WO1995034226A1 - Smoking article - Google Patents

Smoking article Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1995034226A1
WO1995034226A1 PCT/GB1995/001299 GB9501299W WO9534226A1 WO 1995034226 A1 WO1995034226 A1 WO 1995034226A1 GB 9501299 W GB9501299 W GB 9501299W WO 9534226 A1 WO9534226 A1 WO 9534226A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
smoking article
wall
article according
enclosure
rod
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB1995/001299
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO1995034226B1 (en
Inventor
Jerzy Kijowski
Eugene Crous
Original Assignee
Rothmans International Services Limited
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 GB9411630A external-priority patent/GB9411630D0/en
Priority claimed from GBGB9502565.6A external-priority patent/GB9502565D0/en
Application filed by Rothmans International Services Limited filed Critical Rothmans International Services Limited
Priority to AU26254/95A priority Critical patent/AU685641B2/en
Priority to CA002192560A priority patent/CA2192560C/en
Priority to EP95921051A priority patent/EP0763985B1/en
Priority to DE69512054T priority patent/DE69512054T2/en
Priority to DK95921051T priority patent/DK0763985T3/en
Publication of WO1995034226A1 publication Critical patent/WO1995034226A1/en
Publication of WO1995034226B1 publication Critical patent/WO1995034226B1/en

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24FSMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
    • A24F13/00Appliances for smoking cigars or cigarettes
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24FSMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
    • A24F13/00Appliances for smoking cigars or cigarettes
    • A24F13/16Safety sleeves for cigars or cigarettes preventing damage by glowing ash
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24FSMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
    • A24F13/00Appliances for smoking cigars or cigarettes
    • A24F13/22Supports for holding cigars or cigarettes while smoking

Definitions

  • his invention relates to smoking articles and in particular to an enclosed smoking article.
  • the object of the invention is to cut down on or prevent entirely sidestream smoke particles .escaping into the ambient atmosphere thus eliminating one of the major causes of annoyance to non-smokers.
  • the structure also allows for the safe disposal of the article if it is self- extinguishing or is held to a low external temperature. This is achieved according to the invention in that the rod of smokable material such as the tobacco rod of a cigarette, cigarillo or cigar (hereinafter
  • tobacco rod is mounted within and spaced from a wall which is of a closable container which is at least partly porous. One end of the rod is accessible for smoking ' .
  • an enclosed smoking article has a smokable rod mounted in a closed or closable container to have one end (hereinafter called the mouth end) accessible to the outside of the container and its other end within .the container, the wall of the container being at least partly porous and being generally spaced from the rod so that a chamber is formed around it.
  • a chamber wall is a cylinder in which the smokable rod is mounted coaxially with its mouth end flush with or projecting from one end of the cylinder and permanently mounted there by mounting means; at the other end of the cylinder there will be a closure. This may be removable and/or may allow access for lighting the smokable article.
  • air may in appropriate cases pass directly from ambient to ventilation of the filter.
  • the smoking article will preferably be filtered.
  • the filter assembly may be preassembled to the smokable rod and be mounted by mounting means to the wall or may be attached to the wall beyond one end of the smokable rod and of the container.
  • the mounting means may themselves be permeable, e.g. be filter material, or may be impermeable such as for example closed cell foam.
  • at least one such layer and preferably all such layers will desirably bear accessibly one or more of a catalyst, a heat insulator or an adsorbent such as activated carbon, so as to act upon semi-volatiles and vapour phase components of the sidestream smoke. Any of these ingredients may have more than one of those capacities.
  • the outermost layer (the sole layer when only one is provided) will normally be of a stiff but porous paper. There may be a heat-sensitive indicator band along the outermost layer so that the smoker can see that the smokable rod is alight and how far the burning area (the "coal") has progressed.
  • One or more of the layers will preferably be a heat insulation or dispersant layer, e.g. a fabric treated with burn-retardants, or metal foil, wire mesh or metal or metallised fibres.
  • the smokable rod may be self-extinguishing, this being normally provided by a band of paper incorporating a burn-retardant chemical surrounding the smoking material at or adjacent the mouth end, or placed on the inner wall of the container.
  • the smokable rod preferably has a wrapper formulated (as is known per se) so as to cut down on the amount of sidestream smoke generated.
  • the end cap of the container may be formed; by a disc of paper secured across the end; by crimping the end of the container; by providing a comparatively rigid end cap which plugs into the end of a tubular such container; by a permanent end cap having a closable aperture in it; or the aperture may be closable upon being heated, for example being lined by an intumescent paint.
  • a removable end cap or of an access aperture is to allow for ignition of the smokable rod inside the container; alternatively, the container may be permanently sealed by a non- combustible material such as a fibrous material and the tobacco rod be ignited by for example electrically or by impact on a small detonator such as a non-safety match head.
  • a non-combustible material such as a fibrous material
  • ignition of the free end of the tobacco rod may be by a gas flame striking through the seal when the two are in contact.
  • the filter of the smokable rod can be ventilated and by regulation of the comparative permeability of the filter and of its mounting means in the container, together with ventilation of the smokable material portion of the smokable rod if desired, it can be determined what proportion of the smoke from the chamber is drawn by the smoker to be mixed with that drawn direct through the filter.
  • Figures 1 to 6 are respective diametrical sections through first to sixth embodiments-, and Figure 7 is an end view of an embodiment.
  • a filter cigarette 1 is mounted with one end (free end 13) and an intermediate portion 14 of its rod of smokable material in a container 6.
  • the cigarette is thinner and shorter than * a conventional cigarette being for example 4 to 6 mm, usually 5.4 mm in diameter "(as against the conventional 7.9 or 8 mm) and e.g. 60 to 90 mm, usually 72 mm, in length of which length e.g. 30 to 70 mm, usually 45 mm, is the tobacco rod 2 and e.g. 10 to 30 mm, usually 27 mm, the filter end portion 3.
  • the rod 2 is surrounded by the container 6 the wall 7 of which is a hollow cylinder and of which the axis 4 is coaxial with that of the rod.
  • a mounting block 8 on one end of the rod holds the wall 7 spaced from the intermediate portion 14 and other end 13 of the rod 2.
  • the diameter of the container will preferably be that of a conventional cigarette namely 7.9 or 8 mm and also its length will preferably be that of a conventional cigarette (70 to 120 mm) .
  • the tobacco rod 2 is of conventional material for a "slim-line" cigarette and wrapped with conventional cigarette paper or paper of a type, known per se, adapted to cut down sidestream.smoke.
  • the filter 3 is also conventional and may have any suitable filter material and may be a single or multiple type. It is enwrapped by a conventional plug wrap and united to the tobacco rod by an overwrap.
  • the container G is made up of a single layer of stiff but porous paper in the form of cylindrical tube 7.
  • the filter 3 of the rod 2 in such a way that its mouth end is accessible through the end 9 of the container formed by one face of the block 8 and can be drawn on by a smoker.
  • the tube 7 On or accessible from the inner surface of the tube 7 are particles 10 of adsorbent materials such as activated carbon or zeolites.
  • adsorbent materials such as activated carbon or zeolites.
  • an end cap 11 which as shown is -also of stiff but porous paper. It is however only necessary that part of the container be porous so for example the tube 7 could be non-porous if the end cap 11 is porous and vice versa.
  • the rod 2 is mounted so that its intermediate portion and one end are free of the walls of the container and a chamber 12 is formed around it.
  • the end cap 11 is removed and a match or the like applied conventionally to the " free end of the rod. Once it is burning the end cap is replaced.
  • the end cap may be permanently secured and internal means of ignition such as in particular a small charge of a detonator such as a non- safety phosphorus match mixture may be provided to ignite the free end of the rod.
  • the smoker may also draw some of the sidestream smoke from the chamber 12 and the relative proportions of the two smokes drawn can be adjusted by the relative porosity of block 8 and filter 3. If the block 8 is impermeable, some sidestream smoke may be drawn back past the coal and through the rod 2 and
  • the spacing of the tube 7 from the rod 2 provides heat insulation so that not only does the assembly cut down on sidestream particulates but may be able to be rested on an ordinary surface while the cigarette is smouldering.
  • means are shown which will greatly increase the efficiency of the heat insulation effect.
  • Figure 1 also shows how the filter 3 may be ventilated as at 17 so as further to allow adjustment of the ratios of sidestream and mainstream smoke drawn by the user.
  • Figure 2 shows a modification wherein a container 15 has a tube 7 internally coated by adsorbent 10 as before and also as before the cigarette 1 is mounted by a block 8 to be accessible at one end of the tube.
  • the closure cap is a moulded plastics plug 16 which the user fits into the end of the tube 7 once he has lit the cigarette.
  • the plug 16 need not of course be entirely of plastics material but may be for example a ring of plastics bearing a web of paper, which may be porous, across its central void.
  • Figure 3 shows the third embodiment, wherein the container 20 has a plurality of wall layers. An outermost is a protective tube 7 of stiff paper the internal surface of which may or may not have an absorbent layer such as 10. Within this and preferably narrowly spaced from it is an inner tubular layer 21. There is also provided a third layer being an innermost layer 22. If paper 7 is porous then so will inner layers 21 and 22 be porous.
  • Adsorbent material 10 such as activated carbon or zeolite is accessible from the inner surface of the innermost layer 22 being on that layer or on layer 21 or tube 7.
  • Layer 21 is a heat insulating layer being for example filled with heat insulating material or being reflective e.g. due to metallisation.
  • Layer 22 is a heat distributing layer having for example metallic such as a perforated foil or a mesh or metallised fibres laying within it or upon it preferably generally in the axial direction. The metallic fibres when heated may have a catalytic e fect upon the vapour phase components of the smoke.
  • the cigarette 1 is mounted in a block 23 analogous to block 8 and layers 22, 21 and 7 are spaced therefrom and from each other by comparatively thick adhesive layers 24, 25.
  • a strip of a heat-sensitive colour-changing indicator material may be applied along the outermost wall 7 of any embodiment.
  • the cigarette 1 of the embodiment of Figure 1 has in effect been shifted outwardly so that its mouth end 3' projects outwardly beyond the end wall 9 of the container.
  • ventilation holes 17 are free of that end 9 and so when the smoker draws on the cigarette ventilation air will be drawn from the ambient atmosphere. Sidestream smoke from the chamber 12 will be drawn through the smokable material rod.
  • a tobacco rod 2 is mounted in a container.
  • the tobacco rod is thinner than in a conventional cigarette be " ing for example 4 to 6 mm, usually 5.4 mm in diameter (as against the conventional 7.9 or 8 mm) and 30 to 90 mm in length.
  • 3" is, in effect, between the end wall 9 of the container and the mouth end 3"Of the cigarette 1'. It has in this example a multiple filter structure with filter material bands 31,32 sandwiching a cavity 30 in which may be positioned adsorbents or flavour modifying materials, such as e.g. sepiolite or carbon.
  • the rod 2' is mounted within the container by a block 8 ' combining the functions of annular mounting block 8 and extinguishing paper 5.
  • the absolute and relative lengths both of the mouth end structure of the container i.e. that occupied by mounts 8,23,5' and of the chamber can be modified.
  • Figure 6 shows one such possible arrangement, where the annular mounting block of any of the previous embodiments extends for (for example) 40 mm from the end 9 of the assembly, the chamber extending for example a further 60 mm, giving a to ' tal length to the article of 100 mm.
  • the expedient of lengthening the block or other inert portion 8 is that the smoker has more space within which to handle the cigarette without running any risk of coming in contact with heated surfaces.
  • Figure 7 is a cross-section through, in principle, any of the embodiments previously described showing how any could have a multi-layer wall 33,34,35, such as layers 7,21,22 of Figure 3, spaced by the chamber 12 from the smoking rod 2. These layers may be separately assembled but may be preassembled as a laminate before the formation of the container or sheath.
  • a smoking article with a tobacco rod shorter and thinner than a conventional tobacco rod is used to reduce the quantity of heat generated upon smoking and also to reduce the quantities of sidestream smoke components generated.
  • the tobacco rod has a wrapping of a cigarette paper which is preferably a fast-burning cigarette paper selected to minimise the risk that the cigarette will self-extinguish when smouldering.
  • This rod is surrounded by a container which is a hollow cylinder (7.9 or 8 mm diameter) and of which the axis .is coaxial with that of the cigarette.
  • the filter is of a conventional type with the addition of an adsorbent to reduce the vapour phase fraction of sidestream smoke components which in use may be drawn through the cigarette wrapper or through the "coal".
  • the join between filter and tobacco rod is made by overwrapping with a non-combustible paper to render the cigarette self-extinguishing.
  • the material of the container wall has a low porosity and contains activated charcoal to reduce the vapour phase components of the sidestream smoke and the material also includes a mineral filler to provide thermal mass to reduce the temperature of the cylinder wall to less than 150°C, preferably less than 120°C and most preferably to less than 80°C.

Landscapes

  • Cigarettes, Filters, And Manufacturing Of Filters (AREA)
  • Manufacture Of Tobacco Products (AREA)

Abstract

A smoking article is adapted to cut down or eliminate the emission of sidestream smoke particulates to the ambient atmosphere, by having its rod (2) of smokable material surrounded by a wall (7) spaced from the rod (2). The wall may be that of a closed container (16). The wall will preferably include layer(s) containing adsorbents, heat absorbers and/or catalysts. A filtered end (3) of the smokable material rod (2) is accessible from outside the container at one end for smoking. At the other end an end cap (11) is removable to allow for lighting the smokable material rod (2).

Description

SMOKING ARTICLE
. his invention relates to smoking articles and in particular to an enclosed smoking article. The object of the invention is to cut down on or prevent entirely sidestream smoke particles .escaping into the ambient atmosphere thus eliminating one of the major causes of annoyance to non-smokers. We aim also to retain the ash which falls from the rod - another cause of annoyance. The structure also allows for the safe disposal of the article if it is self- extinguishing or is held to a low external temperature. This is achieved according to the invention in that the rod of smokable material such as the tobacco rod of a cigarette, cigarillo or cigar (hereinafter
"tobacco rod") is mounted within and spaced from a wall which is of a closable container which is at least partly porous. One end of the rod is accessible for smoking'. According to one aspect of the invention an enclosed smoking article has a smokable rod mounted in a closed or closable container to have one end (hereinafter called the mouth end) accessible to the outside of the container and its other end within .the container, the wall of the container being at least partly porous and being generally spaced from the rod so that a chamber is formed around it.
Preferably. a chamber wall is a cylinder in which the smokable rod is mounted coaxially with its mouth end flush with or projecting from one end of the cylinder and permanently mounted there by mounting means; at the other end of the cylinder there will be a closure. This may be removable and/or may allow access for lighting the smokable article. When the mouth end projects from the end of the container, air may in appropriate cases pass directly from ambient to ventilation of the filter.
The smoking article will preferably be filtered. The filter assembly may be preassembled to the smokable rod and be mounted by mounting means to the wall or may be attached to the wall beyond one end of the smokable rod and of the container. The mounting means may themselves be permeable, e.g. be filter material, or may be impermeable such as for example closed cell foam.
There may be a plurality of layers in the -wall of the -sheath or container and particularly when cylindrical in the cylindrical wall, these layers having various functions. However, at least one such layer and preferably all such layers will desirably bear accessibly one or more of a catalyst, a heat insulator or an adsorbent such as activated carbon, so as to act upon semi-volatiles and vapour phase components of the sidestream smoke. Any of these ingredients may have more than one of those capacities.
The outermost layer (the sole layer when only one is provided) will normally be of a stiff but porous paper. There may be a heat-sensitive indicator band along the outermost layer so that the smoker can see that the smokable rod is alight and how far the burning area (the "coal") has progressed.
One or more of the layers will preferably be a heat insulation or dispersant layer, e.g. a fabric treated with burn-retardants, or metal foil, wire mesh or metal or metallised fibres. The smokable rod may be self-extinguishing, this being normally provided by a band of paper incorporating a burn-retardant chemical surrounding the smoking material at or adjacent the mouth end, or placed on the inner wall of the container.
The smokable rod preferably has a wrapper formulated (as is known per se) so as to cut down on the amount of sidestream smoke generated.
The end cap of the container may be formed; by a disc of paper secured across the end; by crimping the end of the container; by providing a comparatively rigid end cap which plugs into the end of a tubular such container; by a permanent end cap having a closable aperture in it; or the aperture may be closable upon being heated, for example being lined by an intumescent paint.
The purpose of a removable end cap or of an access aperture is to allow for ignition of the smokable rod inside the container; alternatively, the container may be permanently sealed by a non- combustible material such as a fibrous material and the tobacco rod be ignited by for example electrically or by impact on a small detonator such as a non-safety match head. When the seal is a fibrous non-combustible material, ignition of the free end of the tobacco rod may be by a gas flame striking through the seal when the two are in contact.
The filter of the smokable rod can be ventilated and by regulation of the comparative permeability of the filter and of its mounting means in the container, together with ventilation of the smokable material portion of the smokable rod if desired, it can be determined what proportion of the smoke from the chamber is drawn by the smoker to be mixed with that drawn direct through the filter.
Particular embodiments of the invention will now be described with the accompanying drawings wherein Figures 1 to 6 are respective diametrical sections through first to sixth embodiments-, and Figure 7 is an end view of an embodiment. In the embodiments shown in Figs 1 to 4 a filter cigarette 1 is mounted with one end (free end 13) and an intermediate portion 14 of its rod of smokable material in a container 6. The cigarette is thinner and shorter than*a conventional cigarette being for example 4 to 6 mm, usually 5.4 mm in diameter "(as against the conventional 7.9 or 8 mm) and e.g. 60 to 90 mm, usually 72 mm, in length of which length e.g. 30 to 70 mm, usually 45 mm, is the tobacco rod 2 and e.g. 10 to 30 mm, usually 27 mm, the filter end portion 3.
The rod 2 is surrounded by the container 6 the wall 7 of which is a hollow cylinder and of which the axis 4 is coaxial with that of the rod. A mounting block 8 on one end of the rod holds the wall 7 spaced from the intermediate portion 14 and other end 13 of the rod 2. The diameter of the container will preferably be that of a conventional cigarette namely 7.9 or 8 mm and also its length will preferably be that of a conventional cigarette (70 to 120 mm) .
The tobacco rod 2 is of conventional material for a "slim-line" cigarette and wrapped with conventional cigarette paper or paper of a type, known per se, adapted to cut down sidestream.smoke. The filter 3 is also conventional and may have any suitable filter material and may be a single or multiple type. It is enwrapped by a conventional plug wrap and united to the tobacco rod by an overwrap.
Adjacent the join between the tobacco rod and the filter there is a band 5 of non-porous paper which has the effect of rendering the cigarette self- extinguishing.
In the first embodiment the container G is made up of a single layer of stiff but porous paper in the form of cylindrical tube 7. The filter 3 of the rod 2 in such a way that its mouth end is accessible through the end 9 of the container formed by one face of the block 8 and can be drawn on by a smoker.
On or accessible from the inner surface of the tube 7 are particles 10 of adsorbent materials such as activated carbon or zeolites. There is an end cap 11 which as shown is -also of stiff but porous paper. It is however only necessary that part of the container be porous so for example the tube 7 could be non-porous if the end cap 11 is porous and vice versa.
It is seen that the rod 2 is mounted so that its intermediate portion and one end are free of the walls of the container and a chamber 12 is formed around it. To light the rod the end cap 11 is removed and a match or the like applied conventionally to the "free end of the rod. Once it is burning the end cap is replaced. Alternatively the end cap may be permanently secured and internal means of ignition such as in particular a small charge of a detonator such as a non- safety phosphorus match mixture may be provided to ignite the free end of the rod.
When the smokable material is smouldering (i.e. not being drawn on by the smoker) sidestream smoke is contained in the chamber 12 and no particulate material should be able to escape from it. Some volatiles may penetrate through the porosity of the container wall but many of them, as well as the semi-volatiles and the particulates should be adsorbed by the material 10.
When the smokable rod is drawn on by the smoker there is a conventional flow of smoke through the filter 3. In these embodiments, if the block 8 is of a porous material the smoker may also draw some of the sidestream smoke from the chamber 12 and the relative proportions of the two smokes drawn can be adjusted by the relative porosity of block 8 and filter 3. If the block 8 is impermeable, some sidestream smoke may be drawn back past the coal and through the rod 2 and
filter 3.
The spacing of the tube 7 from the rod 2 provides heat insulation so that not only does the assembly cut down on sidestream particulates but may be able to be rested on an ordinary surface while the cigarette is smouldering. However in the third embodiment, to be described, means are shown which will greatly increase the efficiency of the heat insulation effect.
Figure 1 also shows how the filter 3 may be ventilated as at 17 so as further to allow adjustment of the ratios of sidestream and mainstream smoke drawn by the user.
Figure 2 shows a modification wherein a container 15 has a tube 7 internally coated by adsorbent 10 as before and also as before the cigarette 1 is mounted by a block 8 to be accessible at one end of the tube.
Here however the closure cap is a moulded plastics plug 16 which the user fits into the end of the tube 7 once he has lit the cigarette. The plug 16 need not of course be entirely of plastics material but may be for example a ring of plastics bearing a web of paper, which may be porous, across its central void. Figure 3 shows the third embodiment, wherein the container 20 has a plurality of wall layers. An outermost is a protective tube 7 of stiff paper the internal surface of which may or may not have an absorbent layer such as 10. Within this and preferably narrowly spaced from it is an inner tubular layer 21. There is also provided a third layer being an innermost layer 22. If paper 7 is porous then so will inner layers 21 and 22 be porous.
Adsorbent material 10 such as activated carbon or zeolite is accessible from the inner surface of the innermost layer 22 being on that layer or on layer 21 or tube 7. Layer 21 is a heat insulating layer being for example filled with heat insulating material or being reflective e.g. due to metallisation. Layer 22 is a heat distributing layer having for example metallic such as a perforated foil or a mesh or metallised fibres laying within it or upon it preferably generally in the axial direction. The metallic fibres when heated may have a catalytic e fect upon the vapour phase components of the smoke. If at least one but preferably both of layers 21 and 22 are provided there is less need for a major air gap between the rod 2 and the outer wall 7 while maintaining a very adequate degree of thermal insulation (for example the temperature of the outer wall will not exceed more than 150°C, preferably being in the range 60-80°C) . The cigarette 1 is mounted in a block 23 analogous to block 8 and layers 22, 21 and 7 are spaced therefrom and from each other by comparatively thick adhesive layers 24, 25.
There can be a removable end cap such as 16 or as illustrated here the papers of the three layers 7, 21 and 22 are brought together at 26.
They may be permanently secured together there e.g. by crimping or adhesion or may offer an aperture for temporary access to the free end of the cigarette to allow it to be lit, thereafter being closed together either by the user by a clip or band or by for example the application of a layer of intumescent paint 27 to the relevant region of the innermost layer which swells to seal the aperture under the influence of the heat from the rod. It is clear that these expedients, as well as the use of multi-layered walls, are applicable to all embodiments.
To indicate to the user that the cigarette has remained alight, and how far the "coal" has progressed along it, a strip of a heat-sensitive colour-changing indicator material may be applied along the outermost wall 7 of any embodiment.
Further embodiments are seen in Figures 4, 5 and 6.
In the embodiment of Figure 4, the cigarette 1 of the embodiment of Figure 1 has in effect been shifted outwardly so that its mouth end 3' projects outwardly beyond the end wall 9 of the container. As shown, ventilation holes 17 are free of that end 9 and so when the smoker draws on the cigarette ventilation air will be drawn from the ambient atmosphere. Sidestream smoke from the chamber 12 will be drawn through the smokable material rod.
In the embodiments shown in Figures 5 and 6 a tobacco rod 2 is mounted in a container. The tobacco rod is thinner than in a conventional cigarette be"ing for example 4 to 6 mm, usually 5.4 mm in diameter (as against the conventional 7.9 or 8 mm) and 30 to 90 mm in length.
In the embodiment shown in Figure 5, the filter
3" is, in effect, between the end wall 9 of the container and the mouth end 3"Of the cigarette 1'. It has in this example a multiple filter structure with filter material bands 31,32 sandwiching a cavity 30 in which may be positioned adsorbents or flavour modifying materials, such as e.g. sepiolite or carbon.
The rod 2' is mounted within the container by a block 8 ' combining the functions of annular mounting block 8 and extinguishing paper 5.
In any of the embodiments so far disclosed and described, the absolute and relative lengths both of the mouth end structure of the container i.e. that occupied by mounts 8,23,5' and of the chamber can be modified. Figure 6 shows one such possible arrangement, where the annular mounting block of any of the previous embodiments extends for (for example) 40 mm from the end 9 of the assembly, the chamber extending for example a further 60 mm, giving a to'tal length to the article of 100 mm. The expedient of lengthening the block or other inert portion 8 (or for example 23 or 5') is that the smoker has more space within which to handle the cigarette without running any risk of coming in contact with heated surfaces.
Figure 7 is a cross-section through, in principle, any of the embodiments previously described showing how any could have a multi-layer wall 33,34,35, such as layers 7,21,22 of Figure 3, spaced by the chamber 12 from the smoking rod 2. These layers may be separately assembled but may be preassembled as a laminate before the formation of the container or sheath.
To summarize, in a preferred embodiment, a smoking article with a tobacco rod shorter and thinner than a conventional tobacco rod is used to reduce the quantity of heat generated upon smoking and also to reduce the quantities of sidestream smoke components generated.
The tobacco rod has a wrapping of a cigarette paper which is preferably a fast-burning cigarette paper selected to minimise the risk that the cigarette will self-extinguish when smouldering. This rod is surrounded by a container which is a hollow cylinder (7.9 or 8 mm diameter) and of which the axis .is coaxial with that of the cigarette.
The filter is of a conventional type with the addition of an adsorbent to reduce the vapour phase fraction of sidestream smoke components which in use may be drawn through the cigarette wrapper or through the "coal".
The join between filter and tobacco rod is made by overwrapping with a non-combustible paper to render the cigarette self-extinguishing. The material of the container wall has a low porosity and contains activated charcoal to reduce the vapour phase components of the sidestream smoke and the material also includes a mineral filler to provide thermal mass to reduce the temperature of the cylinder wall to less than 150°C, preferably less than 120°C and most preferably to less than 80°C.

Claims

C IM? :
1. A smoking article having a smokable rod with two end portions (3,3' ,3"' ,13) and an intermediate portion (14) and mounting means (8,8') on one end portion (3,3 ',3'") thereof mounting a wall of an enclosure (6) to surround and be spaced from the intermediate portion (14) and other end (13) of the smokable rod, at least part of the wall of the enclosure being porous to permit combustion of material of the smokable rod within the chamber, with the end of the one end portion (3,3 ',3'") of the smokable rod being accessible.
2. A smoking article according to claim 1 wherein the one end (3,3') of the smokable rod is a filter.
3. A smoking article according to claim 2 wherein the filter (3) is ventilated (17) within the enclosure.
4. A smoking article according to claim 2 wherein the filter (3') is ventilated (17) outside the enclosure, with the filter projecting beyond an end (9) of the enclosure.
5. A smoking article according to claim 1 wherein a filter (3") is provided beyond the one end (3"') of the smokable rod and outside the enclosure (6) .
6. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the end of the enclosure remote from the end at which the one end of the smokable rod is accessible is closed by a removable closure (11,16) .
7. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the end (26) of the enclosure remote from the end at which the one end of the smokable rod is accessible is permanently closed.
8. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the end (26) of the enclosure remote from the end at which the one end of the smokable rod is accessible is adapted (27) to close permanently upon a rise to a predetermined temperature.
9. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the wall (7) of the enclosure includes an adsorbent (10) .
10. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the wall of the enclosure includes a heat insulator.
11. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the wall of the enclosure* includes a catalyst.
12. A smoking article according to any one of claims 9, 10, or 11 wherein the wall of the enclosure is of a plurality of layers (7,21,22) and the adsorbent and/or heat insulator and/or the catalyst are in at least one inner layer (21,22) within a protective outer layer (7) of the wall.
13. A smoking article according to any one of claims 1 to 11 wherein the wall of the enclosure is of a plurality of layers (7,21,22), an outermost being a protective layer (7) and inner layers containing respectively an adsorbent and a heat insulator.
14. A smoking article according to claim 12 or claim 13 wherein heat insulator is metallic fibres.
15. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein ^ he smokable rod has self- extinguishing means (5,8') adjacent its one end.
16. A smoking article according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the wall of the enclosure includes a visible heat-sensitive indicator.
17. A smoking article having a smokable rod with two end portions (3,3 ' ,3"' ,13) and an intermediate portion (14) and mounting means (8,8') on one end portion (3,3',3"') thereof mounting a wall spaced from and surrounding the intermediate portion (14) and. the other end (13) of the smokable rod (2) , the wall (7) being that of a sheath open at one end, the wall of the sheath including an adsorbent ingredient (10) , and means (11,16,26,27) for closing said one end to form a porous enclosure (6) .
18. A smoking article according to claim 17 wherein the wall (7) of the sheath further includes a heat insulator or dissipator ingredient.
19. A smoking article according to claim 18 wherein the wall of the sheath has a plurality of layers
(7,21,22), an outer layer (7) being a protective layer and the said ingredients being distributed among the layers.
PCT/GB1995/001299 1994-06-10 1995-06-06 Smoking article WO1995034226A1 (en)

Priority Applications (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU26254/95A AU685641B2 (en) 1994-06-10 1995-06-06 Smoking article
CA002192560A CA2192560C (en) 1994-06-10 1995-06-06 Smoking article
EP95921051A EP0763985B1 (en) 1994-06-10 1995-06-06 Smoking article
DE69512054T DE69512054T2 (en) 1994-06-10 1995-06-06 SMOKING ITEMS
DK95921051T DK0763985T3 (en) 1994-06-10 1995-06-06 A smoking article

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9411630.8 1994-06-10
GB9411630A GB9411630D0 (en) 1994-06-10 1994-06-10 Smoking article
GBGB9502565.6A GB9502565D0 (en) 1995-02-10 1995-02-10 Smoking article
GB9502565.6 1995-02-10

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1995034226A1 true WO1995034226A1 (en) 1995-12-21
WO1995034226B1 WO1995034226B1 (en) 1996-01-18

Family

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Country Status (7)

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EP (1) EP0763985B1 (en)
AT (1) ATE184162T1 (en)
AU (1) AU685641B2 (en)
DE (1) DE69512054T2 (en)
DK (1) DK0763985T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2138741T3 (en)
WO (1) WO1995034226A1 (en)

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WO1998016125A1 (en) * 1996-10-15 1998-04-23 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke and free-burn rate control device
EP0920817A3 (en) * 1997-12-06 1999-07-14 Kar Eng Chew Filter
US6286516B1 (en) 1998-04-16 2001-09-11 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke treatment material
US6799578B2 (en) 2000-09-18 2004-10-05 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with combustible paper
FR2911761A1 (en) * 2007-01-31 2008-08-01 Emmanuel List Pen-shaped lighted cigarette holding device i.e. vented closed tube, for use when smoking, has open nozzle lined by ring that fixes cigarette at level of filter before introducing cigarette in body to hold cigarette while smoking
CN110786557A (en) * 2018-08-01 2020-02-14 湖南中烟工业有限责任公司 Heating non-combustible cigarette, smoking device thereof and method for producing smoke
US10874140B2 (en) 2015-12-10 2020-12-29 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Smoking article
US11330838B2 (en) 2019-07-19 2022-05-17 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Holder for aerosol delivery device with detachable cartridge
US11395510B2 (en) 2019-07-19 2022-07-26 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with rotatable enclosure for cartridge
US11439185B2 (en) 2020-04-29 2022-09-13 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with sliding and transversely rotating locking mechanism
US11589616B2 (en) 2020-04-29 2023-02-28 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with sliding and axially rotating locking mechanism
US11723399B2 (en) 2018-07-13 2023-08-15 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Smoking article with detachable cartridge
US11744296B2 (en) 2015-12-10 2023-09-05 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Smoking article
US11825872B2 (en) 2021-04-02 2023-11-28 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with protective sleeve
US12022859B2 (en) 2019-07-18 2024-07-02 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Thermal energy absorbers for tobacco heating products

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Cited By (26)

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US7624739B2 (en) 1996-10-15 2009-12-01 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Tubular cigarette device comprising cerium oxide
AU724365B2 (en) * 1996-10-15 2000-09-21 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke and free-burn rate control device
WO1998016125A1 (en) * 1996-10-15 1998-04-23 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke and free-burn rate control device
US6371127B1 (en) 1996-10-15 2002-04-16 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke and free-burn rate control device
US6748955B2 (en) 1996-10-15 2004-06-15 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke and free-burn rate control device
US6345625B1 (en) 1997-12-06 2002-02-12 Kar Eng Chew Filter for secondary smoke and smoking articles incorporating the same
EP0920817A3 (en) * 1997-12-06 1999-07-14 Kar Eng Chew Filter
US6286516B1 (en) 1998-04-16 2001-09-11 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Cigarette sidestream smoke treatment material
US6799578B2 (en) 2000-09-18 2004-10-05 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with combustible paper
AU2006220389B2 (en) * 2000-09-18 2009-05-28 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with combustible paper
US6810884B2 (en) 2000-09-18 2004-11-02 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with non-combustible treatment material
US8267096B2 (en) 2000-09-18 2012-09-18 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with combustible paper
US6904918B2 (en) 2000-09-18 2005-06-14 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with non-combustible treatment material
US7717120B2 (en) 2000-09-18 2010-05-18 Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, Inc. Low sidestream smoke cigarette with combustible paper
FR2911761A1 (en) * 2007-01-31 2008-08-01 Emmanuel List Pen-shaped lighted cigarette holding device i.e. vented closed tube, for use when smoking, has open nozzle lined by ring that fixes cigarette at level of filter before introducing cigarette in body to hold cigarette while smoking
US10874140B2 (en) 2015-12-10 2020-12-29 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Smoking article
US11744296B2 (en) 2015-12-10 2023-09-05 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Smoking article
US11723399B2 (en) 2018-07-13 2023-08-15 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Smoking article with detachable cartridge
CN110786557A (en) * 2018-08-01 2020-02-14 湖南中烟工业有限责任公司 Heating non-combustible cigarette, smoking device thereof and method for producing smoke
CN110786557B (en) * 2018-08-01 2022-05-17 湖南中烟工业有限责任公司 Heating non-combustible cigarette, smoking device thereof and method for producing smoke
US12022859B2 (en) 2019-07-18 2024-07-02 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Thermal energy absorbers for tobacco heating products
US11330838B2 (en) 2019-07-19 2022-05-17 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Holder for aerosol delivery device with detachable cartridge
US11395510B2 (en) 2019-07-19 2022-07-26 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with rotatable enclosure for cartridge
US11589616B2 (en) 2020-04-29 2023-02-28 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with sliding and axially rotating locking mechanism
US11439185B2 (en) 2020-04-29 2022-09-13 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with sliding and transversely rotating locking mechanism
US11825872B2 (en) 2021-04-02 2023-11-28 R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Aerosol delivery device with protective sleeve

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
ES2138741T3 (en) 2000-01-16
DK0763985T3 (en) 2000-03-27
DE69512054T2 (en) 2000-02-10
DE69512054D1 (en) 1999-10-14
AU685641B2 (en) 1998-01-22
AU2625495A (en) 1996-01-05
EP0763985B1 (en) 1999-09-08
ATE184162T1 (en) 1999-09-15
EP0763985A1 (en) 1997-03-26

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