by a line segment FB, then this line segment, FB, the two sides, AB and BC, and the two radii, FD and FE, form two congruent 30-60-90 degree triangles, BEF and BDF. The total saving from one curved triangular box is calculated based on these two congruent triangles as below. Surface Area of the New Curved Triangular box (using the 30-60-90 triangle)
(27) =area of 2 curved triangles+lateral area
(28) =2(area of equilateral triangle ABC−savings on 3 corners)+(length around) (height)
(29) =2[(√¾)(side).sup.2−3(area of DBEF−(sector DGEF)]+(5+5+5+2π(1.25))(9.5)
(30) =2[(√¾)(5+2(1.25√3)).sup.2−3(2 times the area of triangle BEF−(120°/360°) (π)(1.25).sup.2)]+(15+2π(1.25)) (9.5)
(31) =2[37.69430571−3(2(½)(1.25)(1.25√3)−(120/360)(π)(1.25).sup.2)]+217.1128255
(32) =2[37.69430571−3(2.706329387−1.63246174)]+217.1128255
(33) =2[37.69430571−3(1.070083213)]+217.1128255
(34) =2[37.69430571−3.210249639]+217.1128255
(35) =2[34.48405607]+217.1128255
(36) =286.0809377 square inches.
(37) Volume of the New Curved Triangular box
(38) =(SA of one face) (height)
(39) =(34.48405607)(9.5)
(40) =327.5985327 cubic inches
(41) Percent saving in volume as compared to a rectangular box
(42) =(new−old)/((old)(100))
(43) =(327.5985327−356.25)/((356.25)(100))
(44) =a saving in volume of 8.04%
(45) Saving in SA in a curved triangular box as compared to a rectangular box
(46) =340−286.0809377=53.9190623 sq. in.
(47) Saving in SA in the curved triangular box/year
(48) =(53.9190623 sq. in./box)(1700000000 cans/12 cans/box/day)(365 days)
(49) =2,788,806,484,600 sq. in.
(50) or a saving of 2788.8 billion square inches of paperboard/year
(51) Percent saving in SA
(52) =(new−old)/(old)(100)
(53) =(286.0809377−340)/((340)(100))
(54) =15.8585478%
(55) or a saving in SA of 15.86%.
(56) Number of equivalent new boxes
(57) =53.9190623/340
(58) =0.158585478 new boxes/existing box
(59) Savings of equivalent trees (estimated 1375 boxes=1 tree)
(60) =0.158585478/1375
(61) =0.000115335 trees/box
(62) Savings of trees/day (assuming 20% of 1.7 billion cans per day packed in cardboard boxes and 12 cans/box)
(63) =(0.000115335)(0.2)(1900000000/12)
(64) =3652.271615 trees/day
(65) Savings of trees/year
(66) =(3652.271615)(365)
(67) =1333079.139 trees/year
(68) or a saving of 1.333 million trees/year
(69) Advantages and Disadvantages of the Disclosed Technology
(70) Advantages 1. The existing 12-can Coke box weighs 88.1 grams. Total weight of Coke can boxes/year=2.50 million tons (assuming 20% of 1.7 billion cans per year packed in cardboard boxes). The total production of paperboard for packaging purposes is 300 million tons/year (http://www.tappi.org/pa-peru/all_about_paper/faq.htm). About 15.86% saving on paperboard=300×15.86%=0.48 million tons of paperboard/year. The new design can be extended to redesign many other product packages. 2. Paper and paper products made only from 1 ton of recycled paper (like the cut corner pieces from the curved triangular box as mentioned in #1 above) instead of trees will save “17 trees, and 7000 gallons of water, 84 gallons of oil, and 4,100 kilowatt-hours of electricity—enough to power the average American home for six months.” (http://www.epa.gov/re-gion3/beyondtranslation/2013BTF/SessionB-Beautification/Michelle-Feldman.pdf) 3. There will be a saving of 1.3 million trees/year due to the savings in paperboard if the 12-can curved triangular box is used instead of the existing 12-can rectangular box. 4. If we cut less number of trees, then those live trees can hold natural water from rain. Water conservation in this manner may partially help solve the water crisis that the world is going to face by 2020. 5. Reduction in paperboard as mentioned in #1 above (15.86%) will have the corresponding savings on printing cost of beverage can boxes. 6. Reduction in paperboard as mentioned in #1 above (15.86%) will have the corresponding savings in storage and handling costs. 7. More trees can absorb more carbon dioxide and save the ozone layer that protects us from the Ultra Violet rays. 8. More trees can save energy, improve storm water quality, reduce pavement maintenance, and improve quality of life. (http://www.epa.gov/heatisland/mitigation/trees.htm)
(71) Disadvantages 1. Since the triangular box has curved corners, it may require initial training on handling and storage. 2. The die cutters required for making boxes may have to be redesigned due to the curved corners of the triangular box. However, the savings due to the disclosed technology will far outweigh the cost of redesigning the die cutters.