Patents by Inventor Peter G. Gosselin

Peter G. Gosselin has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 5385303
    Abstract: The present invention relates to aerosol spray packages having a plurality of spray settings each having been optimized in terms of flow rate, particle size and spray pattern for a particular use. These spray characteristics are created by individual selection of the flow rate and nozzle parameters for each setting. Selecting the spray is easy and convenient to use.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 12, 1993
    Date of Patent: January 31, 1995
    Assignee: The Procter & Gamble Company
    Inventors: Peter G. Gosselin, William D. Benge
  • Patent number: 5323935
    Abstract: A consumer product passage incorporating a mixing chamber for mixing air and liquid. Consumer packages of the present invention are capable of providing excellent spray qualities at typical consumer product flow rates (e.g., less than about 1.0 cubic centimeters per second) while simultaneously maintaining relatively low air to liquid ratios (e.g., less than about 0.06:1 on a mass basis) and relatively low pressures (e.g., less than about 50 psi). The package of the present invention also offers significant environmental and safety advantages. For example, it does not depend upon dissolved propellants; and it permits the use of water in place of volatile solvents as thinning agents since high surface tension fluids are actually sprayed better. Several packages of the present invention are illustrated, including a standard aerosol version, pump and spray versions, and a finger pump version.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 19, 1992
    Date of Patent: June 28, 1994
    Assignee: The Procter & Gamble Company
    Inventors: Peter G. Gosselin, Mark T. Lund, Paul E. Sojka, Arthur H. LeFebvre
  • Patent number: 5064671
    Abstract: Method of and apparatus for extracting whole juice sacs from citrus fruits by fluid impinging chunks of peeled fruit meat. In one embodiment, a fruit chunk is fed into a fluid impingement chamber that includes a plurality of off-center orifices. High-pressure fluid emitted from the orifices strikes the fruit chunk and spins it such that the fruit chunk's juice sacs are stripped from the chunk's sectional membranes. In another preferred embodiment, a plurality of fluid impingement chambers are incorporated into a high-speed, continuous motion turret. In yet another preferred embodiment, fruit chunks are fed into an inclined tube that includes fluid orifices which emit high pressure fluid. Controlling the fluid pressure, nozzle orifice size, number of orifices, direction of fluid jets, impingement time, and size and shape of the fruit chunks determine how substantially the radial membranes of fruit chunks are stripped of juice sacs without shredding the membranes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 28, 1990
    Date of Patent: November 12, 1991
    Assignee: The Procter & Gamble Company
    Inventors: Ronald W. Kock, Peter G. Gosselin, H. Norman Reiboldt
  • Patent number: 4977826
    Abstract: Method of an apparatus for extracting whole juice sacs from citrus fruits by fluid impinging chunks of peeled fruit meat. In one embodiment, a fruit chunk is fed into a fluid impingement chamber that includes a plurality of off-center orifices. High-pressure fluid emitted from the orifices strikes the fruit chunk and spins it such that the fruit chunk's juice sacs are stripped from the chunk's sectional membranes. In another preferred embodiment, a plurality of fluid impingement chambers are incorporated into a high-speed, continuous motion turret. In yet another preferred embodiment, fruit chunks are fed into an inclined tube that includes fluid orifices which emit high pressure fluid. Controlling the fluid pressure, nozzle orifice size, number of orifices, direction of fluid jets, impingement time, and size and shape of the fruit chunks determine how substantially the radial membranes of fruit chunks are stripped of juice sacs without shredding the membranes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 8, 1989
    Date of Patent: December 18, 1990
    Assignee: The Procter & Gamble Company
    Inventors: Ronald W. Kock, Peter G. Gosselin, H. Norman Reiboldt
  • Patent number: 4937088
    Abstract: A method of and apparatus for extracting the meat section and juice from a fruit while minimizing the amount of undesirable flavor components, e.g. peel oil, released from the fruit's peel. In one embodiment of the present invention, whole fruits are fed into a single station extraction apparatus that first cuts a equatorial groove in the fruit's peel while the fruit is rotated. A semicircular coring blade is then inserted into the groove and rotated 360.degree. which severs a spherical chunk of fruit meat from the peel. The small amount of fruit meat remaining on the peel's inner surface is then preferably extracted with a reaming element or fluid jet nozzle. In other particularly preferred embodiments, the grooving, coring, and reaming component mechanisms are incorporated into an indexing turret apparatus and a high-speed continuous motion turret apparatus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 29, 1988
    Date of Patent: June 26, 1990
    Assignee: The Procter & Gamble Company
    Inventors: Peter G. Gosselin, Ronald W. Kock, Michael S. Kolodesh, Jeffrey T. Leitner, Bruce A. Pierson, H. Norman Reiboldt, David A. Sabatelli, Vicki L. Weber, William Willhite, Jr.
  • Patent number: 4885182
    Abstract: A method of and apparatus for extracting the fruit meat section of a fruit, and subsequently separating and removing the sectional membranes and seeds from the fruit meat section to produce free juice and an abundance of unruptured juice sacs. In one embodiment of the present invention, whole fruits are fed into a dual turret extraction apparatus that includes a plurality of matched resilient cups for holding the fruit. After the fruit is cut in half, the halves are indexed through successive coring and reaming stations. The coring station includes a coring element that cleanly extracts a hemisperical section of fruit meat from the peel. The reaming station includes a reaming element that gently removes any fruit meat remaining within the peel. The fruit meat sections are then fed into rag separator apparatus that uses a rotating screen drum and a counterrotating shaft having striker bars projecting radially therefrom to strip the juice sacs from the sectional membranes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 3, 1988
    Date of Patent: December 5, 1989
    Assignee: The Proctor & Gamble Company
    Inventors: Michael S. Kolodesh, Walter Cash, Jr., Jerry E. Davis, Peter G. Gosselin, Ronald W. Kock, Bruce A. Pierson, H. Norman Reiboldt, David A. Sabatelli, Douglas Toms