MULTIPLE-COMPARTMENT INSULATED FOOD TRAY
The present disclosure provides a multiple-compartment insulated food tray and lid for storage and service. The insulated food trays allow for two or more stacked strays to be mechanically unified using the weight of the top tray on the bottom tray in any orientation where the weight of the second tray remains on the first tray. In another embodiment of the present disclosure, a polymer with foam and blowing agents are used during the molding process to create in a first phase a hard shell in contact with the mold. In a second phase, insulation is created in the hard shell by thermal treatment and expansion of the residual polymer inserted in the mold. In a third embodiment of the present disclosure, the insulated food trays, when stacked, can be placed in a nondiscriminatory arrangement.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/423599, filed Jun. 12, 2006, the contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE DISCLOSUREThe present disclosure relates to a multiple-compartment insulated food tray for storage and service, and more particularly an insulated food tray and method of manufacture using a durable polymer matrix wherein each main compartment is insulated.
BACKGROUNDMeals served to humans generally include multiple courses served at different temperatures. Normally, each courses is served on a different plate, often at different temperatures, and at different time intervals. In some circumstances, large groups of people must be fed where special requirements are imposed. In some environments, such as school cafeterias, incarceration facilities, hospitals, military bases, summer camps, airplanes, nursing homes, etc., food service must be provided to large groups without generating excessive dirty dishes or utensils, and those dishes and utensils must limit manipulation problems at service, provide ease in storage, be easily cleaned, protect the user from sharp objects, and even respect strict logistical restraints.
The use of food serving systems based on trays is known in the art. The first generation of trays was made of disposable structures with removable inserts. More robust trays include a light-weight frame with vertical separators designed to segregate the courses, but these trays offered little or no thermal insulation between the courses. A common example of these trays include the familiar TV dinner tray, which is able to hold frozen food for long periods of time and later be placed in a conventional oven. Trays may include compartments to separate cold foods from hot foods, wet courses from dry courses, and prevent mixing of the courses. Trays may also include compartments in which small items such as condiments can be served.
Thin-walled metallic trays are light and disposable but offer little temperature control of the food. If heated courses are placed in these trays, the trays themselves can become hot, the hands of users can be burned, and food courses can reach thermal equilibrium within minutes. Newer versions of trays include insulation placed within a shell made by the tray, but these shells are often bulky, require numerous and expensive manufacturing steps, result in very small compartment sizes, and are still vulnerable to thermal equilibrium unless they are covered by a second tray or a lid. For this reason, a thin-walled robust food tray capable of insulating the food is needed.
Another problem with existing trays is the incapacity to provide for an efficient and safe way to supply of utensils without resulting to a dedicated compartment in the tray, or an independent and external supply of utensils. Placing utensils within a compartment often results in the utensil being in contact with the food. What is needed is a food tray able to provide for utensil delivery system without negatively affecting the other functions of the food tray, such as the capacity.
Yet another problem of existing food tray technology is partial insulation resulting from stacking trays. Food place within a recessed portion of a first insulated food tray is insulated from the environment, but if the courses include hot and cold portions located in different compartments, both courses reach an intermediate thermal equilibrium quickly within the food tray. What is needed is a compartment-specific insulated food tray. The use of compartment-specific insulation may also offer odor control in order to better preserve the aroma of each course.
SUMMARYIt is an object of the present disclosure to provide an insulated, multiple-compartment food tray and lid for storage and service. The insulated food tray and lid is equipped with a circumferential, weight-activated lip and a series of female U-shaped lips located on the tops of the internal and external walls of the insulated food tray. If a lid or a second insulated food tray acting as a lid is placed on top of the first insulated food tray, an L-shaped circumferential lip and male U-shaped lip located on the bottom portion of the second tray seals the compartments from each other resulting in thermal and aromatic segregation among the compartments. The use of a long, L-shaped lip on the circumference of the insulated food trays allows for two stacked strays to be mechanically unified using the weight of the top tray on the bottom tray in any orientation where the weight of the second tray remains on the first tray.
In another embodiment of the present disclosure, a polymer with foam and blowing agents is used during the molding process to create in a first phase a hard shell in contact with the mold. In a second phase, insulation is created in the hard shell by thermal treatment and expansion of the residual polymer inserted in the mold. This two-step formation process allows for a light, robust insulated food tray with better capacity and improved properties over existing food tray technologies. In a third embodiment of the present disclosure, the insulated food trays can be stacked in a nondiscriminatory arrangement by rotating one tray in relationship with the next by a fixed angle depending on the geometry of the insulated trays.
Referring to
The bottom insulated food tray 1 as shown on
The inner volume 20 is filled with an insulating medium as a result of the formation process of the outer shell 21. An injection molding method for manufacturing an insulated food tray is shown in
In a third step 103 also shown in
The next step of the method of manufacturing relates to cooling the insulated food tray within the injection mold 105. In a preferred embodiment, water is used to cool the mold to facilitate stabilization of the agents and the insulation 20 within the outer shell 21. It is understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the insulated food tray 1 within the injection mold can be cooled using a plurality of conventional means including but not limited to air cooling, mold cooling, time cooling, and compressed gas cooling. In a next step, the insulated tray 1 is stabilized 106 before removal from the injection mold using classical techniques including but not limited to hand removal or mechanical removal.
Returning to the embodiment shown as
The upper surface member 3 is relieved to define a plurality of inner compartments 5 of at least a third height 50 of a first top lip 57 and an outer rim 7 [not shown] with a second top lip 55 of the first height 51. The lower surface member 4 is relieved to define inner ribs 58 of a fourth height 52 with a first bottom lip 56 and a second outer rim 14 [not shown] with a second bottom lip 54 of the second height 53. While the surface member 3 is described with the help of elements of two heights called a first height 51 and a third height 50, respectively, it is understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that both heights may be of the same height or that any of the two heights may be higher from the bottom surface of the compartments 5 without any influence on this disclosure. The same may be said for the second height 53 and the fourth height 52 on the bottom member 4. The use of the terms “second” and “fourth” are not indicative of the necessity of a difference in height or any indication that the second height 53 is more important than the fourth height 52.
The contents of an inner compartment 5 in a first insulated food tray 1, as shown in
In another embodiment, the seal between the first top lip 57 is made of a female U-shaped lip, and the first bottom lip 56 is made of a male U-shaped lip in order to allow for the compartment 5 to be sealed when the upper surface member 3 of a first insulating food tray 1 is placed under the lower surface member 4 of a second insulated food tray 1. In another preferred embodiment, the second top lip 55 is made of a male U-shaped and the second bottom lip 54 is a recessed L-shaped lip. In the preferred embodiment shown as
As shown on
One of the compartments 5 includes a notch holder 12 able to receive a utensil 60 as shown using phantom lines in
In yet another embodiment as shown in
Persons of ordinary skill in the art appreciate that although the teachings of the disclosure have been illustrated in connection with certain embodiments, there is no intent to limit the invention to such embodiments. On the contrary, the intention of this disclosure is to cover all modifications and embodiments falling fairly within the scope of the teachings of the disclosure.
Claims
1. An insulated food tray, comprising:
- an upper surface member; and
- a lower surface member circumferentially connected to the upper surface member during a formation process to form an outer shell with an inner volume;
- the inner volume is filled with an insulated medium as a result of the formation process of the outer shell; and
- wherein the upper surface member is relieved to define a plurality of inner compartments having a first top lip and the lower surface member is relieved to define inner ribs with a first bottom lip so that the bottom lip of a second food tray connects with the first top lip of a first food tray.
2. The insulated food tray of claim 1, wherein the formation process is injection molding.
3. The insulated food tray of claim 2, wherein the insulated medium is an insulating foam made by an endothermic or an exothermic reaction to the formation process of the outer shell by adding a blowing agent and a foaming agent to an injection polymer used in the injection molding of the outer shell.
4. The insulated food tray of claim 3, wherein from 1% to 5% of blowing agent is added to the injection polymer.
5. The insulated food tray of claim 3 wherein from 5% to 20% of foaming agent is added to the injection polymer.
Type: Application
Filed: May 18, 2010
Publication Date: Sep 9, 2010
Inventor: Joseph CLAFFY (Western Springs, IL)
Application Number: 12/782,419