WO1991003404A1 - Container closure with internal channels for washing an interthread space - Google Patents

Container closure with internal channels for washing an interthread space Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1991003404A1
WO1991003404A1 PCT/US1990/004665 US9004665W WO9103404A1 WO 1991003404 A1 WO1991003404 A1 WO 1991003404A1 US 9004665 W US9004665 W US 9004665W WO 9103404 A1 WO9103404 A1 WO 9103404A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
closure
disk
container
skirt
lip
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1990/004665
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Charles S. Ochs
Original Assignee
Anchor Hocking Corporation
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US07/535,400 external-priority patent/US5009324A/en
Priority claimed from US07/566,239 external-priority patent/US5078290A/en
Application filed by Anchor Hocking Corporation filed Critical Anchor Hocking Corporation
Publication of WO1991003404A1 publication Critical patent/WO1991003404A1/en

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D51/00Closures not otherwise provided for
    • B65D51/14Rigid discs or spherical members adapted to be held in sealing engagement with mouth of container, e.g. closure plates for preserving jars
    • B65D51/145Rigid discs or spherical members adapted to be held in sealing engagement with mouth of container, e.g. closure plates for preserving jars by means of an additional element connected directly to the container
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D41/00Caps, e.g. crown caps or crown seals, i.e. members having parts arranged for engagement with the external periphery of a neck or wall defining a pouring opening or discharge aperture; Protective cap-like covers for closure members, e.g. decorative covers of metal foil or paper
    • B65D41/02Caps or cap-like covers without lines of weakness, tearing strips, tags, or like opening or removal devices
    • B65D41/04Threaded or like caps or cap-like covers secured by rotation

Definitions

  • This invention relates to container clo ⁇ sures, and more particularly to a closure with means by which food product on the threads of a container can be washed from them even after the closure has been sealed.
  • the closure is of the type which includes a tamper evidencing or breakaway band, such as a band which is severed and separated from the upper or top part of the closure as an incident to opening.
  • tamper indicating bands typically include inward, up-turned tabs or flaps which project beneath a locking bead around the neck of the container, below the container threads.
  • the up-turned tabs or flaps present pockets into which food particles can be lodged and retained, which tends to accentuate the need for effective cleaning.
  • U.S. Patent No. 2,270,729 shows a two-piece closure with a shell having an inturned flange at the top and radial corrugations for SUBSTITUTESHEET strengthening the flange.
  • the inner edge of the flange is planar and not corrugated. This structure is said to maintain a hermetic seal' by preventing the flange from bending upwardly.
  • the patent does not discuss water washing.
  • Shaffer No. 2,449,014 shows a two part closure wherein a threaded band which receives a lid has an overhanging flange with a bead at its inner edge.
  • the band is interrupted by offsets at spaced positions. Steam or water can be circulated between the inside of the band and the outside of the lid and the outer surface of the container to remove food particles.
  • Shaffer No. 2,456,607 shows a closure having wash channels between a shell and a liner which is permanently retained within the shell, to enable the space between the shell and liner to be washed and sterilized when the closure is off the container.
  • the closure does not provide for internal washing when secured on a container.
  • Barriac No. 4,807,770 shows a composite closure having a plastic ring or band for the purpose of indicating vacuum in the container, wherein the band contains notches in its top lip and side wall. The band receives and retains a generally flat disk which engages and closes the top of the container. Washability is not disclosed.
  • Doi No. 4,880,127 shows a composite closure having fine projections on the inner side of an annular top panel wall of an outer lid. The projec ⁇ tions provide gas paths between the inner and outer lids and upwardly release gas pressure when a car ⁇ bonated beverage container is first being opened. Compression of plastic closure threads is said to maintain airtightness between the threads of the closure and the container; such airtightness prevents water washing of the threads.
  • a closure is provided with wash channels which provide a water flow path into and through an interthread channel — an open spiral shaped channel between the thread of the container and the thread of the closure — from the top to bottom thereof.
  • the invention can be used in a composite (two-piece) cap with either a bottom loaded insert disk or a top loaded disk, as well as in a molded one-piece closure.
  • the closure shell is provided with one and preferably more angularly spaced water wash channels which extend outwardly between the insert disk and a top lip which overhangs the disk. These channels start at the inside edge of the top lip and communicate with the threaded region of the shell. A downwardly projecting stop or boss on the underside of the lip will abut the disk to prevent it from closing the channels, for example if the closure is over ⁇ tightened.
  • the channels on the closure shall pref ⁇ erably extend outwardly beyond the edge of the disk, down the inside wall of the skirt of the shell.
  • Inwardly projecting ribs on the inside of the skirt help to center the disk, and the channels between the ribs provide for wash downflow around the entire circumference of the disk even if the disk is slightly 0 ff center in the shell.
  • the thread of the closure forms a spiral interthread channel with the thread of the container.
  • a wash jet directed onto the insert disk will flow over the disk, around or past the stop and over the peripheral edge of the disk, downwardly into the threaded region in which the wash spirals downwardly along and between the threads of the closure and the container.
  • the water flows to and through an outlet from the closure, below the threaded region.
  • drain outlets are preferably provided along the juncture of inturned band retaining means and the tamper indicating band.
  • a closure having wash channels is further provided with a bead which tempo*- rarily closes the channels at the time when the vacuum is broken, so as to prevent dirt on the insert disk from being carried into the container by the inrush of air when the vacuum is broken. At other times the bead is spaced from the disk and does not interrupt wash flow.
  • Figure 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of the neck of a container with a composite closure in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention
  • Figure 2 is an enlarged vertical axial section taken on line 2-2 of Figure 1, and indicates diagrammatically the flow of wash water through the wash channels from the top downwardly around the threads;
  • Figure 3 is a fragmentary, further enlarged vertical view taken on line 3-3 of Figure 2;
  • Figure 4 is a top plan view of the closure of Figure 2, partly broken away, showing the slotted rim and water channels of the closure;
  • Figure 5 is an enlarged vertical section of a composite closure with a top-loaded disk and a tamper evidencing band which is provided with wash channels in accordance with a second embodiment of the
  • Figure 6 is a top plan view of the closure of Figure 5;
  • Figure 7 is an enlarged partial vertical section of a one-piece closure in accordance with a 1° third embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 8 is an enlarged partial vertical section of a closure in accordance with another embodiment, the closure being secured on a container; and I 5 Figure 9 is a view similar to Figure 8 but shows the closure after the it has been partially unscrewed to break the tamper indicating band before the lid has been lifted.
  • the invention is useful in closures which do not have a tamper indicating band, but is especially useful in those which do.
  • An embodiment of the in ⁇ vention in a composite closure having no tamper indicating band is shown in Figures 1-4; an embodiment
  • a container designated generally by 10 has a neck 11 and a finish 12 ( Figures 1 and 2) .
  • Container lo may be of glass or of molded plastic.
  • the embodiment illus ⁇ trated has "two start" threading, that is, the con ⁇ tainer has two helical threads 13 which cooperate with ⁇ two internal threads 28 of the closure 16, but it will be understood that the invention is also useful with containers having a single thread, or having inter ⁇ rupted screw lugs.
  • thread is used to mean and include both a screw thread and
  • Closure shell 18 which has a top opening 20.
  • Closure shell 18 may be an integral molding of plastic.
  • An annular top lip 22 projects inwardly,
  • the side wall of the closure shell 18 includes a generally cylindrical skirt portion 26. As can be seen in Figure 2, when the closure is secured on container 10 the threads 28
  • closure threads bear on the underside of the respective threads 13 of the container, but the closure threads do not completely fill the spaces between the con ⁇ tainer threads, so that an interthread space or flow channel 30 is presented between the threads of the
  • Disk 32 may comprise a metal or composite member having a downwardly opening groove or recess 38 for receiving a gasket 36 on its lower surface.
  • disk gasket 36 may be a flowed-in plastisol gasket.
  • disk 32 Around its periphery, disk 32 has a down turned rim 40, see Figure 2. The disk 32 is spaced above the top of the container by the gasket 36 and does not necessarily contact the container on either its top or its side surface. In this first embodiment the disk is inserted from the bottom of the closure ("bottom loaded”) ; but as will be described the invention is also useful with a disk which is loaded into a shell from the top.
  • closure top lip 22 engages disk 32 and gasket 36 is brought into engagement with the top edge of a container.
  • the air pressure in the container beneath the disk is lower than the external air pressure acting downwardly on the surface 32, and the pressure differential holds the gasket tightly against the container to seal it.
  • the top lip 22 does not necessarily provide the seal.
  • top lip 22 and/or the screw threads would effectively isolate any food particles on the threads.
  • the invention provides a pathway through which a water wash, directed onto the top of the disk, can flow from the top of the disk downwardly between the threads, and drain at the bottom of the closure.
  • one or more water channels or recesses 45 are provided on the lower face of lip 22, which provide internal flow paths from the top of the disk into the interthread space. (The channels 45 may be shaped to direct or funnel flow diagonally outwardly across the disk, although this does not seem particularly helpful in practice.)
  • a low, slotted peripheral rim 44 depends from the inner edge 23 of top lip 22. Notches or slots 46 in rim 44 permit water to flow past the rim into channel 45.
  • the rim slots 46 are preferably rectangular, as seen in elevation. Their proportions are not critical but may for example be about .010" x .200"; the minor dimension of slots 46 is preferably so small as to prevent entrance of insects into the channels 45.
  • the slots are pref ⁇ erably no larger than necessary to permit wash water from a jet to pass through them.
  • the -11- slots 46 are preferably only barely visible from above. This appears to be psychologically desirable; moreover, they are so small as not to catch or hold most particulate matter that falls on the cap, for example, during shelf storage, or to admit insects.
  • the channel 45 extends radially outwardly as slots or grooves 47 beyond the downturned disk rim 40 and downwardly on the inside face of shell 18, into the interthread channel 30. It can thus be seen that slots 46 admit water directed onto the disk to flow past edge 23 into chamber 45, radially and to some extent peripherally around the disk (see Fig. 4) , and through sidewall grooves 47 in shell 18 into the interthread region 30.
  • the sidewall grooves 47 permit downward flow around the circumference of disk 32 even if it is somewhat off center in shell 18.
  • the wash can flow along and between the threads as indicated by the arrows in Figure 2, downwardly to wash virtually the entire area between the threads except where the threads of the closure actually bear on the closure threads.
  • a drain opening or gap 48 is provided adjacent the lower edge 50 of the shell, and can simply be a space between the shell and closure neck 11, frcn which the wash water can exit from the interthread space and carry with it any removed food particles. Tests have demonstrated that a stream of wash water will pass through the slots 46 to effectively wash the interthreaded region. It is preferred that the water slots be so small as to be effectively open only when heated by hot water (or steam) wash ⁇ For that purpose the passages may be so dimensioned that they are normally closed, and so that they open by a differential between the thermal expansions of the shell and the disk when the closure is heated (a plastic shell expanding more than a metal disk) . This optional feature is described at greater length in my previ- ously mentioned application Serial No. 535,400, to which reference may be had.
  • top lip is attached to the shell only at its outer edge, it may bend upwardly when the shell is tightened on the disk.
  • One or more down- wardly projecting stops or bosses 49 are provided on the lip, which acts as a positive spacer to prevent deformation on overtightening from choking or closing the water channels.
  • a stop 49 is preferably posi ⁇ tioned substantially directly above the upper end of each closure thread 28. Surprisingly, this stop orientation provides the greatest resistance to lip deformation when the closure is tightened; the bending stress on the lip which tends to block the channel is greatest directly above the start of a thread, and positioning a stop above the upper end of the thread more effectively resists such blocking. If single start threading is used, a stop should be directly above the thread top end. For two start threads, a stop should be provided above each thread start (see Fig. 4) .
  • a water channel 45 may extend across the stop.
  • the closure 54 of Figures 5 and 6 includes a tamper indicating band 55 around the lower edge 56 of a shell 58.
  • Band 55 is connected to the shell only by severable or rupturable bridges, one of which is shown at 57, there being an interrupted knife cut or score 59 between band 55 and lower edge 56 of shell 58.
  • Band 55 includes an external band or ring 61 with an upwardly molded retaining flap or hoop 63 having an upper inner edge 65 which resides beneath a locking bead 67 around the container.
  • tlie insert disk 76 has a downturned skirt 77 with a reversely or upturned rim '78.
  • the shell 58 has a central opening which is surrounded by an inwardly and then reversely tapered top lip 80.
  • Disk 76 is in ⁇ serted into the shell by pressing it downwardly past lip 80, until disk rim 78 snaps under the lip and engages against its sloping undersurface 81.
  • Radial water channels 84 are molded in the undersurface 81 bf top lip 80, extending across the line of engagement 86 of disk rim 78 with top lip 80 and may extend further down the inside wall 85 of the shell.
  • the channels 84 are of sufficient depth that the disk edge , though it may press into the top lip, does not close the chan- nels. (Bosses or stops are generally not necessary where the insert disk is top loaded.)
  • water directed onto the top 89 of disk 76 falls into the annular pocket 90 between skirt 77 and rim 78, and flows through channels 84 over the top of rim 86, through channels 85 to the interthread space 73. From space 73 the wash flows out through outlet windows 74.
  • the top or cover is integral with the skirt 100. More speci ically, the closure 92 has a top panel or cover 93 with a channel 94 on its inside face which contains an annular gasket 95.
  • wash water is directed into the spiral interthread space 97 from the outside of the closure below the gasket, rather than across the periphery of a separate top disk above a gasket.
  • Inlet openings 99 are provided at angularly spaced positions around skirt 100, above interthread space 97. Wash water directed into these flows around the threads and drains through outlet openings 101 which, as shown in Fig. 7, may be in a tamper indicating band as already described.
  • Closures for vacuum sealed containers must effectively prevent dirt on the lid from being sucked into the container by the inrush of air when the vacuum is broken.
  • dirt on the lid might be blown over the edge of the lid, inwardly past the gasket and into the container upon opening.
  • dirt lodged in a tamper indicating band could be carried upwardly as the vacuum is broken, past the gasket and into the con ⁇ tainer.
  • the wash channels could in theory provide such a pathway in which dirt might be carried from the top of the lid through the slots, around the lid edge and into the container when the vacuum is broken.
  • FIGS 8 and 9 show a modified embodiment of the invention wherein the wash channels are auto ⁇ matically choked off at the lid periphery or edge when the lid is lifted by unscrewing the shell, to prevent any such contamination.
  • the wash channels are auto ⁇ matically choked off at the lid periphery or edge when the lid is lifted by unscrewing the shell, to prevent any such contamination.
  • SUBSTITUTESHEET closure has a top lip 22 as in the previous embodi ⁇ ments, with water channels as previously described.
  • the grooves 47 extend downwardly on the inside surface of the shell 18 toward the uppermost thread portion 105 on the closure skirt 107.
  • skirt 107 has a continuous internal circular bead or rib ill which extends annularly around its inside surface.
  • This rib ill has an inside diameter just equal to the outside diameter of edge 119 of lid 32 (see Fig. 9) , so as to form a seal with the lid edge when in vertical align ⁇ ment with it.
  • Rib 111 is spaced below lid edge 119, as shown in Figure 8. Rib 111 is then opposite the topmost thread portion 113 of the container, but because the container threads are helical and bead 111 is planar, the bead only contacts the container thread 113 at one point per thread.
  • the bead 111 contacts the container threads at only two relatively narrow angular areas.
  • the bead 111 does not engage either the container threads or the closure threads, and wash water can flow down- wardly through the opening between them, as indicated by arrows 125 in Figure 8.
  • SUBSTITUTESHEET edge 119 The lid is lifted and the vacuum is broken by the top portion 105 of the closure threads which abuts lid edge 119 as the Shell is unscrewed. (This occurs after the tamper evidencing band has been broken.) Bead 111 is so positioned that, when the shell begins to lift the lid, the bead meets and forms an effective seal with the lid edge around its entire periphery. This seal closes the previous passage between the lid and the shell and thus then isolates the gasket 130 from any dirt on the top surface of the lid.
  • FIG. 8 and 9 has a tamper evidencing band which is molded in a down position, then is turned up. for use. As can be seen, opening the closure first breaks off the band 122, which drops down onto the shoulder of the container, before the lid is lifted. Any dirt in the pocket 120 between the tamper indicating band 122 and the retain ⁇ ing hoop 125 is thereafter so far away from the gasket area that it cannot be drawn into the container as the vacuum is broken. While the invention is not limited to use with a band, a preferred form of downwardly molded, upturned tamper indicating band is shown in the copending application of H. Hayes, titled “Tamper Indicating Closure Havirg Retaining Hoop With Relief Windows," Serial No. 401,966, filed September 1, 1989.
  • Closures with slots for water washing in accordance with this invention can also include a capability for venting excess gas pressure within the container beneath the lid.
  • Such closures are de ⁇ scribed and claimed in my copending application Serial No. 4 0 2,211, titled “Pressure Venting Closure", filed September 1, 1989, to which reference may be made.

Abstract

A closure (16) has channels (45) for washing food particles out of a spiral space (30) between the threads (13, 28) when the closure is sealed on a container. In a composite closure embodiment, a disk (32) is received beneath a top (22) of an annular shell (18). Channels (45) on the lip undersurface extend from the lip inner edge (23) outwardly past the disk outer edge (40). a stop (49) on the underside of the lip directly above the container rim (24) prevents the channels from being closed, as by overtightening. The channels extend outwardly past the stop and communicate with the interthread space which in turn communicates with an outlet (48). A jet directed onto the disk flows through the channels over the edge of the disk and downwardly through the interthread space, to the outlet.

Description

CONTAINER CLOSURE WITH INTERNAL CHANNELS FOR WASHING AN INTERTHREAD SPACE
Field of the Invention
This invention relates to container clo¬ sures, and more particularly to a closure with means by which food product on the threads of a container can be washed from them even after the closure has been sealed. Related Applications
This application is a continuation-in-part of my pending applications Serial No. 402,211, filed September 1, 1989, and Serial No. 535,400, filed June
8, 1990. Background of the Invention
In the food packing industry, when a food product (for example, baby food) is packed in a container, it sometimes happens that a small amount of the food product will splash onto the finish or threads of the container during the packing and sealing process. The food product may spoil if it remains between the closure and the container, but usually any such spillage is removed by water washing or a cooling spray. The containers of food products which are packed hot are washed as an incident to water spray cooling, and the containers of products which are retorted are immersed in water during the retort cycle. However, such water washing and/or cooling does not always remove food product that might have been lodged on threads in the area between the closure and the container, and any such residual product could present a potential problem. Thus there has been a need for a closure in which the threaded region between the closure and the container can be washed or flushed clean, after the closure has been applied.
The problem is accentuated where the closure is of the type which includes a tamper evidencing or breakaway band, such as a band which is severed and separated from the upper or top part of the closure as an incident to opening. The reason for this is that tamper indicating bands typically include inward, up-turned tabs or flaps which project beneath a locking bead around the neck of the container, below the container threads. The up-turned tabs or flaps present pockets into which food particles can be lodged and retained, which tends to accentuate the need for effective cleaning. The Prior Art
Geddes U.S. Patent No. 2,270,729 shows a two-piece closure with a shell having an inturned flange at the top and radial corrugations for SUBSTITUTESHEET strengthening the flange. The inner edge of the flange is planar and not corrugated. This structure is said to maintain a hermetic seal' by preventing the flange from bending upwardly. The patent does not discuss water washing.
Shaffer No. 2,449,014 shows a two part closure wherein a threaded band which receives a lid has an overhanging flange with a bead at its inner edge. The band is interrupted by offsets at spaced positions. Steam or water can be circulated between the inside of the band and the outside of the lid and the outer surface of the container to remove food particles.
Shaffer No. 2,456,607 shows a closure having wash channels between a shell and a liner which is permanently retained within the shell, to enable the space between the shell and liner to be washed and sterilized when the closure is off the container. The closure does not provide for internal washing when secured on a container.
Barriac No. 4,807,770 shows a composite closure having a plastic ring or band for the purpose of indicating vacuum in the container, wherein the band contains notches in its top lip and side wall. The band receives and retains a generally flat disk which engages and closes the top of the container. Washability is not disclosed. Doi No. 4,880,127 shows a composite closure having fine projections on the inner side of an annular top panel wall of an outer lid. The projec¬ tions provide gas paths between the inner and outer lids and upwardly release gas pressure when a car¬ bonated beverage container is first being opened. Compression of plastic closure threads is said to maintain airtightness between the threads of the closure and the container; such airtightness prevents water washing of the threads.
Brief Description of the Invention
In accordance with this invention, a closure is provided with wash channels which provide a water flow path into and through an interthread channel — an open spiral shaped channel between the thread of the container and the thread of the closure — from the top to bottom thereof. The invention can be used in a composite (two-piece) cap with either a bottom loaded insert disk or a top loaded disk, as well as in a molded one-piece closure.
As used in a composite closure with a bottom loaded insert disk, the closure shell is provided with one and preferably more angularly spaced water wash channels which extend outwardly between the insert disk and a top lip which overhangs the disk. These channels start at the inside edge of the top lip and communicate with the threaded region of the shell. A downwardly projecting stop or boss on the underside of the lip will abut the disk to prevent it from closing the channels, for example if the closure is over¬ tightened. The channels on the closure shall pref¬ erably extend outwardly beyond the edge of the disk, down the inside wall of the skirt of the shell.
Inwardly projecting ribs on the inside of the skirt help to center the disk, and the channels between the ribs provide for wash downflow around the entire circumference of the disk even if the disk is slightly 0ff center in the shell. The thread of the closure forms a spiral interthread channel with the thread of the container. A wash jet directed onto the insert disk will flow over the disk, around or past the stop and over the peripheral edge of the disk, downwardly into the threaded region in which the wash spirals downwardly along and between the threads of the closure and the container. The water flows to and through an outlet from the closure, below the threaded region. If a tamper evidencing band is provided, drain outlets are preferably provided along the juncture of inturned band retaining means and the tamper indicating band.
In preferred form, only a small fraction of the area of the undersurface of the top lip of the closure actually bears on the insert disk as a stop; the flow channels extend over most of the area between the disk and top lip. A slotted rim surrounds the top opening; a jet of wash water can pass through the slots in the rim, into a recess or chamber on the undersurface of the lip, then outwardly through channels over the lip rim and down side channels into the interthread space. In another embodiment, a closure having wash channels is further provided with a bead which tempo*- rarily closes the channels at the time when the vacuum is broken, so as to prevent dirt on the insert disk from being carried into the container by the inrush of air when the vacuum is broken. At other times the bead is spaced from the disk and does not interrupt wash flow. Description of the Drawings
The invention can best be further described by reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of the neck of a container with a composite closure in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention;
Figure 2 is an enlarged vertical axial section taken on line 2-2 of Figure 1, and indicates diagrammatically the flow of wash water through the wash channels from the top downwardly around the threads;
Figure 3 is a fragmentary, further enlarged vertical view taken on line 3-3 of Figure 2;
Figure 4 is a top plan view of the closure of Figure 2, partly broken away, showing the slotted rim and water channels of the closure; Figure 5 is an enlarged vertical section of a composite closure with a top-loaded disk and a tamper evidencing band which is provided with wash channels in accordance with a second embodiment of the
5 invention;
Figure 6 is a top plan view of the closure of Figure 5;
Figure 7 is an enlarged partial vertical section of a one-piece closure in accordance with a 1° third embodiment of the invention;
Figure 8 is an enlarged partial vertical section of a closure in accordance with another embodiment, the closure being secured on a container; and I5 Figure 9 is a view similar to Figure 8 but shows the closure after the it has been partially unscrewed to break the tamper indicating band before the lid has been lifted. Detailed Description 20 The invention is useful in closures which do not have a tamper indicating band, but is especially useful in those which do. An embodiment of the in¬ vention in a composite closure having no tamper indicating band is shown in Figures 1-4; an embodiment
25 of the invention for use in a closure with a tamper indicating band is shown in Figures 5-7.
Referring to the drawings in more detail, a container designated generally by 10 has a neck 11 and a finish 12 (Figures 1 and 2) . Container lo may be of glass or of molded plastic. The embodiment illus¬ trated has "two start" threading, that is, the con¬ tainer has two helical threads 13 which cooperate with ~ two internal threads 28 of the closure 16, but it will be understood that the invention is also useful with containers having a single thread, or having inter¬ rupted screw lugs. As used herein the term "thread" is used to mean and include both a screw thread and
10 discontinuous lugs.
The closure designated generally by 16 includes an annular shell 18 which has a top opening 20. Closure shell 18 may be an integral molding of plastic. An annular top lip 22 projects inwardly,
15 above the top edge 24 of container 10, and defines the peripheral edge of top opening 20. The side wall of the closure shell 18 includes a generally cylindrical skirt portion 26. As can be seen in Figure 2, when the closure is secured on container 10 the threads 28
- - of the closure bear on the underside of the respective threads 13 of the container, but the closure threads do not completely fill the spaces between the con¬ tainer threads, so that an interthread space or flow channel 30 is presented between the threads of the
25 closure and those of the container. This interthread channel is in the form of an open ended, internal spiral passage between the skirt and the container. Top opening 20 of the container is closed and sealed by a lid or insert disk 32 which is re¬ tained within shell 18 by the top lip 22 thereof. Disk 32 may comprise a metal or composite member having a downwardly opening groove or recess 38 for receiving a gasket 36 on its lower surface. Pref¬ erably but not necessarily disk gasket 36 may be a flowed-in plastisol gasket. Around its periphery, disk 32 has a down turned rim 40, see Figure 2. The disk 32 is spaced above the top of the container by the gasket 36 and does not necessarily contact the container on either its top or its side surface. In this first embodiment the disk is inserted from the bottom of the closure ("bottom loaded") ; but as will be described the invention is also useful with a disk which is loaded into a shell from the top.
After container 10 has been filled with food product and the closure is being applied, closure top lip 22 engages disk 32 and gasket 36 is brought into engagement with the top edge of a container. After retorting, or after the container has been chilled, the air pressure in the container beneath the disk is lower than the external air pressure acting downwardly on the surface 32, and the pressure differential holds the gasket tightly against the container to seal it. The top lip 22 does not necessarily provide the seal.
As previously indicated, it sometimes happens that a bit of food product splashes on the outside of the container and may be lodged on the side wall or the threads, where it can spoil. It is therefore desirable to wash"the interthread channel 30 after the closure has been applied. Absent this invention, top lip 22 and/or the screw threads would effectively isolate any food particles on the threads. The invention provides a pathway through which a water wash, directed onto the top of the disk, can flow from the top of the disk downwardly between the threads, and drain at the bottom of the closure. For this purpose one or more water channels or recesses 45 are provided on the lower face of lip 22, which provide internal flow paths from the top of the disk into the interthread space. (The channels 45 may be shaped to direct or funnel flow diagonally outwardly across the disk, although this does not seem particularly helpful in practice.)
A low, slotted peripheral rim 44 depends from the inner edge 23 of top lip 22. Notches or slots 46 in rim 44 permit water to flow past the rim into channel 45. As shown in Figure 3, the rim slots 46 are preferably rectangular, as seen in elevation. Their proportions are not critical but may for example be about .010" x .200"; the minor dimension of slots 46 is preferably so small as to prevent entrance of insects into the channels 45. The slots are pref¬ erably no larger than necessary to permit wash water from a jet to pass through them. As can be seen, the -11- slots 46 are preferably only barely visible from above. This appears to be psychologically desirable; moreover, they are so small as not to catch or hold most particulate matter that falls on the cap, for example, during shelf storage, or to admit insects.
The channel 45 extends radially outwardly as slots or grooves 47 beyond the downturned disk rim 40 and downwardly on the inside face of shell 18, into the interthread channel 30. It can thus be seen that slots 46 admit water directed onto the disk to flow past edge 23 into chamber 45, radially and to some extent peripherally around the disk (see Fig. 4) , and through sidewall grooves 47 in shell 18 into the interthread region 30. The sidewall grooves 47 permit downward flow around the circumference of disk 32 even if it is somewhat off center in shell 18. In the interthread region 30, the wash can flow along and between the threads as indicated by the arrows in Figure 2, downwardly to wash virtually the entire area between the threads except where the threads of the closure actually bear on the closure threads. A drain opening or gap 48 is provided adjacent the lower edge 50 of the shell, and can simply be a space between the shell and closure neck 11, frcn which the wash water can exit from the interthread space and carry with it any removed food particles. Tests have demonstrated that a stream of wash water will pass through the slots 46 to effectively wash the interthreaded region. It is preferred that the water slots be so small as to be effectively open only when heated by hot water (or steam) wash\ For that purpose the passages may be so dimensioned that they are normally closed, and so that they open by a differential between the thermal expansions of the shell and the disk when the closure is heated (a plastic shell expanding more than a metal disk) . This optional feature is described at greater length in my previ- ously mentioned application Serial No. 535,400, to which reference may be had.
Because the top lip is attached to the shell only at its outer edge, it may bend upwardly when the shell is tightened on the disk. One or more down- wardly projecting stops or bosses 49 are provided on the lip, which acts as a positive spacer to prevent deformation on overtightening from choking or closing the water channels. A stop 49 is preferably posi¬ tioned substantially directly above the upper end of each closure thread 28. Surprisingly, this stop orientation provides the greatest resistance to lip deformation when the closure is tightened; the bending stress on the lip which tends to block the channel is greatest directly above the start of a thread, and positioning a stop above the upper end of the thread more effectively resists such blocking. If single start threading is used, a stop should be directly above the thread top end. For two start threads, a stop should be provided above each thread start (see Fig. 4) . A water channel 45 may extend across the stop.
Referring next to the embodiment of the invention in a closure which includes a top loaded disk and a tamper indicating band, the closure 54 of Figures 5 and 6 includes a tamper indicating band 55 around the lower edge 56 of a shell 58. Band 55 is connected to the shell only by severable or rupturable bridges, one of which is shown at 57, there being an interrupted knife cut or score 59 between band 55 and lower edge 56 of shell 58. Band 55 includes an external band or ring 61 with an upwardly molded retaining flap or hoop 63 having an upper inner edge 65 which resides beneath a locking bead 67 around the container. When the closure 54 is unscrewed by applying torque to grips 69, the entire closure initially moves upwardly. When the upper end 65 of hoop 63 bears upwardly against locking bead 67, this exerts a separating force on band 55 and causes the bridges 57 to rupture. Band 55 remains loosely captured on the container between bead 67 and shoulder 71, and thereby provides a distinct visual indication that the closure has been opened. Water outlet windows 74 are molded along the line 77 between flap 63 and band 55. Wash water from interthread chamber 73 empties into the V-shaped space 79 between upturned flap 63 and tamper indicating band 55, and drains from the windows 74. -14-
In the top load embodiment of Figure 5, tlie insert disk 76 has a downturned skirt 77 with a reversely or upturned rim '78. The shell 58 has a central opening which is surrounded by an inwardly and then reversely tapered top lip 80. Disk 76 is in¬ serted into the shell by pressing it downwardly past lip 80, until disk rim 78 snaps under the lip and engages against its sloping undersurface 81. Radial water channels 84 are molded in the undersurface 81 bf top lip 80, extending across the line of engagement 86 of disk rim 78 with top lip 80 and may extend further down the inside wall 85 of the shell. The channels 84 are of sufficient depth that the disk edge , though it may press into the top lip, does not close the chan- nels. (Bosses or stops are generally not necessary where the insert disk is top loaded.) Thus water directed onto the top 89 of disk 76 falls into the annular pocket 90 between skirt 77 and rim 78, and flows through channels 84 over the top of rim 86, through channels 85 to the interthread space 73. From space 73 the wash flows out through outlet windows 74.
In the one-piece or all plastic closure embodiment of Figure 7 the top or cover is integral with the skirt 100. More speci ically, the closure 92 has a top panel or cover 93 with a channel 94 on its inside face which contains an annular gasket 95. In this embodiment wash water is directed into the spiral interthread space 97 from the outside of the closure below the gasket, rather than across the periphery of a separate top disk above a gasket. Inlet openings 99 are provided at angularly spaced positions around skirt 100, above interthread space 97. Wash water directed into these flows around the threads and drains through outlet openings 101 which, as shown in Fig. 7, may be in a tamper indicating band as already described.
Closures for vacuum sealed containers must effectively prevent dirt on the lid from being sucked into the container by the inrush of air when the vacuum is broken. In theory, dirt on the lid might be blown over the edge of the lid, inwardly past the gasket and into the container upon opening. There is also a possibility that dirt lodged in a tamper indicating band could be carried upwardly as the vacuum is broken, past the gasket and into the con¬ tainer. In . the closure embodiments thus far de¬ scribed, the wash channels could in theory provide such a pathway in which dirt might be carried from the top of the lid through the slots, around the lid edge and into the container when the vacuum is broken.
Figures 8 and 9 show a modified embodiment of the invention wherein the wash channels are auto¬ matically choked off at the lid periphery or edge when the lid is lifted by unscrewing the shell, to prevent any such contamination. In this embodiment the
SUBSTITUTESHEET closure has a top lip 22 as in the previous embodi¬ ments, with water channels as previously described. The grooves 47 extend downwardly on the inside surface of the shell 18 toward the uppermost thread portion 105 on the closure skirt 107.
Below the lower end 109 of each groove 47, and below the lower edge 119 of lid 32, skirt 107 has a continuous internal circular bead or rib ill which extends annularly around its inside surface. This rib ill has an inside diameter just equal to the outside diameter of edge 119 of lid 32 (see Fig. 9) , so as to form a seal with the lid edge when in vertical align¬ ment with it. When the closure has been tightened on the container, rib 111 is spaced below lid edge 119, as shown in Figure 8. Rib 111 is then opposite the topmost thread portion 113 of the container, but because the container threads are helical and bead 111 is planar, the bead only contacts the container thread 113 at one point per thread. (Thus, in a container having two thread entrances, the bead 111 contacts the container threads at only two relatively narrow angular areas.) At other angular locations the bead 111 does not engage either the container threads or the closure threads, and wash water can flow down- wardly through the opening between them, as indicated by arrows 125 in Figure 8.
When the closure is unscrewed, the rotation of shell 18 shifts band 111 upwardly relative to lid
SUBSTITUTESHEET edge 119. The lid is lifted and the vacuum is broken by the top portion 105 of the closure threads which abuts lid edge 119 as the Shell is unscrewed. (This occurs after the tamper evidencing band has been broken.) Bead 111 is so positioned that, when the shell begins to lift the lid, the bead meets and forms an effective seal with the lid edge around its entire periphery. This seal closes the previous passage between the lid and the shell and thus then isolates the gasket 130 from any dirt on the top surface of the lid.
The embodiment shown in Figures 8 and 9 has a tamper evidencing band which is molded in a down position, then is turned up. for use. As can be seen, opening the closure first breaks off the band 122, which drops down onto the shoulder of the container, before the lid is lifted. Any dirt in the pocket 120 between the tamper indicating band 122 and the retain¬ ing hoop 125 is thereafter so far away from the gasket area that it cannot be drawn into the container as the vacuum is broken. While the invention is not limited to use with a band, a preferred form of downwardly molded, upturned tamper indicating band is shown in the copending application of
Figure imgf000019_0001
H. Hayes, titled "Tamper Indicating Closure Havirg Retaining Hoop With Relief Windows," Serial No. 401,966, filed September 1, 1989.
Closures with slots for water washing in accordance with this invention can also include a capability for venting excess gas pressure within the container beneath the lid. Such closures are de¬ scribed and claimed in my copending application Serial No. 402,211, titled "Pressure Venting Closure", filed September 1, 1989, to which reference may be made.
Having described the invention, what is claimed is:

Claims

-19- 1. A closure for a container, said closure comprising a plastic annular shell having a top opening and an insert disk beneath said top opening, said shell including a skirt and a top lip which surrounds said opening, said skirt having a threaded region with at least one thread for securing the closure onto the finish of a container, said threaded region providing a spiral interthread channel between said thread of said closure and a thread of a container when said closure is secured thereon, through which channel wash water can flow downwardly, said disk fitting in said shell and retained by said top lip, said disk including a gasket for engaging and sealing the rim of a container, said top lip having an undersurface which faces a peripheral region of said disk, said top lip having at least one water inlet channel molded on its said undersurface through which water can flow beneath said lip and outwardly over the periphery of said disk, said inlet channel commu¬ nicating with said spiral channel even when said closure is secured on a container, a stop projecting downwardly from the undersurface of said lip directly above the rim of a container when secured thereon and bearing on said disk to prevent said disk from closing said channel if said closure is overtightened on said container, a water outlet from the lower part of said threaded region, said water inlet channel, threaded region, and outlet providing an internal flow passage through which wash water can flow from said disk to said outlet, thereby to wash contaminants from said flow passage when said closure is secured on a container.
2. The closure of Claim 1 wherein a stop is positioned on said lip above the upper end of each said thread of said closure.
3. The closure of Claim 1 wherein said skirt has downwardly extending channels on its inside surface, which conduct water flow downwardly past the periphery of said disk.
4. The closure of Claim 1 wherein said water inlet channel is at least one radial slot in the undersurface of said top lip.
5. The closure of Claim 1 wherein said top lip has a downwardly depending rim along an inner edge thereof, there being slots in said rim through which wash water impinging on said disk can enter said channel. -21-
6. The closure of Claim 1 further wherein said channel includes grooves on the inside of said shell, said grooves extending beyond the outer periphery of said disk, downwardly into said spiral channel.
7. The closure of Claim 1 wherein said closure further includes a tamper-indicating band with band retaining means for engaging a bead on the container, said outlet including at least one opening in said band retaining means to permit flow of water outwardly therepast.
8. The closure of Claim 1 wherein said insert disk has a flat peripheral portion which abuts said stop.
9. The closure of Claim 1 wherein said disk is a bottom load disk.
SUBSTITUTESHEET -22- 10. A closure for a container, said closure comprising a plastic annular shell having a top opening; and a top loaded insert disk within said top opening, said shell including a skirt and a top lip around said opening, said skirt having a threaded region with at least one thread for securing the closure onto the finish of a container, said top lip having an undersurface overhanging a peripheral edge of said disk, said disk fitting in said shell and retained by said top lip, said disk including a gasket for engaging and sealing the rim of a container, said threaded region providing a spiral interthread channel between said thread of said closure and a thread of a container when said closure is secured thereon, through which channel wash water can flow downwardly, said top lip having at least one water inlet channel molded on its said undersurface through which water can flow beneath said lip and outwardly over the peripheral edge of said disk, said inlet channel communicating with said spiral channel even when said closure is secured on a container, a water outlet from the lower part of said threaded region, said water inlet channel, threaded region, and outlet providing an internal flow passage through -23- which wash water can flow from said disk to said outlet, thereby to wash contaminants from said flow passage when said closure is secured on a container.
11. The closure of Claim 10 wherein said top loaded insert disk has an upturned rim which bears against said top lip in line contact therewith, .said inlet channel extending across said rim.
SUBSTITUTESHEET -24-
12. A closure for a container, said closure comprising a skirt having a threaded region for secur¬ ing the closure onto the finish of the container, a top panel for closing a top opening of said container, said top panel being integral with said skirt, a gasket on an undersurface of said top panel for sealing an opening of the container, 0 said skirt having at least one water inlet channel through it which opens to the interior of the skirt above said threaded region, said inlet channel extending through said skirt below said gasket, 5 a water outlet from said threaded region, said inlet channel, threaded region, and outlet providing a flow passage through which wash water can be directed from outside said skirt, through said inlet channel into said threaded region, and o drain from said outlet, thereby to wash contaminants from said threaded region.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET
13. The closure of Claim 12 wherein said inlet channel is formed through said skirt immediately below said gasket.
14. The closure of Claim 13 wherein said inlet channel extends diagonally inwardly and downwardly through said skirt and opens to said threaded region at the top thereof.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET -26-
15. A composite closure for a container, said closure comprising an annular shell having a top opening and an insert disk below said top opening, said shell having a skirt with a threaded region with at least one thread for securing the closure onto the finish of a container, and a top lip which surrounds said top opening, said disk fitting in said shell and retained therein by said top lip, said disk having an outer edge and including a gasket for engaging and sealing the top of a container, said closure having at least one channel on its inside surface through which wash water can flow from said disk through said threaded region to wash contaminants therefrom, said skirt having means for engaging and lifting said disk when said shell is unscrewed- from a container, said skirt having a circumferential internal bead in said channel, said bead spaced below said outer edge of said disk when said closure is sealed on a container, but aligning and sealing with said edge when said shell is unscrewed and lifts said disk from said container, said bead thereupon closing said channel to the passage of dirt therethrough.
SUBSTITUTESHEET
16. The closure of Claim 15 wherein said bead is a continuous annular rib around the inside of said shell.
17. The closure of Claim 15 wherein said bead has an inside diameter equal to the outside diameter of said edge of said disk.
18. The closure of Claim 15 wherein said means for engaging and lifting said disk comprises a portion of said threads of said skirt.
19. The closure of Claim 18 wherein said bead is an annulus immediately above said lifting means.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET
PCT/US1990/004665 1989-09-01 1990-08-17 Container closure with internal channels for washing an interthread space WO1991003404A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US40221189A 1989-09-01 1989-09-01
US402,211 1989-09-01
US535,400 1990-06-08
US07/535,400 US5009324A (en) 1989-09-01 1990-06-08 Closure having thermally responsive water washing slots
US07/566,239 US5078290A (en) 1989-09-01 1990-08-15 Container closure with internal channels for washing an interthread space
US566,239 1990-08-15

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1991003404A1 true WO1991003404A1 (en) 1991-03-21

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ID=27410497

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1990/004665 WO1991003404A1 (en) 1989-09-01 1990-08-17 Container closure with internal channels for washing an interthread space

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AU (1) AU6180490A (en)
WO (1) WO1991003404A1 (en)

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WO1998047784A1 (en) * 1997-04-17 1998-10-29 Robert Malcolm Olliffe Container having a self-cleaning closure
US5913434A (en) * 1996-07-10 1999-06-22 Otsuka Pharamaceutaical Co., Ltd. Retortable container
WO2000069742A1 (en) * 1999-05-19 2000-11-23 Crown Cork & Seal Technologies Corporation Vented composite closure
WO2008151400A1 (en) * 2007-06-15 2008-12-18 Massucato Jose Carlos Airtight container closure consisting of disc element and threaded ring
WO2009122118A1 (en) * 2008-04-04 2009-10-08 Obrist Closures Switzerland Gmbh A closure
US8931243B2 (en) 2008-10-23 2015-01-13 Obrist Closures Switzerland Gmbh Hot-fill method
US9993636B2 (en) 2011-10-19 2018-06-12 Bayer Healthcare Llc Sterility retaining medical connector assembly and method
US10507319B2 (en) 2015-01-09 2019-12-17 Bayer Healthcare Llc Multiple fluid delivery system with multi-use disposable set and features thereof
US10549084B2 (en) 2014-01-10 2020-02-04 Bayer Healthcare Llc Single-use disposable set connector
US10688294B2 (en) 2013-06-14 2020-06-23 Bayer Healthcare Llc Portable fluid delivery system
US11738152B2 (en) 2016-06-15 2023-08-29 Bayer Healthcare, Llc Multi-use disposable system and syringe therefor

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US5913434A (en) * 1996-07-10 1999-06-22 Otsuka Pharamaceutaical Co., Ltd. Retortable container
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GB2317883A (en) * 1996-07-10 1998-04-08 Otsuka Pharma Co Ltd Retortable container and anti-loosening closure
WO1998047784A1 (en) * 1997-04-17 1998-10-29 Robert Malcolm Olliffe Container having a self-cleaning closure
WO2000069742A1 (en) * 1999-05-19 2000-11-23 Crown Cork & Seal Technologies Corporation Vented composite closure
US6276543B1 (en) 1999-05-19 2001-08-21 Crown Cork & Seal Technologies Corporation Vented composite closure
WO2008151400A1 (en) * 2007-06-15 2008-12-18 Massucato Jose Carlos Airtight container closure consisting of disc element and threaded ring
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WO2009122118A1 (en) * 2008-04-04 2009-10-08 Obrist Closures Switzerland Gmbh A closure
US8931243B2 (en) 2008-10-23 2015-01-13 Obrist Closures Switzerland Gmbh Hot-fill method
US9993636B2 (en) 2011-10-19 2018-06-12 Bayer Healthcare Llc Sterility retaining medical connector assembly and method
US10857345B2 (en) 2011-10-19 2020-12-08 Bayer Healthcare Llc Sterility retaining medical connector assembly and method
US10688294B2 (en) 2013-06-14 2020-06-23 Bayer Healthcare Llc Portable fluid delivery system
US10549084B2 (en) 2014-01-10 2020-02-04 Bayer Healthcare Llc Single-use disposable set connector
US10507319B2 (en) 2015-01-09 2019-12-17 Bayer Healthcare Llc Multiple fluid delivery system with multi-use disposable set and features thereof
US11491318B2 (en) 2015-01-09 2022-11-08 Bayer Healthcare Llc Multiple fluid delivery system with multi-use disposable set and features thereof
US11738152B2 (en) 2016-06-15 2023-08-29 Bayer Healthcare, Llc Multi-use disposable system and syringe therefor

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