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GB2116529A - Screw closure - Google Patents

Screw closure Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2116529A
GB2116529A GB08305464A GB8305464A GB2116529A GB 2116529 A GB2116529 A GB 2116529A GB 08305464 A GB08305464 A GB 08305464A GB 8305464 A GB8305464 A GB 8305464A GB 2116529 A GB2116529 A GB 2116529A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
surface portion
skirt
gasket
plastics material
end panel
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status 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 status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08305464A
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GB8305464D0 (en
GB2116529B (en
Inventor
Kenneth Martin Sinnott
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
WR Grace and Co
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WR Grace and Co
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Publication date
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Priority to GB08305464A priority Critical patent/GB2116529B/en
Publication of GB8305464D0 publication Critical patent/GB8305464D0/en
Publication of GB2116529A publication Critical patent/GB2116529A/en
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Publication of GB2116529B publication Critical patent/GB2116529B/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
    • 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
    • B65D41/0435Threaded or like caps or cap-like covers secured by rotation with separate sealing elements
    • B65D41/0442Collars or rings
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C45/00Injection moulding, i.e. forcing the required volume of moulding material through a nozzle into a closed mould; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C45/16Making multilayered or multicoloured articles
    • B29C45/1676Making multilayered or multicoloured articles using a soft material and a rigid material, e.g. making articles with a sealing part

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

Abstract

A bottle cap 1 moulded of a first plastics material includes a skirt 3 having a step between a first inner surface portion 11a and a second inner surface portion 11b of the skirt, and a second plastics composition (not shown) defining a gasket covering a radially outer part 9 of the inner surface of the cap end panel 2 and also the first inner surface portion 11a of the skirt and at least a part of the second inner surface portion 11b, to achieve a combined side seal and top seal upon application of the cap to a bottle neck. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Screw closure The present invention relates to a screw closure e.g. for a bottle, the closure being moulded of plastics material and being effective to provide a gas-tight seal when the contents of the bottle are to be packaged at a pressure which is different from the external atmospheric pressure, for example because the contents are carbonated, giving an internal pressure in excess of the external atmospheric pressure.
Traditionally the packaging of liquids, such as carbonated beverages, under pressure has involved the use of a relatively strong metal screw cap or crown with a sealing gasket to seal between the metal closure and the container neck.
Recently, attempts have been made to provide screw closures of moulded plastics construction for bottle closing in such applications where a superatmospheric pressure is expected within the bottle.
Whereas plastics closures have for some time been used with non-carbonated packs where it is possible for the seal formation, e.g., a flexible bead, to be an integral part of the plastics material making up the moulded closure and there is no need for a separately-formed gasket, a more resilient plastics sealing gasket is considered desirable to withstand the pressure of a carbonated beverage in the container. One proposal for lining a threaded plastics cap is disclosed in our U.K. Patent Specification No. 1327583 in which microwave radiation was to be used for heating the gasket material without damaging the closure.
Other proposals for a plastics screw cap with a relatively softer gasket composition are disclosed in U.K. Patent Specifications Nos. 1 164367, 1203068, 1255739, 1592793, 2022064 and 2026995 all using a separately formed liner snapped in place, or pushed into a socket, in the screw cap. U.K.
Patent Specification No. 1,577,663 discloses a plastics cap having a flowed-in gasket illustrated in the form of a flat annular sheet located on the inner face of the end panel. The sealing action achieved with the bottle closure of British Patent Specification No. 1,677,663 is solely "top-sealing", in that all of the sealing action is generated by compression of the gasket sheet between the inside of the cap end panel and the end rim of the neck of the bottle, jar or can sealed by the closure.
Another proposal for sealing a liquid under reratmospheric pressure using a lined plastics screw cap is disclosed in WO 81/00822 an WO 810083. in which the gasket comprises a flat centre panel keyed to the corresponding surface of the top panel of the screw cap, and is bounded by a peripheral thickened gasket portion which engages a frusto conical neck rim of the container (in this case a specially designed bottle) and which is retained against the screw cap end panel by an integral bead of the screw cap positioned at the root of the cap skirt. This proposal suffers the disadvantage that it requires an unusual bottle neck having a very accurately defined external profile for sealing with the gasket peripheral portion.
Apart from WO 81/00822,8100838 and U.K. Patent Specification No. 1203068 which all require accurate conformity between the gasket and the container neck, the prior proposals for lined plastics screw caps all rely on a solely top sealing action.
A more recent proposal, unpublished at the priority date of the present application, comprises the disclosure of WO 82/02182 where a radially inwardly extending rib on the root of the cap skirt traps a rotatable sealing liner for sealing on the neck rim of a plastics bottle.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a lined plastics closure for a pressure-holding pack, for example a carbonated beverage pack, for use with an injection-moulded or blow-moulded threaded container or with other containers such as glass jars or bottles which may have less tight tolerances.
A first aspect of the present invention provides a screw closure comprising a cap of a first plastics material having an end panel and an internally threaded skirt joined to the end panel, the radially inwardly facing surface of the skirt being stepped to define first and second inner surface portions of which the second inner surface portion is further from the end panel, and the said first inner surface portion having a diameter which is smaller than that of said second inner surface portion; and a flowedin gasket on the end panel near its junction with the skirt, the gasket being of a second plastics material which is softer than the first plastics material, said gasket extending over both the said first inner surface portion and at least a part of said second inner surface portion.
The stepped inner periphery to the skirt ensures that upon application of the closure to a container the plastics composition of the gasket will become confined in a narrow gap between the exterior of the container neck and the surrounding said first inner surface portion of the cap skirt, to be compressed tightly in that gap, particularly on the step between the first and second inner surface portions, as the closure is moved axially downwardly onto the neck.
A second aspect of the present invention provides a process of forming a container closure comprising moulding, of a first plastics material, a screw cap having an end panel and an internally threaded skirt, said skirt having on its radially inner surface a step between a first inner surface portion and a second inner surface portion which has a diameter larger than that of said first inner surface portion and includes the internal threading of said skirt; and forming a flowed-in gasket of a second plastics material softer than said first plastics material, said gasket covering (a) at least the radially outer region of said end panel, (b) the said first inner surface portion of the skirt and (c) at least a part of said second inner surface portion of the skirt.
Yet a further aspect of the invention provides a process of closing a container comprising: taking a closure according to the first aspect; effecting relative rotation between said closure and a necked container to be sealed therewith, said container having an external surface portion near the rim of its neck which is just smaller than said first inner surface portion of the skirt to be surrounded by said first inner surface and to define therewith an annular first gap which is smaller than the corresponding annular second gap just to the other side of said step; and continuing said relative rotation between the closure and the container neck until said second plastics composition of the gasket fills said annular first gap and is compressed against the axially outwardly facing end wall of the neck.
In order that the present invention may more readily be understood the following description is given, merely by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: FIGURE 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a first embodiment of moulded closure showing its application to glass finish of the MCA 1 type (but with the gasket composition omitted); FIGURE 2 is a view similar to Figure 1 but showing a modified arrangement where the glass finish is of the "MCA 2" and "GF 320" type (the glass finish intended for the "Flavorlok" 28 mm pilfer proof closure marketed by Metal Closures Ltd), this time with the gasket material shown; FIGURE 3 corresponds to Figure 1 but shows the "GF 301" type of glass finish (designed for 28 mm Metal Closures Flavorlok closures); and FIGURE 4 shows a modified form of the cap of Figure 2 but before application of the bottle neck.
The moulded closure in accordance with the present invention includes a cap 1 comprising an end panel 2, and a skirt 3, joined to the end panel 2 to define a corner region 4 having a generally cylindrical exterior vearing suitable knurling formations to assist removal of the screw cap 1. The internal screw threading 5 of the skirt may be a single start thread or a multi-start thread.
As an important aspect of the invention, the cap 1 is stepped to include a shoulder 11 projecting radially inwardly near the corner 4 between the panel 2 and the skirt 3 so as to define, at the "root" of the skirt 3 of the cap, a first inner surface portion 11 a of reduced diameter with respect to that of a second inner surface portion 11 b. The purpose of this reduced diameter first inner surface portion 11 a (which may preferably be cylindrical, as shown) is to define a narrow gap between the internal profile of the skirt root and the substantially cylindrical exterior surface 1 2 of the container neck (without risk of the second portion 11 b fouling the external threading 6 of the neck).As a result, when the cap 1 is driven downwardly onto the end of the neck of, for example, a bottle, the gasket material 13 (see Figures 2 and 4) becomes squeezed in the gap between these two surfaces 11 a and 12 and provides a region of high compressive stress which enhances the sealing action. The stress is particularly high on the corner of the shoulder 11 at the step from the first inner surface portion 11 a to the second inner surface portion 11 b. As indicated above, this seal-enhancement is equally effective with super-atmospheric pressures inside the container as with infra-atmospheric pressures.
The embodiments shown in Figures 2 and 3 have the same important characteristics as the embodiment shown in Figure 1, but are subject to minor variations in shape in order to accommodate different existing glass finish designs of glass bottles used as the container.
For example, the glass finish configuration in Figures 1 and 2 has a deep tapering base portion (14 in Figure 1 and 1 4a in Figure 2) which is omitted from Figure 3 where there is, instead, a locating toroida! portion 1 9. The function of this base portion 1 4 or 1 4a is to provide a retaining bead for a removable pilfer-proof extension of the cap where such an extension is provided at the bottom of the skirt 3. Such an alternative is not shown in the drawings but is conventional in the art. In the embodiment of Figures 1 and 2 the cap 1 has the radially inward profile of the lower part of its skirt 3 of stepped formation around the base portion 14 (see shoulder 1 5 in Figure 1 and 1 5a in Figure 2).
The embodiment shown in Figure 3 has differences, again resulting from the different glass finish for which it is intended, in that the threading 5 of the cap 1 starts much further away from the shoulder 1 a at the corner of the cap than does the threading 5 of Figure 1 from the corner 11 of that embodiment.
The configuration of the gasket material 1 3 shown in Figure 2 will be substantially the same for each of the embodiments, taking into account the minor variations of geometry of the cap and of the glass finish. In each case there will be:- (a) a relatively flat region 1 3a compressed between the end wall 8 of the glass finish and the floor 9 of the gasket-receiving recess 10 of the cap; (b) a cylindrical portion 1 3c under high compression between the skirt first portion 11 a and the substantially cylindrical outer surface 12 (Figure 1) of the container neck at the shoulder 11 (Figure 1); (c) a transition region 1 3b at the corner 4 of the gasket-receiving recess 10 between the flat end portion 1 3a and the cylindrical portion 1 3c: (d) an optional slightly compressed zone 1 3a radially inwardly of the flat portion 1 3a where the gasket material has become extruded around the inner corner 1 6 of the glass finish; and (e) a relatively deformation-free portion 1 3d beyond the shoulder 11, i.e. on the second inner surface portion 11 a of the skirt.
Figure 4 shows the configuration of the gasket before compression and in this case the crosssection exhibits a smooth arcuate surface 1 7 which is substantially a continuation of the flat free end face 1 8a of a gasket-confining rib 18 on the end panel 2.
The gasket-confining rib 1 8 has, as can be seen clearly in Figure 3, an undercut radially outer surface 1 8b which serves both to limit radially inward migration of the plastics composition during formation of the gasket (by spin-lining techniques) and to prevent detachment of the gasket composition from the gasket receiving recess 10, by virtue of the undercut shape of the surface 1 8b.
An optional further gasket-retaining bead 21 (Figure 4) projects radially inwardly from the cap skirt 3 to limit the extent to which the viscous plastics gasket composition migrates up the cap skirt during spin-lining. Although the gasket should cover the shoulder 11 and is therefore formed so as to cover at least a part of the second inner surface portion 11 b, such composition in the region 1 3d does not add significantly to the sealing action and is therefore advantageously kept to a minimum by the bead 21.
Such a gasket-retaining flange is analagous to those disclosed in WO 82/00822, W0/00838 and U.K.
2092999.
In each of the drawings the axis of symmetry 20 of the closure is shown in chain dotted lines so as to give some idea of the overall appearance of the cap, bearing in mind that only one half of the closure cross-section is shown. The dotted outline for the glass finish illustrates the minimum diameter tolerance for the bottle neck internal diameter.
The lining of the already moulded cap is achieved by placing a quantity of a plastics composition, which is softer than that from which the cap 1 is moulded, in the gasket-receiving recess 10 of the already injection-moulded cap and shaping the gasket composition uniformly within the recess 10, up the side of the skirt root, overall of the first inner surface 11 a and onto the shoulder 11 of the skirt and beyond the shoulder 11, in order to ensure that the shoulder 11 is covered right around the cap circumference.What is important to the present invention is that the annular zone between the substantially cylindrical external surface 1 2 of the bottle neck and the first portion 11 a of the cap skirt interior surface should be (a) filled with plastics composition when the cap is applied to the bottle and (b) subjected to sufficient compressive stress in order to enhance the sealing action when the cap is fully closed onto the bottle.
The cap 1 may be moulded of any suitable thermoplastic or thermoset polymer, for example an olefin polymer. Specific examples include polypropylene, polyethylene, an ethylene-propylene copolymer, and a blend of polypropylene and polyethylene.
The gasket may be shaped in any one of several possible ways. For example, one method comprises spinning a plastisol, i.e. a dispersion of a resin (for example a vinyl resin) in a plasticiser, in the gasket-receiving recess 10 of a cap 1. The cap may then be preheated, for example in a hot air oven, before being heated for fluxing the plastisol, i.e. applying heat to cause the vinyl resin to absorb the plasticiser so as to form what can be regarded as a solid solution and thereby be capable of producing a solidified gasket upon cooling.The application of heat may be effected by use of microwave energy, for example as disclosed in our British Specification No. 2,051,660A. In that British Patent Specification there is mention of various possible materials for use as both resin and plasticiser, and it is also indicated that the microwave energy application system allows moulded caps to be equipped with a gasket of a conventional PVC resin plastisol. The cap is substantially transparent to the microwave energy and consequently the microwave heating achieves fluxing of the plastisol without any distortion of the previously injection-moulded cap 1.
Another possible method for lining the cap 1, again using the spin lining technique, is to dispense a thermoplastic gasketting material heated to liquid or other form, optionally mixed with a foaming gas, into the cap 1 while the cap is being spun in a chuck, so that when the gasketting material cools it forms in the cap a gasket which may be of closed cell foam type. No further heating, for fluxing the gasket, is envisaged with this system. Such a process, with foaming, is described and claimed in European Patent Application No. 0031 673. Compositions suitable for this system comprise ethylene homopolymers and/or copolymers, for example ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer and one or more resins, for example of the rosin ester type. The compositions may also include a surfactant, nucleating agent, and pigment.As indicated above, the plastisol compound and the molten thermoplastic material are applied to the plastic cap by spin lining.
The gasketted closures, formed as described above, are then applied by screwing up onto the container neck, e.g. the glass finish of Figures 1, 2 or 3, after the container has been filled, preferably with a carbonated liquid in order to exploit the pressure-holding characteristics of the closure in accordance with the present invention.
It will of course be appreciated that application of the closure onto the neck is carried out by a screwing-up action using an appropriate rotating chuck to hold the closure relative to the neck while the container and/or the closure can be driven to rotate.
The closure is reclosable, in that after unscrewing by the user to open the container the container can thus be manually reclosed with the same closure.
To enhance retention of the gasket to the cap, the cap 1 may be provided with the optional radially outer undercut 1 8c shown in Figure 3, and also the cap end panel (e.g. the floor 9 of the gasketreceiving recess 10) may be moulded to have a rough surface finish.
In order to evaluate the improvement afforded by the present invention, comparative tests were made using a nominal 28 mm closure in accordance with the present invention (designed according to Figures 1 and 2), and a "comparison closure" having the same general dimensions but lacking the stepped internal surface portion at the root of the skirt in that the larger radius second inner surface portion 1 1 b extended substantially to the plane of the floor 9 of the gasket-receiving recess. However for convenience the "comparison closure" did include a small keying flange near the junction of the skirt and the top panel of the closure, so as to help to ensure location of the gasket in the closure. No similar flange was incorporated in the closure of Figures 1 and 2.
The gasket composition used was a hot melt plastics material which is solid at room temperature and at temperatures up to its melting point (which is high enough to exceed any temperature to which a commercial pack is subjected during storage but this melting point of the gasket 13 is lower than the melting point of the plastics material used for the cap 1 itself). The results of these comparative tests are given in the following example A series of test runs was carried out by forming a flowed-in gasket in a series of the closures shown in Figures 1 and 2 and in a similar number of comparison closures which lacked the stepped inner surface according to the invention, and these closures were each lined with three separate volumes of the gasket composition.
In the case of the closures according to Figures 1 and 2, the smallest volume is the minimum required to cover the shoulder 11 in the case of the closures having the "corner feature" formed by the step in the inner surface of the skit wall, and the other two values are increased over that minimum value by 10% and 20%, respectiveiy.
In the case of the comparison closures, the minimum film volume chosen was about 10% higher than that used for the closures according to Figures 1 and 2, and again two further correspondingly greater values were also used.
The lined closures were then applied to a standard set of glass bottles at various different application torques the precise values of which were not noted but which are represented, in the first column "machine setting" of Tables 1 and 2, by a numeral which represents the number of incrementai increases in pre-stressing of a spring controlling the application torque clutch. Closures applied with the machine set at "increment 1" were not properly closed, and comparison closures applied with the machine set at "increment 10" were found to break due to excessive stressing. The "machine setting 7" condition corresponds to a slowly applied (i.e. virtually static) application torque of 12 in.lb (13.8 cm.Kg).
The sealing performance of each of these closures was measured in terms of the pressure at which the closures starts to vent, when the closed bottle is subjected to the following test procedure.
Initiaily the pressure is increased to 100 Ibs/in2 (689 KPa) and held at that pressure for one minute.
Then the pressure was increased to 1 50 Ibs/in2 (1 034 KPa) following which it was held steady for two minutes. Next the pressure was increased to 175 Ibs/in2 (1207 KPa) and then held for a further two minute period, and finally the pressure was increased to 200 Ibs/in2 (1379 KPa) and held for ten seconds before release of pressure. The tests were carried out using GF320 glass finish (equivalent to MCA2) and the head load on the closure applicator was set at 40 Kg. Table I below gives the pressure at which the onset of venting is observed. The test is carried out with the closed bottle neck just below the surface of a water bath in an Owens Illinois Secure Seal Tester and venting is observed in the form of bubbles escaping from between the closure and the glass finish.
The removal torque test was carried out using a United Glass "KORK--AA-TOROUE" Torque Tester to remove the closure two minutes after closing of the bottle. The bottle (glass finish GF320) was filled with Schweppes tonic water at 40C and the glass around the sealing area was wetted before closing.
TABLE I VENTING PRESSURE -- LB/IN2 (KPa)
COMPARISON CLOSURE CLOSURE OF FIGS. 1 AND 2.
Machine 290 300 330 260 280 300 Setting mg mg mg mg mg mg 7 160+(1102) 160+(1102) 188+(1296) 200+(1378) 200+(1378) 200+(1378) 122 (841) 127 (875) 134 (923) 200+(1378) 200+(1378) 199+(1371) In Table I above and Tables II and Ill below the film volumes are expressed as film weight which is easier to determine.
As can be seen from Table I above, the venting pressure results for a bottle closed under an application torque giving "increment 7" -- equivalent to 12 in.lb (13.8 cm.Kg) -- give a venting pressure of at least 200 lbs/in2(1379 KPa) in the case of a closure according to Figures 1 and 2, but the comparable test on the "comparison closure" gives venting pressures of just above 1 60 lbs/cm2 (1103 KPa) in the case of the minimum and intermediate film volume and a value of 188 lbs/cm2 (1296 KPa) in the case of the highest film volume.
When the application torque is reduced to "increment 2" in each case the venting pressure result obtained with the closure of Figures 1 and 2 is substantially unchanged whereas the venting pressure of the comparison closure has dropped to a value from 122 lbs/cm2 (841 KPa) to 134 lbs/cm2 /924 KPa).
Table II below compares the removal torque values obtained under comparable test conditions on the two closure types.
TABLE II REMOVAL TORQUE - IN. LBS (CM.KG)
COMPARISON CLOSURE CLOSURE OF FIGS. 1 AND 2 Machine 290 300 330 260 280 300 Setting mg mg mg mg mg mg 9 15.4(17.7) 21.4(24.6) 21.4(24.6) 16.8 (19.3) 20.6 (23.7) 20.8 (23.9) 8 14.6(16.8) 16.2 (18.6) 16.6(19.1) 15.0(17.2) 16.6(19.1) 16.8(19.3) 7 13.2 (15.2) 15.2 (17.5) 15.0 (17.2) 14.2 (16.3) 15.2 (17.5) 15.0(17.2) 6 12.2 (14.0) 12.6 (14.5) 12.0 (13.8) 12.6 (14.5) 12.4 (14.3) 12.8 (14.7) 5 13.4 (15.4) 12.0 (13.8) 11.8(13.6) 13.6 (15.6) 13.0 (15.0) 13.6(15.6) 4 11.4(13.1) 11.4(13.1) 11.0(12.7) 12.6 (14.5) 12.4 (14.3) 12.0 (13.8) 3 10.8 (12.4) 9.8 (11.3) 10.4 (12.0) 12.2 (14.0) 10.6 (12.2) 11.0(12.7) 2 9.6(11.0) 9.4 (10.8) 9.6(11.0) 10.0(11.5) 10.0 (11.5) 10.2 (11.7) Table II shows that, in most cases, the removal torque is slightly higher in the case of the closure according to Figures 1 and 2 than in the case of the comparison closure. However, a removal torque of above 1 8 in.lbs (20.7 cm.Kg) is considered as being unacceptably high for a reclosable bottle closure and it is clear from the results that only when the application torque is increased to "increment 9" is the removal torque too high.In the case of the closure according to Figures 1 and 2, the removal torque remains below 18 ins.lbs (20.7 cm.Kg) and is as low as 10 in.lbs (11.51 cm.Kg) at "increment 2", the minimum application torque to ensure closing in the case of the comparison closure.
Bearing in mind that the application head includes the possibility of five intermediate machine settings between "increment 8" and "increment 2", the maximum and minimum values covered by this test, the closure in accordance with the present invention performs much better in that the removal torque is always within acceptable limits and the venting pressure is in almost every case in excess of 200 Ibs/in2 (1379 KPa) whereas with the comparison closure, the removal torques are slightly reduced but the venting performance is not appreciably improved.
A further test which is conventionally carried out in order to determine acceptability from a commercial point of view concerns closure venting performance. This was considered an important test in order to ensure that despite having better pressure-holding qualities by virtue of the stepped skirt root, the ability of the closure to vent safely during removal was not affected. The closure venting performance tests were carried out in a Coca-Cola (RTM) tester incorporating a flowmeter measuring the flow of compressed air into, and therefore out of, the test bottle, as the closure was progressively removed by monitored rotation.It is necessary for the closure to begin venting after rotation through no more than 1000 from fully closed, and the closure should remain attached to the bottle neck by virtue of the interengaging threads at all angles below 2700 of removal rotation. Furthermore the air flow during the venting stage should be in excess of 400 Ft3/hr (1 1.33 m3/hr) for angles of up to 2500. The results of this closure venting performance are shown in Table Ill below.
TABLE III CLOSURE VENTING PERFORMANCE
FLOW RATES Ft3/hr (m3/hr) at FILM VENT SEPARATION WF ANGLE 1000 1500 200" OCCURS AT 265 mg 350 315(8.92) 455 (12.88) 500 (14.16) 2800 265 mg 35 315 (8.92) 455 (12.88) 500 (14.16) 280 265 mg 300 310(8.78) 440 (12.46) 490(13.88) 2800 265 mg 300 315(8.92) 450(12.74) 470 (13.31) 2900 In the closure venting performance tests, the closure in accordance with Figures 1 and 2 gave satisfactory performance and is considered commercially acceptable. No closure venting performance tests were carried out with the comparison closure it had already failed the pressure retention test.
Additional tests were carried out using further modified 28 mm closures in accordance with the present invention (in which the axial length of the first inner surface portion 11 a was increased with respect to the otherwise identical cap shown in Figures 1 and 2, used in the previous tests). The results gave marginally increased removal torques and no detected improvement in sealing performance.
Although in Figures 1 to 4, the cap 1 has a gasket-receiving recess confining the gasket to the radially outer part of the cap top panel, this is optional in that the gasket could extend right in to the centre of the top panel.

Claims (23)

1. A screw closure comprising a cap of a first plastics material having an end panel and an internally threaded skirt joined to the end panel, the radially inwardly facing surface of the skirt being stepped to define first and second inner surface portions of which the second inner surface portion is further from the end panel, and the said first inner surface portion having a diameter which is smaller than that of said second inner surface portion; and a flowed-in gasket on the end panel near its junction with the skirt, the gasket being of a second plastics material which is softer than the first plastics material, said gasket extending over both the said first inner surface portion and at least a part of said second inner surface portion.
2. A screw closure according to claim 1, wherein said first inner surface portion is of substantially cylindrical form.
3. A screw closure according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said first inner surface portion extends right up to the end panel.
4. A screw closure according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said gasket is of annular form and has its radially inner extremity bounded by a bead projecting inwardly from a generally flat inner face of said end panel.
5. A screw closure according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein said gasket extends radially inwardly across the cap end panel to its centre.
6. A screw closure according to claim 4 or 5, wherein said bead has an undercut radially outer surface to key said gasket in place.
7. A screw closure according to any one of the preceding claims, and including a further step in the skirt, bounding a transition between (a) the end of said second portion remote from the end panel and (b) a substantially cylindrical third inner surface portion of the skirt having a diameter larger than that of said second inner surface portion.
8. A screw closure according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said gasket has been formed by spin-lining of a sealant material disposed near the radially outer extremity of the inner face of said end panel.
9. A screw closure according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein said body has been injection-moulded and said first plastics material is an olefin resin.
10. A screw closure according to claim 9, and including a radially inwardly extending gasketretaining bead on said second inner surface portion of the cap skirt to limit the extent of migration of said second plastics material during the spin lining operation.
11. A screw closure substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to, and as illustrated in, the accompanying drawings.
12. A process of forming a container closure comprising moulding, of a first plastics material, a screw cap having an end panel and an internally threaded skirt, said skirt having on its radially inner surface a step between a first inner surface portion and a second inner surface portion which has a diameter larger than that of said first inner surface portion and includes the internal threading of said skirt; and forming a flowed-in gasket of a second plastics material softer than said first plastics material, said gasket covering (a) at least the radially outer region of said end panel (b) the said first inner surface portion of the skirt and (c) at least a part of said second inner surface portion of the skirt.
1 3. A process of closing a container comprising moulding, of a first plastics material, a screw cap having an end panel and an internally threaded skirt, said skirt having on its radially inner surface a step between a first inner surface portion and a second inner surface portion which has a diameter larger than that of said first inner surface portion and includes the internal threading of said skirt; forming a flowed-in gasket of a second plastics material softer than said first plastics material, said gasket covering (a) at least the radially outer region of said end panel (b) the said first inner surface portion of the skirt and (c) at least a part of said second inner surface portion of the skirt; effecting relative rotation between said closure and a necked container to be sealed therewith, said container having an external surface portion near the rim of its neck which is just smaller than said first inner surface portion of the skirt to be surrounded by said first inner surface portion and to define therewith an annular first gap which is smaller than a corresponding annular said gap just to the other side of said step; continuing said relative rotation between the closure and the container neck until said second plastics composition of the gasket fills said annular first gap and is compressed against the axially outwardly facing end wall of the neck.
14. A process according to claim 12 or 13, wherein said gasket is formed by introducing said second plastics material in flowable form into the corner defined around the cap body between the end panel and said first inner surface portion of the skirt.
1 5. A process according to claim 14, wherein the step of introducing said sealant material into said corner includes spinning the closure about its axis of symmetry, to ensure uniform dispersion of the sealant material around the periphery of the end panel.
1 6. A process according to claim 14 or 15, wherein said second plastics material is a plastisol, and including the step of applying fluxing heat to render said second plastics material capable of solidifying upon cooling.
1 7. A process according to claim 16, wherein said application of heat to the second plastics material is achieved by subjecting the cap body and the second plastics material to microwave radiation to which the first plastics material is substantially transparent.
18. A process according to claim 14 or 15, wherein said second plastics material is solid at room temperature and up to an elevated melting temperature below the melting temperature of the cap body, and wherein it is introduced into the corner of the cap body at a temperature above its melting point but below the melting point of the first plastics material.
19. A process according to any one of claims 14 to 18, wherein on the second inner surface portion of the cap skirt there is a radially inwardly extending gasket-retaining flange and the second plastics material is caused to cover the second surface portion between the step and said gasketretaining bead.
20. A process according to any one of claims 13 to 19, wherein said second plastics composition contains a foaming agent which causes the gasket to have a cellular construction.
21. A process of forming a closure for a container having a threaded neck, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
22. A process of closing a necked container, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
23. A container including liquid contents under a pressure greater than the external atmospheric pressure, and sealed by closing the container using the process of claim 13 or any one of claims 14 to 20 when appendant thereto.
GB08305464A 1982-03-10 1983-02-28 Screw closure Expired GB2116529B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08305464A GB2116529B (en) 1982-03-10 1983-02-28 Screw closure

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8206980 1982-03-10
GB08305464A GB2116529B (en) 1982-03-10 1983-02-28 Screw closure

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GB8305464D0 GB8305464D0 (en) 1983-03-30
GB2116529A true GB2116529A (en) 1983-09-28
GB2116529B GB2116529B (en) 1985-07-17

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0155021A1 (en) * 1984-02-09 1985-09-18 Kornelis' Kunsthars Producten Industrie B.V. A closure cap provided with a gasket and a sealing ring from an olefin polymer
EP0168982A1 (en) * 1984-07-18 1986-01-22 W.R. Grace & Co.-Conn. Pre-threaded container closure
GB2181119A (en) * 1985-10-08 1987-04-15 Grace W R & Co Plastic container closure with moulded liner
GB2195623A (en) * 1986-10-06 1988-04-13 Grace W R & Co Plastic closure with shaped gasket
GB2251430A (en) * 1990-12-04 1992-07-08 Brice Edward Mills Watertight canister
GB2318574A (en) * 1996-10-28 1998-04-29 Beeson & Sons Ltd Container closure with compressible sealing wad

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1203068A (en) * 1967-10-23 1970-08-26 Loy Bros Proprietary Ltd Screw closures for containers
WO1982002182A1 (en) * 1980-12-22 1982-07-08 Ethyl Prod Closure

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1203068A (en) * 1967-10-23 1970-08-26 Loy Bros Proprietary Ltd Screw closures for containers
WO1982002182A1 (en) * 1980-12-22 1982-07-08 Ethyl Prod Closure

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0155021A1 (en) * 1984-02-09 1985-09-18 Kornelis' Kunsthars Producten Industrie B.V. A closure cap provided with a gasket and a sealing ring from an olefin polymer
EP0168982A1 (en) * 1984-07-18 1986-01-22 W.R. Grace & Co.-Conn. Pre-threaded container closure
GB2181119A (en) * 1985-10-08 1987-04-15 Grace W R & Co Plastic container closure with moulded liner
EP0219265A3 (en) * 1985-10-08 1988-02-24 W.R. Grace & Co. Plastic container closure with moulded liner
GB2195623A (en) * 1986-10-06 1988-04-13 Grace W R & Co Plastic closure with shaped gasket
GB2251430A (en) * 1990-12-04 1992-07-08 Brice Edward Mills Watertight canister
GB2318574A (en) * 1996-10-28 1998-04-29 Beeson & Sons Ltd Container closure with compressible sealing wad

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8305464D0 (en) 1983-03-30
GB2116529B (en) 1985-07-17

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Effective date: 19950228