CROSS-REFERENCE TO PRIORITY APPLICATIONThis application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/181,242 filed on May 26, 2009, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference.
BACKGROUND1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to a preform for plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels, and more specifically to a perform having a rigid, substantially elongate, frustoconical body portion that is closed at one of its longitudinal ends by a dome-shaped end portion and at its opposite longitudinal end adjoins, via a preform collar, a neck portion provided with a pouring opening and has an external diameter that is reduced from the preform collar to the end portion.
2. State of the Art
The previously conventional containers made of white or coloured sheet metal, of glass or else of ceramic are increasingly being superseded by containers made of plastics material. In particular for the packaging of pourable media, for example of cleaning utensils, body care products, cosmetics, motor vehicle media, etc., use is made mainly of plastics material containers. The low weight and the relatively low costs are no doubt key factors in this substitution. The use of recyclable plastics materials and the overall more advantageous total energy balance in the manufacture thereof also contribute to promoting consumers' acceptance of plastics material containers, in particular of plastics material bottles.
The most frequently used plastics material bottles are usually manufactured in what is known as an injection stretch blow moulding method. These methods are a combination of injection moulding and blow moulding. In this case, a preform is first manufactured in an injection mould in an injection moulding process. Recently, extrusion methods have also been proposed for manufacturing preforms. The preform has a substantially elongate body, one longitudinal end of which is closed off by a dome-shaped end portion. A neck portion comprising a pouring opening adjoins the other longitudinal end of the body. This neck portion conventionally already displays the subsequent shape of the bottleneck. Threaded portions or the like are usually also already formed on the outside of this neck portion for securing a closure part. The preform is removed, after manufacture thereof in a plastics material injection moulding method, from the injection mould, if necessary conditioned and introduced into a blowing mould of a blowing machine, in which it is finally inflated with excess pressure to the desired shape and is additionally stretched using a stretching mandrel. Also already known is an injection blow moulding method in which the blowing process follows on immediately from the injecting of the preform. The preform remains in this case on the injection mandrel and part of the injection mould forms a portion of the blowing mould.
For the manufacture of plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels having a reinforced bottom region, specific preforms are known, having a stepped or tiered bottom portion. In these preforms, the wall thickness of the preform changes at the transition to the dome-like bottom portion in a stepwise manner and suddenly assumes a higher value. During the manufacture of preforms of this type by injection moulding, the sudden change in wall thickness can lead to problems. In particular, there can occur at the transition from the wall thickness of the body to the greater wall thickness of the bottom portion during the injection moulding method local temperature peaks which impair the properties of the plastics material. In the stretch blow moulding method too, changes in the wall thickness of the preform, which are staggered in a stepwise manner, can lead to problems which manifest themselves as non-uniformities in the fully stretch blow-moulded plastics material bottle. It is often also desirable to form the preform, at the particularly critical region of transition from the neck portion to the body, in what is known as the preform collar, with a greater wall thickness. This also leads, in the known preforms, to staggered changes in wall thickness which can lead to the above-described problems.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,044,086 discloses a preform, the wall thickness of which decreases substantially constantly over its longitudinal extension, and the internal diameter i of which decreases likewise substantially constantly from a transition to the preform collar up to a transition to the dome-shaped end portion. In the longitudinal extension, the wall thickness increases downwardly from 0.047 inch (1.2 mm) to 0.18 inch (4.7 mm). Thus, the change in wall thickness along the longitudinal extension of the preform is more than 2 mm.
EP 0 311 161 discloses a method and an apparatus for manufacturing multi-layer, thermoplastic preforms from which blow-moulded containers for food products and beverages can be made. The figures show a mould for manufacturing a frustoconical preform. The mould can be used to manufacture preforms which subsequently have on the neck portion a cylindrical portion which merges with the body portion via a conical portion of substantially the same wall thickness. The external diameter of the preform collar decreases from the neck portion up to the body portion.
The present invention therefore provides a preform for the manufacture of plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels in an injection blow moulding or injection stretch blow moulding method. The preform eliminates problems during manufacture thereof in a plastics material injection moulding method and in the subsequent blow moulding method. In both, the required mechanical strengths and the thermal stability of the plastics material bottle produced from the preform or of the wide-necked vessel are ensured.
Thus, a preform for manufacturing plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels is provided having a body portion that has a wall thickness that changes over its longitudinal extension substantially constantly by up to plus orminus 2 mm, and possesses an internal diameter which decreases substantially constantly from a transition to the preform collar up to a transition to the dome-shaped end portion. Further developments and/or advantageous various embodiments of the invention are set forth herein.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe invention provides a preform for manufacturing plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels, having a rigid, substantially elongate, frustoconical body portion which is closed at one of its longitudinal ends by a dome-shaped end portion and at its opposite longitudinal end adjoins via a preform collar a neck portion provided with a pouring opening. The preform possesses in the body portion an external diameter which is reduced from the preform collar to the end portion. The body portion has a wall thickness which changes over its longitudinal extension substantially constantly by up to ±2 mm. For this purpose, it possesses an internal diameter which decreases substantially constantly from a transition to the preform collar up to a transition to the dome-shaped end portion.
The fact that sudden changes in wall thickness are avoided makes allowance for the problem of local exposure to heat during the injecting of the preform with plastics material. This also ensures that the preform has uniform wall thicknesses over its circumference. Shrinkage cavities or the like, as a consequence of turbulences of the plastics material, at edges and corners can thus reliably be avoided. During stretch blow moulding of the preform, the forces are distributed more uniformly. Local overstressing, which might lead to material weakening, or overheating at edges and corners are as a result avoided. As a consequence of the substantially constantly preceding changes in wall thickness of merely up to 2 mm in the body portion of the preform (either an increase in wall thickness or a decrease in wall thickness by at most 2 mm from the transition of the preform collar up to the transition to the dome-shaped end portion), the behaviour of the plastics material during stretch blow moulding is easier to predict and to control. As a result, plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels having the desired properties can be manufactured more reliably. Irrespective of the change in the wall thickness of the body portion, the internal diameter of the body portion decreases substantially constantly over its longitudinal extension toward the dome-shaped end portion. Undercuts are avoided, so that simple removability of the injection core from the mould continues to be ensured.
A variant of the preform provides for the preform collar forming the transition from the neck portion to the body portion to have an external diameter which changes from the neck portion to the body portion. The preform collar forms, after the blow moulding method, the shoulder region of the manufactured plastics material bottle or the wide-necked vessel. As a result of the embodiment according to the invention, the subsequent shape of the generated container is taken into account already on the preform. As a result, the preform collar is stretched neither excessively nor too little during the blow moulding method and the subsequent shoulder region of the container obtains its optimum strength. In this case, provision may be made for the external diameter of the preform collar to increase in size from the neck portion to the body portion at least in the partial portion adjoining the body portion. This is particularly advantageous in plastics material containers having bulky bodies. Another variant of the preform provides, on the other hand, for the external diameter of the preform collar to decrease in size from the neck portion to the body portion at least in the partial portion adjoining the body portion. This variant embodiment of the preform is used particularly advantageously in the manufacture of wide-necked vessels. It will be understood that the increase or reduction in external diameter cannot take place immediately after the transport ring. There can also first be provided a substantially cylindrical portion which is adjoined by the region, the external diameter of which varies. The internal diameter of the preform collar decreases, on the other hand, substantially constantly from the neck portion to the body portion of the preform.
In order to prevent sudden transitions from the preform collar to the body portion, the outer wall and the inner wall of the preform collar enclose with the adjoining outer wall and inner wall of the body portion in each case obtuse angles. The angles are 130° to less than 180°, preferably between 158° and 178° and most particularly preferably between 160° and 175°.
If the body portion of the preform has a minimum wall thickness which does not drop below 0.8 mm, sufficient rigidity and stability of the plastics material container made from the preform are ensured. On the other hand, the maximum wall thickness of the body portion does not exceed 6 mm. This ensures sufficiently rapid softening of the preform as a whole and uniform stretching of the body portion during the blow moulding method.
For the uniformity of the process of manufacturing the preform by injection moulding, extrusion, but also by spray foaming, it has been found to be expedient if the body portion has an internal diameter and an external diameter which are each reduced from the preform collar to the dome-shaped end portion by 0.1 mm to at most 3.5 mm.
A sudden change in wall thickness is also avoided at the transition from the body portion to the end portion. For this purpose, the dome-shaped end portion has a wall thickness which is reduced from the wall thickness of the body portion up to an injection point by 0% to 50%, preferably 20 to 50%. The wall thickness in the injection point is in this case not taken into account. The wall thickness in the end portion is in this case selected in accordance with the type of bottom to be manufactured, in order to impart optimum rigidity and stability to the fully blow-moulded container.
The preform according to the invention can be made of the conventional materials used for the stretch blow moulding method, for example of PET. Advantageously, at least 85% of the body portion of the preform is made of materials selected from the group consisting of polyesters (including PET, PBT, PLA, and PEN), copolyesters, polyolefins (in particular PP, HDPE) and polystyrenes (GPS or HIPS).
The preform according to the invention is optimised inter alia for manufacture by injection moulding, extrusion or spray foaming.
Plastics material bottles and wide-necked vessels made from the preforms embodied in accordance with the invention are distinguished by high mechanical strengths and high thermal stability. For example, they allow the formation of a champagne bottom for the storage of highly carbonated beverages which can build up high pressure inside the bottle during storage or during transportation.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSFurther advantages and features will emerge from the subsequent description of exemplary embodiments of the invention with reference to the schematic drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a non-true-to-scale, schematic axial section of a first exemplary embodiment of a preform according to the invention;
FIG. 2 is a non-true-to-scale, schematic axial section of a second exemplary embodiment of the preform;
FIG. 3 is a non-true-to-scale, schematic axial section of a third exemplary embodiment of the preform; and
FIG. 4 is a non-true-to-scale, schematic view of a fourth variant of the preform according to the invention.
For the sake of clarity, in the illustrations, like parts are denoted in all cases by the same reference numerals.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTSThe preform illustrated inFIG. 1 is denoted in its entirety byreference numeral1. It has a rigid, substantially elongate, frustoconically embodiedbody portion2, one longitudinal end of which is closed by a dome-shapedend portion3. The other longitudinal end of thebody2 is adjoined in the first place by what is known as apreform collar8 which forms the transition of thebody portion2 to aneck portion4 comprising a pouringopening5. Theneck portion4 conventionally already displays the subsequent shape of the neck of the inflated plastics material bottle or a wide-necked vessel. Threadedportions6 or the like are formed on the outside of theneck portion4 for securing a closure part. Thepreform1 is manufactured for example in an injection moulding method. Alternative manufacturing methods are for example extrusion or, with appropriate raw materials, spray foaming.
Thepreform collar8 is separated from theneck portion4 by an annularly encirclingtransport ring7. Thepreform collar8 has an axial length x which is measured on itsinner wall81 and corresponds, in the illustrated exemplary embodiment, roughly to an axial length l of thepreform collar8 on itsouter wall82. However, the two axial extensions of theinner wall81 and theouter wall82 of thepreform collar8 do not necessarily have to have the same length.
Thebody portion2 of thepreform1 has an external diameter a, which substantially constantly decreases in size from thepreform collar8 up to the dome-shapedend portion3. The internal diameter i of thebody portion1 also substantially constantly decreases in size from thepreform collar8 to theend portion3. Thebody portion2 possesses a wall thickness w which changes substantially constantly along the longitudinal extension of thebody portion2 from thepreform collar8 to the dome-shapedend portion3. In the illustrated exemplary embodiment, the wall thickness w of thebody portion2 is reduced constantly by up to ±2 mm toward theend portion3. In this case, the wall thickness w of thebody portion2 of thepreform1 does not drop below a minimum wall thickness of 0.8 mm.
A second exemplary embodiment of the preform is denoted inFIG. 2 in its entirety byreference numeral11. It has, again, abody portion2 which on the one hand adjoins a dome-shapedend portion3 and on the other hand is connected to aneck portion4 via apreform collar8. Theneck portion4 and thepreform collar8 are separated from each other by atransport ring7. Again, threaded portions or the like (not shown in greater detail) are formed on theneck portion4 for securing a closure part.FIG. 2 shows that thepreform11 has in itspreform collar8 an external diameter d which increases in size substantially constantly over a substantial portion of its longitudinal extension from thetransport ring7 toward thebody portion2. Thepreform collar8 has an internal diameter e which decreases in size toward thebody portion2. The transition of anouter wall82 of thepreform collar8 to theouter wall22 of thebody portion2 takes place at an obtuse angle β. The obtuse angle of transition β is preferably greater than or equal to 130° to less than 180°.
Thepreform11 is, during injection moulding, not easily removable from the mould despite the undercut formed by the increase in size of the external diameter, because thepreform collar8 is formed in the jaws of the injection mould, which are opened and closed radially. Owing to the decreasing internal diameter of thepreform collar8 and thebody portion2, the injection core can also easily be removed from the mould axially. Finally, thebody portion2, with theend portion3 of thepreform11, can also easily be removed from the mould axially owing to the external diameter decreasing toward theend portion3.
As may be seen fromFIG. 2, the wall thickness w of thebody portion2 increases constantly despite the external diameter a decreasing along its longitudinal extension. In this case, the wall thickness w of thebody portion2 does not exceed a maximum wall thickness of 6 mm.
At the transition from thebody portion2 to the dome-shapedend portion3, a sudden change in wall thickness is avoided. For this purpose, the dome-shaped end portion has a wall thickness t which is reduced from the maximum wall thickness w of thebody portion2 up to aninjection point9 by 0% to 50%. The wall thickness in theinjection point9 is in this case not taken into account. The wall thickness t in theend portion3 is in this case selected depending on the type of bottom to be manufactured, in order to impart optimum rigidity and stability to the fully blow-moulded container.
A further variant embodiment, illustrated inFIG. 3, of a preform according to the invention is denoted overall byreference numeral21. Again, like parts are denoted by the same reference numerals as in the preceding figures. Thebody portion2 of thepreform21 has, again, a wall thickness w which is reduced from thepreform collar8 to theend portion3. The wall thickness of theend portion3 is denoted, again, by reference symbol t; the injection point is denoted by9. Thepreform collar8 has an external diameter d which decreases in size over the longitudinal extension of thepreform collar8 toward thebody portion2.FIG. 3 shows that aninner wall81 of thepreform collar8 merges with theinner wall21 of thebody portion2 of thepreform1 at an obtuse angle α. The angle of merging α is preferably 130° to less than 180°. This measure substantially prevents sudden transitions.
The preform which is illustrated inFIG. 4 and denoted in its entirety byreference numeral31 is embodied for example for the manufacture of a wide-necked vessel. Theneck portion4 has anopening5, the opening diameter of which is larger than the external diameter a of thebody portion2. Accordingly, the preform collar also has an external diameter d which is reduced from the much larger external diameter of theneck portion4 toward thebody portion2. The external diameter a of thebody portion2 of thepreform1 decreases toward theend portion3 now only slightly. Despite the relatively large difference in the external diameter of thepreform collar8 below thetransport ring7 and of thebody portion2 adjoining thepreform collar8, theouter wall82 of thepreform collar8 and theouter wall22 of thebody portion2 enclose at their mutual transition an obtuse angle β of from preferably 130° to less than 180°.
A common feature of the illustrated preforms is the fact that the wall thickness w of thebody portion2 is reduced or increases in size over its longitudinal extension from the transition to thepreform collar8 up to the transition to the dome-shapedend portion3 substantially constantly by up to 2 mm. The internal diameter i and the external diameter a of thebody portion2 are reduced in this case from thepreform collar8 up to the dome-shapedend portion3 substantially constantly by 0.1-3.5 mm.
The preform embodied in accordance with the invention does not display any sudden, staggered changes in wall thickness. As a result, during manufacture thereof by plastics material injection moulding, local exposure to heat can be avoided, and fluctuations in wall thickness over the circumference are prevented. The embodiment of the preform allows the desired distribution of material on the preform that is required for the required strength and heat resistance of the plastics material bottle stretch blow-moulded therefrom, without more material having to be provided at the injection point. The invention can be applied to all plastics materials which are suitable for the injection blow moulding or injection stretch blow moulding method. Advantageously, at least 85% of the body portion of the preform is made of materials selected from the group consisting of polyesters (including PET, PBT, PLA, and PEN), copolyesters, polyolefins (in particular PP, HDPE) and polystyrenes (GPS or HIPS).
The preform according to the invention is optimised for manufacture by injection moulding, extrusion or spray foaming and serves as an intermediate product for the manufacture of plastics material bottles or wide-necked vessels in an injection blow moulding or injection stretch blow moulding method.