WO2016130136A1 - Récipient à enroulement à compartiments multiples - Google Patents

Récipient à enroulement à compartiments multiples Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2016130136A1
WO2016130136A1 PCT/US2015/015750 US2015015750W WO2016130136A1 WO 2016130136 A1 WO2016130136 A1 WO 2016130136A1 US 2015015750 W US2015015750 W US 2015015750W WO 2016130136 A1 WO2016130136 A1 WO 2016130136A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
individual containers
container structure
watertight
rolled
airtight
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2015/015750
Other languages
English (en)
Inventor
Hirshol H. PHEIR
Original Assignee
Pheir Hirshol H
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
Application filed by Pheir Hirshol H filed Critical Pheir Hirshol H
Priority to PCT/US2015/015750 priority Critical patent/WO2016130136A1/fr
Publication of WO2016130136A1 publication Critical patent/WO2016130136A1/fr

Links

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
    • B65D81/00Containers, packaging elements, or packages, for contents presenting particular transport or storage problems, or adapted to be used for non-packaging purposes after removal of contents
    • B65D81/32Containers, packaging elements, or packages, for contents presenting particular transport or storage problems, or adapted to be used for non-packaging purposes after removal of contents for packaging two or more different materials which must be maintained separate prior to use in admixture
    • B65D81/3283Cylindrical or polygonal containers, e.g. bottles, with two or more substantially axially offset, side-by-side compartments for simultaneous dispensing
    • B65D81/3288Cylindrical or polygonal containers, e.g. bottles, with two or more substantially axially offset, side-by-side compartments for simultaneous dispensing composed of two or more separate containers joined to each other
    • 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
    • B65D1/00Containers having bodies formed in one piece, e.g. by casting metallic material, by moulding plastics, by blowing vitreous material, by throwing ceramic material, by moulding pulped fibrous material, by deep-drawing operations performed on sheet material
    • B65D1/02Bottles or similar containers with necks or like restricted apertures, designed for pouring contents
    • B65D1/04Multi-cavity bottles

Definitions

  • Systems and methods herein generally relate to watertight and airtight containers, and more particularly to containers that contain multiple compartments.
  • a multi-compartment container structure disclosed herein has individual containers connected together. All the individual containers can have the same size and shape. Each of the individual containers has a flat base wall. Each of the individual containers is joined to immediately adjacent containers of the container structure by joints at wall edges of the flat base wall. The joints have a greater flexibility relative to the flat base wall. In other words, the base walls of adjacent individual containers are joined to one another by relatively more flexible joints.
  • each flat base wall of each individual container lies in the same plane when the multi-compartment container structure is in an unrolled state, but each flat base wall of the individual containers lies in different parallel planes when the container structure is in a rolled-up state.
  • the combination of flat base walls of the individual containers forms a multi-planar exterior of the container structure when the container structure is in the rolled-up state.
  • the individual containers comprise watertight and airtight caps that are positioned adjacent each other when the container structure is in the rolled-up state.
  • Another exemplary multi-compartment container structure herein also has individual containers connected together, and all the individual containers can have the same size and shape.
  • the individual containers can have a triangular- shaped tubular body.
  • the triangular- shaped tubular body has three flat walls sealed to each other and the flat walls form a triangular shape in cross-section of the tubular body.
  • triangular end walls form watertight and airtight seals at the ends of the triangular- shaped tubular body.
  • a cap provides a removable watertight and airtight seal for fill/dispense openings of the triangular end walls.
  • each of the individual containers is joined to immediately adjacent containers of the container structure by joints at wall edges of a flat base wall (which is one of the three flat walls forming the triangular- shaped tubular body). Again, the joints have a greater flexibility relative to the flat base wall.
  • the flat base wall of each the individual containers lie in the same plane when the container structure is in the unrolled state.
  • Each flat base wall of the individual containers lies in different parallel planes when the multi-compartment container structure is in a rolled-up state. The rolled-up state occurs when two flat base walls of adjacent ones of the individual containers fold relative to one another along one of the joints.
  • the combination of flat base walls of the individual containers forms a multiplanar exterior of the container structure when the container structure is in the rolled- up state.
  • the watertight and airtight caps of the individual containers are positioned adjacent each other when the container structure is in the rolled-up state.
  • the positions of the watertight and airtight caps of the individual containers allow all the watertight and airtight caps of the container structure to be grasped and opened simultaneously by the user.
  • the fill/dispense openings of the individual containers are all positioned adjacent each other when the container structure is in the rolled-up state.
  • the fill/dispense openings of the container structure are positioned to cause contents (e.g., liquid material, granular dry material, etc.) of the individual containers to mix after being dispensed (e.g., to mix when the watertight and airtight caps are opened and the contents is poured out the fill/dispense openings).
  • contents e.g., liquid material, granular dry material, etc.
  • the individual containers and the watertight and airtight caps prevent the contents maintained in different individual containers from mixing.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 2 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 3 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a partially rolled-up position
  • Figure 4 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a partially rolled-up position
  • Figure 5 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled- up position
  • Figure 6 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled- up position
  • Figure 7 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled- up position
  • Figure 8 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled- up position
  • Figure 9 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled- up position dispensing contents
  • Figure 10 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position dispensing contents
  • Figure 11 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position
  • Figure 12 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position
  • Figure 13 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position being filled with contents
  • Figure 14 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position being filled with contents
  • Figure 15 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position being filled with contents
  • Figure 16 is a cross-sectional drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position
  • Figure 17 is a cross-sectional drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position
  • Figure 18 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 19 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 20 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 21 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a partially rolled position
  • Figure 22 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position
  • Figure 23 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 24 is a cross-sectional drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position
  • Figure 25 is a cross-sectional drawing illustrating devices herein in a rolled-up position
  • Figure 26 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in an unrolled position.
  • Figure 27 is a perspective drawing illustrating devices herein in a partially rolled position.
  • the individual containers When rolled-up, the individual containers form an overall larger container that positions all individual container fill/dispense openings in one location. Then, the caps of the rolled-up container can be 'twisted' open and the contents of the individual containers can be poured into a receptacle (glass, pitcher, blender, etc.).
  • a receptacle glass, pitcher, blender, etc.
  • the caps e.g., cork, stopper, perforated neck, etc.
  • the contents can then be poured through the individual fill/dispense openings of the different containers into a pitcher of ice, a blender, a glass, etc., to be used or consumed.
  • Figure 1 illustrates one perspective view of an exemplary multicompartment container structure 100 herein.
  • this exemplary multi-compartment container structure 100 has individual containers 102 connected together, and all the individual containers 102 can have the same size and shape.
  • the individual containers 102 can have a triangular- shaped tubular body 106.
  • Other examples of differently shaped containers are discussed below.
  • the initial example presented in this disclosure has a triangular- shaped tubular body 106 that has three flat walls sealed to each other, and the three flat walls thereby form a triangular shape in a cross-section of the tubular body 106. See Figures 2, 4, 6, 8, etc., that illustrate how the triangular- shaped tubular body 106 has a triangular shape in cross- section. Also, as shown for example in Figures 2, 4, 6, 8, etc., triangular end walls 118 seal the ends of the triangular- shaped tubular body 106.
  • a removable watertight and airtight cap 110 seals fill/dispense openings 112 of the triangular end walls 118.
  • the openings 112 can be in the form of a neck or spout that are sealed with a screw-on cover, cork-type or stopper-type plug device, etc., 110, as shown in Figure 1.
  • item 112 can be fill/dispense openings or holes in the end walls 118 that will be opened when the caps or plugs/corks 110 are removed from the end walls 118, as shown in Figure 2. Note that in Figure 2, there is no neck and the cap 110 forms the entire protrusion from the end wall 118, and when the protrusion/cap 110 is removed from the end wall 118, an opening 112 will remain in the end wall 118.
  • each of the individual containers 102 is joined to immediately adjacent containers of the container structure by joints 104 at wall edges of a flat base wall 114 (of the three flat walls).
  • the joints 104 have a greater flexibility relative to the flat base wall 114 (either by being thinner or by being made of a different material) thereby allowing adjacent flat base walls 114 to fold relative to one another around a corresponding joint 104.
  • each flat base wall 114 of each the individual containers 102 lies in the same plane when the container structure is in the unrolled state.
  • each flat base wall 114 of the individual containers 102 lies in different parallel planes when the multi-compartment container structure is in a rolled-up state.
  • the rolled-up state occurs when two flat base walls 114 of adjacent ones of the individual containers 102 fold relative to one another along one of the wall edges 104 (as shown in perspective view in Figure 3 and in top- view in Figure 4 which shows the container structure 100 in the partially rolled-up state, where the rolling action is shown by block arrows).
  • two adjacent flat base walls 114 are folded relative to one another when the planes of the two adjacent flat base walls 114 are at a non-zero angle (0) with respect to each other (and such an angle is formed at the wall edge 104).
  • the combination of flat base walls 114 of the individual containers 102 forms a multi-planar exterior of the container structure when the container structure is in the rolled-up state, as shown in Figures 5 and 6.
  • the watertight and airtight caps 110 of the individual containers 102 are positioned adjacent each other when the container structure is in the rolled-up state.
  • the positions of the watertight and airtight caps 110 of the individual containers 102 allow all the watertight and airtight caps 110 of the container structure to be grasped and opened (e.g., removed, twisted-off, torn-off, pulled-out, unscrewed, etc.) simultaneously, as shown by the block arrow in Figure 7.
  • Figure 8 also shows that the fill/dispense openings 112 of the individual containers 102 are all positioned adjacent each other when the container structure is in the rolled-up state after the caps 110 are removed.
  • the watertight and airtight caps 110 are sized and positioned (when in the container structure 100 is in the rolled-up state) to be easily grasped simultaneously by a human user's hand or fingers, allowing the user to simultaneously twist, pull, tear, etc., all the watertight and airtight caps 110 of a given container structure 100 in a single motion, so as to simultaneously remove all watertight and airtight caps 110 from all individual containers 102 of the given container structure 100 (and this is illustrated by the block arrows in Figure 7).
  • the user can grab or pinch the overall hexagonal-shaped cap structure (created by the combination of the individual triangular- shaped caps 110 in the rolled-up structure) using their fingers or the palm on their hand, allowing the user to simultaneously grasp all caps 110 and
  • the fill/dispense openings 112 of the container structure are positioned to cause contents 140 (e.g., liquid material, granular or powdered dry material, etc.) of the individual containers 102 to be dispensed and to mix when the watertight and airtight caps 110 are opened and the contents 140 is poured out the fill/dispense openings 112 and into a container 142, such as a drinking glass.
  • contents 140 e.g., liquid material, granular or powdered dry material, etc.
  • Figure 10 illustrates many block arrows (identified by reference number 140) and this illustrates that different materials 140 are simultaneously dispensed from different openings 112, and that the different materials 140 combine (e.g., mix together) as they are being dispensed from the different openings 112.
  • the dispensed material 140 is shown as mixing into a single stream as it enters the container 142.
  • the dispensed material 140 begins as individual streams as it exits each different opening 112; however, these individual streams at least partially combine as they are poured together and as they enter the container 142.
  • the user can perform additional mixing of the different materials after the dispensed material 140 has been poured into the container 142.
  • Figure 10 illustrates that in Figure 10, the individual openings 112 are only identified using a single identification number (112) to avoid clutter in the drawings; however, Figure 8 uses individual identification numerals for each individual fill/dispense opening, and the structure in Figures 8 and 10 is the same, except that in Figure 10 the material 140 is shown as being dispensed. Also, Figures 9 and 10 illustrate that the rolled-up container structure 100 is tilted by the user (so that the end having the fill/dispense openings 112 is lower (relative to the surface of the earth) than the opposite end of the container structure 100) to allow the earth's gravitational force to cause the material contents 142 to exit the fill/dispense openings 112.
  • Figures 11 and 12 provide a different view of the structure, which more clearly illustrates an optional perforation feature between the caps 110 and the fill/dispense openings 112. More specifically, in Figure 11, the perforations (shown as dashed lines) can be more easily seen between the caps 110 and the fill/dispense openings 112. Such perforations do not disturb the watertight/airtight seals of the individual containers 102, but merely make tearing/removing the caps 110 from the openings 112 easier for the user by weakening the material in the area of the perforations (through scoring, forming incomplete holes that do not pass fully through the material, etc.). In Figure 12, the fill/dispensed caps 110 have been removed (as discussed above) allowing the fill/dispense openings 112 to be available to
  • the openings 112 have been described as fill/dispense openings, meaning that the openings 112 can be used to fill the individual containers 102 with different materials 140, and/or can be used for dispensing the contents 140 from the individual containers 102.
  • Figures 13-15 shows some exemplary ways in which the individual containers 102 can be filled with the different materials 140.
  • the caps 110 are not in place, allowing the contents 140 to be placed, poured, pumped, injected, etc., into the individual containers 102 through the fill/dispense openings 112 (after which the caps 110 are positioned to seal the openings 112).
  • the container structure 100 can be made of a somewhat flexible material that can be self-sealing if a small enough injection hole is utilized to inject the material.
  • the injection process can be combined with a heating process that re-melts the material of the container structure 100, thereby sealing any injection holes as they are made.
  • Figure 15 illustrates that the flat base wall 114 can comprise a flap that can be open to allow the different materials 140 to be inserted, placed, poured, pumped, injected, etc., into the individual containers 102.
  • the flat base wall 114 is sealed to the other walls (to create the structure shown in Figure 2, for example) to again create the watertight and airtight sealed individual containers 102 that are described above.
  • these materials 140 can be any form of materials, liquids, solids, crystalline materials, powdered materials, liquids containing solids, pressurize materials, carbonated materials, etc.
  • the resulting rolled-up container structure will have four sides (as shown in cross-sectional view in Figure 16); similarly, if there are five individual containers 102, the resulting rolled-up container structure will have five sides (as shown in cross- sectional view in Figure 17).
  • the number and/or cross-sectional size of individual containers 102 that are included within a single container structure 100 may be subject to the usage of the container. If, for example, a user-consumable drink that contains three distinct substances (e.g., water in one individual container, powered flavoring in one individual container, and sugar in one individual container) may only include three individual containers (if each container has sufficient volume to hold a prescribed quantity of material), which would result in a triangular- shaped container when rolled-up. Some of the individual containers can contain the same material, depending upon quantity requirements.
  • three distinct substances e.g., water in one individual container, powered flavoring in one individual container, and sugar in one individual container
  • Some of the individual containers can contain the same material, depending upon quantity requirements.
  • the rolled-up container structure herein can contain as many sides as there are individual containers and can be triangular, square, pentagonal, hexagonal, etc., and the number of individual containers may depend upon what the container structure 100 maintains. Therefore, containers having a triangular- shaped tubular body 106 and a rolled-up container having a hexagonal shape are only examples, and the disclosed structure is intended to include all shaped individual and rolled-up structures.
  • each of the individual containers 102 include a flat face wall 114, and the joints 104 between the individual containers 100 allow the container structure 100 to be rolled-up, the remaining structure of the individual containers 102 can take almost any shape. Therefore, for example, as shown in Figures 18 and 19, the remaining structure of individual containers 126 can have a curved shape, and this curve shaped portion 126 in Figures 18 and 19 can be flexible (e.g., as a bag, pouch, or pouch-like structure and becomes curved as it is filled with contents) or the curve shaped portion 126 can be non-flexible and remain curved in all situations (whether full or empty).
  • each flat face wall 114 can comprise many different flat sections 124 that run from end wall 118 to end wall 118.
  • the flat sections 124 of each flat face wall 114 can be more easily seen in Figure 21, which illustrates the structure shown in Figure 20 in partially rolled-up form.
  • Figure 22 illustrates the same structure shown in Figures 20 and 21 in fully rolled-up form.
  • the 'rigid' outer shell 114 (i.e. the exterior 114 when rolled-up) can be strips of rigid material 124. Also, as shown, there can be many strips 124 of rigid material for each of the inner softer/malleable pouches/bags 126, such that each relatively more flexible pouch/bag 124 spans multiple lengths of the rigid strips 124. When the container is flat or unrolled, it sits flat because the inner pouches/bags 124 are flexible and soft, and the inner pouches/bags 124 spread evenly over the rigid strips 124.
  • Figured 23 illustrates that the individual containers 102 can be different than triangular or pouch-shaped structures in cross-section, and in Figure 23 the bodies 116 are six-sided bodies in cross-section (were a five-sided body 116 is connected to the flat face wall 114).
  • the individual containers in Figures 24 and 25 (where the container structure 100 is shown unrolled in Figure 24 and rolled-up in Figure 25) the individual containers can have a rectangular shape in cross-section. Note that with the rectangular- shaped individual containers 102 (in Figures 24 and 25) the joints 104 can be longer (larger) than the joints 104 used for triangular- shaped individual containers 102 shown in Figure 1.
  • Figures 26 and 27 illustrate an unrolled (Figure 26) and rolled-up ( Figure 27) container structure 100, where the individual containers 102 include curved outer face walls 134 (in place of the flat face walls 114) that can be flexible or rigid; and these illustrated structures 100 otherwise maintain all the features discussed above with respect to the triangular structures shown in Figures 1-15.
  • An additional feature shown in Figures 18, 19, and 23 is a strip or band 150 that connects all of the caps 110 together.
  • This strip or band 150 helps ensure that all the caps 110 will be positioned in the same location when the structure is rolled-up, and helps ensure that all the caps are simultaneously removed when the user twists the caps 110 off the rolled-up container structure 100.
  • All structures described herein can be made of any material capable of forming a watertight or airtight container, and such structures can be formed using any manufacturing process, whether currently known or developed in the future.
  • the container structures described herein can be formed of plastics, glasses, metals, alloys, rubbers, etc., or any combinations of such materials; and the structures herein can be fully (or have sections that are) transparent, translucent, non- transparent, etc.
  • the container structures herein can be made using any material capable of forming a watertight or airtight container, and such structures can be formed using any manufacturing process, whether currently known or developed in the future.
  • the container structures described herein can be formed of plastics, glasses, metals, alloys, rubbers, etc., or any combinations of such materials; and the structures herein can be fully (or have sections that are) transparent, translucent, non- transparent, etc.
  • the container structures herein can be made using any combination
  • the containers mentioned herein can be made of different materials than other portions of the containers or the entire container structure can be made of a single uniform material, depending upon the use of the container structure.
  • the containers herein can be one-time-use containers, or can be reusable. [0064] Therefore, the material makeup, appearance, size, shapes, etc., of the structures described herein can vary for different uses, so long as the flat base walls can be folded along the joints to allow the structure to be rolled-up from a flat state to a rolled-up state, where all the caps and openings are positioned adjacent one another when the structure is in the rolled-up state.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Ceramic Engineering (AREA)
  • Closures For Containers (AREA)

Abstract

L'invention concerne une structure de récipient à compartiments multiples (100), ladite structure ayant des récipients individuels (102) reliés entre eux. Tous les récipients individuels peuvent avoir la même taille et la même forme, et chacun possède une paroi de base plate (114). Chacun des récipients individuels est réuni à des récipients immédiatement adjacents au niveau de bords de paroi de la paroi de base plate. Les raccords (104) ont une plus grande souplesse par rapport à la paroi de base plate (114). La paroi de base plate (114) de chaque récipient individuel se situe dans le même plan lorsque la structure de récipient à compartiments multiples (100) est dans un état déroulé. Chaque paroi de base plate (114) des récipients individuels se trouve dans différents plans parallèles lorsque la structure de récipient (100) est dans un état enroulé. La combinaison des parois de base plates des récipients individuels forme un extérieur multi-planaire de la structure de récipient (100) lorsque la structure de récipient est dans l'état enroulé. Les récipients individuels (102) ont des capuchons étanches à l'air et à l'eau (110) qui sont positionnés à proximité les uns des autres lorsque la structure de récipient est dans l'état enroulé.
PCT/US2015/015750 2015-02-13 2015-02-13 Récipient à enroulement à compartiments multiples WO2016130136A1 (fr)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/US2015/015750 WO2016130136A1 (fr) 2015-02-13 2015-02-13 Récipient à enroulement à compartiments multiples

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/US2015/015750 WO2016130136A1 (fr) 2015-02-13 2015-02-13 Récipient à enroulement à compartiments multiples

Publications (1)

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WO2016130136A1 true WO2016130136A1 (fr) 2016-08-18

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2540119B (en) * 2015-05-22 2020-12-30 Richmond Containers Ctp Ltd Liquid dispenser

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1503901A (fr) * 1966-10-18 1967-12-01 Emballage transformable pour confiserie et autres produits
GB2305162A (en) * 1995-09-13 1997-04-02 Thomas & Betts Corp Multi-unit packages
WO2001044065A1 (fr) * 1999-12-14 2001-06-21 Green Ronald D Systeme de distribution pliable
DE10207763A1 (de) * 2002-02-23 2003-09-04 Fischer Artur Werke Gmbh Mehrkomponenten-Kartusche
WO2005110872A1 (fr) * 2004-05-17 2005-11-24 Sergio Luiz Wilbert Recipient modulaire compose de deux, trois ou quatre elements emboitables

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1503901A (fr) * 1966-10-18 1967-12-01 Emballage transformable pour confiserie et autres produits
GB2305162A (en) * 1995-09-13 1997-04-02 Thomas & Betts Corp Multi-unit packages
WO2001044065A1 (fr) * 1999-12-14 2001-06-21 Green Ronald D Systeme de distribution pliable
DE10207763A1 (de) * 2002-02-23 2003-09-04 Fischer Artur Werke Gmbh Mehrkomponenten-Kartusche
WO2005110872A1 (fr) * 2004-05-17 2005-11-24 Sergio Luiz Wilbert Recipient modulaire compose de deux, trois ou quatre elements emboitables

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2540119B (en) * 2015-05-22 2020-12-30 Richmond Containers Ctp Ltd Liquid dispenser

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