METHOD AND LINEAR INSTALLATION FOR FILLING CONTAINERS WITH A FILLING MATERIAL

A method for filling containers with a filling material and subsequently sealing the filled containers with container closures includes, using a linear transporter, moving the containers in a container-transport direction and in a timed manner, toward a sealing device, at the sealing device, sealing the containers with a container closure during a stationary phase of a timed movement, moving the containers onward in a subsequent movement phase of the timed movement, and during the subsequent movement phase, and before applying a container closure on the containers, dosing headspaces of the containers with liquid nitrogen to force air out of the headspace and to achieve an internal pressure in the sealed containers.

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Description
RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is the national stage entry under 35 USC 371 of PCT application PCT/EP2012/002348, filed on Jun. 2, 2012, which claims the benefit of the Jul. 5, 2011 priority date of German application DE 10 2011 106 760.8, the contents of which are herein incorporated by reference.

FIELD OF INVENTION

The invention concerns a method and apparatus for filling containers.

BACKGROUND

The dosed introduction of liquid nitrogen in the headspace of filled containers is known in particular in the drinks industry, in order on the one hand to force air and thus oxygen out of the headspace by the evaporation or degassing of the nitrogen (oxygen reduction), but on the other hand to generate an internal pressure in the sealed container, so that in this way an adequate stability is achieved even for thin-walled containers, i.e. low-weight containers, and thus the use of containers of this kind is possible. In particular, in the case of oxygen-sensitive products or filling materials, their shelf-life and quality is substantially improved due to the oxygen reduction in the headspace of the containers, e.g. the vitamin C decomposition in relevant drinks is reduced.

Also known is the sterile filling and sealing of containers, in particular, the sterilization of the closures used for sealing by charging with a suitable sterilization medium, for example with aqueous hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) at a high concentration and by subsequent drying immediately before the use of the particular container closure (EP 1 741 666 A2, EP 0 993 418 B1, EP 1 175 343 B1).

SUMMARY

The aim of the invention is to disclose a method by which the filling and sealing of containers is possible with the admission of nitrogen, preferably liquid nitrogen, at least into the headspace of the filled container, with optimum oxygen reduction and however at a sufficient internal pressure of the container, preferably a pressure above atmospheric in the particular filled container.

In the invention, the charging of the containers or the headspace of the containers not taken up by the filling material, with the liquid nitrogen takes place during a movement phase of the timed movement of the containers, this being preferably in the movement phase of the timed movement immediately before the application or placement of the particular container closure. Achieved in this way, is inter alia, that there remains sufficient time for the evaporation or degassing of the nitrogen and thus sufficient time for the forcing-out of air and oxygen from the headspace of the containers, but at the same time after the final sealing of the particular container, the container has a sufficient internal pressure generated by the nitrogen.

By way of the method according to the invention, an oxygen reduction is possible without any problem so that far less than 1% of the original oxygen remains in the particular headspace.

In a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, after the charging of the particular container with liquid nitrogen, initially only a “loose” application of the container closure occurs, i.e. an application of the container closure in such a way that while it is secured sufficiently on the particular container, there are gaps between the container closure and the container through which nitrogen, and air, and in particular oxygen forced out by the nitrogen, can flow out. Only after the end of a further period, corresponding approximately to the duration of a movement step of the timed movement with which the containers are moved through the linear installation, or a complete multiple thereof, is the final tight sealing of the containers with the particular container closure carried out.

The closures are preferably cap-tight closures, for example closures that are fixed by distortion and/or screwing onto the containers or onto the container areas having the container mouth.

The “headspace” of the containers is the part of the interior of a container underneath the container opening, that is not taken up by the filling material after filling.

As used herein, the expression “substantially” means deviations from exact values in each case by +/−10%, and preferably by +/−5% and/or deviations in the form of changes that are not significant for functioning.

Further benefits and application possibilities of the invention arise also from the following description of examples of embodiments and from the figures. In this regard, all characteristics described and/or illustrated individually or in any combination are categorically the subject of the invention, regardless of their inclusion in the claims or reference to them. The content of the claims is also an integral part of the description.

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention is explained in more detail below by means of the figures using an example of an embodiment. The following are shown:

FIG. 1 is a very simplified schematic representation from above of a linear installation for the filling and sealing of containers in the form of bottles under sterile conditions with oxygen reduction and with the establishment of an internal pressure (e.g. pressure above atmospheric) in the sealed container;

FIG. 2 is a simplified partial representation in side view of the section of the installation in FIG. 1 having the sealing device;

FIG. 3 is a partial representation in cross-section of one of the dosing heads of a nitrogen dosing device with a dosing valve and a nozzle opening;

FIG. 4 in items a) and b) in each case is a partial representation of a container with a container seal after an initial provisional application of the container seal (item a)) and after the final fixing of the container seal (position b)).

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The linear installation generally identified by 1 in FIG. 1 serves for the filling and sterile sealing of containers 2 in the form of bottles. The containers 2 to be filled and sealed are supplied to the installation 1 by means of a container inlet 3 according to arrow A and are then moved in a multi-lane flow of containers or on a number of movement paths 4.1 by a transporter 4 through various sections of the installation 1, this being, in the embodiment shown, through a pre-treating section 5 for pre-treating the containers 2, through a filling section 6 for filling the containers 2, and through a sealing section 7 for sealing the containers under sterile conditions. The containers 2 stand, for example, with their bases on the transporter 4 and are secured against toppling by supporting elements 4.2 moved synchronously with them in the area of their container mouth. In an alternative embodiment, the transporter 4 is made for a suspended transportation of the containers 2.

The containers 2 filled and sealed in this way are removed by means of a container outlet 8 according to arrow C. The movement of the containers 2 through the sections 5, 6 and 7 in transport direction B occurs in a timed manner, i.e. in a stepwise transport movement, in which stationary phases and movement phases follow each other in turn. It is clear that the devices needed for the particular handing of the containers 2 are provided on each movement path 4.1. Furthermore, the containers 2, which are arranged vertically, i.e. with their container axes oriented in a vertical direction, are moved through sections 5-7 so that at least the particular container opening or container mouth 2.1 is taken into a sterile chamber 9 (FIG. 2), which at least during the operation of the installation 1 is charged with a sterile medium in the form of gas and/or vapour preferably at a slight pressure above atmospheric, for example with sterile air.

FIG. 2 shows the section 7 of one of the movement paths 4.1 in the area of a sealing device. Illustrated are the containers 2 with their container mouths 2.1 arranged in the sterile or aseptic chamber 9 and a closure transfer station 10 and a sealing station 11 following in transport direction B, which is at a distance from the closure transfer station 10 in transport direction B by a timed or movement step of the timed transport movement or by a complete multiple of such a movement step. The cap-type container closures 12 used to seal the containers 2 or the container mouths 2.2 are supplied in sterile form, for example after sterilization with a suitable sterilization medium, for example with H2O2 and after drying, by means of a slideway 13 to a closure supply position arranged in the sterile chamber 9 of the closure transfer station 10. From there, the closures are each placed on a container mouth 2.1 with a closure transfer element in the stationary phase of the timed transport movement. Following a further movement cycle of the timed movement, the relevant container 2 is then positioned under the sealing station 11 at which the container closure 12 is definitely fixed in the stationary phase of the timed transport movement on the mouth area, which has the container mouth 2, of the relevant container 2, for example by pressing and/or depressing and/or distorting and/or screwing and/or welding and/or sealing etc.

In relation to the transport direction B before the closure transfer station 10, in the sterile chamber, a nozzle opening 14 is provided for the dosed supply of liquid nitrogen (N2) into the headspace of the filled containers 2. The nozzle opening 14, which is part of a nozzle head 16, extending into the sterile chamber 9 diagonally from top to bottom, of a nitrogen dosing unit 15, is arranged in this sterile chamber 9 so that its distance from the closure transfer station 10 or from the area at which the transfer of the particular container closure 12 to a container 2 occurs, in transport direction B is smaller than the distance between the closure transfer station 10 and the sealing station 11 or is smaller than a movement step of the timed transport movement of the containers 2. Furthermore, the nozzle head 16 and the nozzle opening 14 are arranged such that the axis DA of the nozzle opening 14 encloses, on a vertical or in a substantially vertical plane with the transport direction B, an acute angle α, i.e. an angle α smaller than 45°, that opens in the direction opposite to the transport direction B (FIG. 3). The nozzle opening 14, which is arranged above the movement path of the container mouths 2.1, is on a level underneath the level of the closure supply position 14 and is generally oriented so that the containers 2 moved past with their container mouths 2.1 underneath nozzle 14 and thereby in particular their headspaces are dosed with liquid nitrogen emerging from the nozzle opening 14.

For the dosed dispensing of the liquid nitrogen, the nozzle opening 14 is embodied as a dosing valve, this being also with the use of a plunger-type valve body 16, the pointed end of which extends into the open end of the channel 16 formed in the dosing head 15 and thereby forms the annular nozzle opening 14. By axial displacement (double arrow D) of the valve body 17, the nozzle opening can be opened to a greater or lesser extent.

The described design and arrangement of the dosing head 16 and the nozzle opening 14 not only results in the headspace of the containers 2 moved past the nozzle opening 14 being reliably charged with the liquid nitrogen, but in particular also that sufficient time remains for the expansion, evaporation, or degassing of the liquid nitrogen in the particular headspace and thus for the forcing of air, and in particular, of oxygen, out of the particular headspace. However, the application of the container closures 12 occurs so soon that after the sealing of the particular container 2, there remains a sufficiently high internal pressure from the nitrogen in the sealed container 2.

After the placing of the particular container closure 12 on a container, this container closure 2 is provisionally fixed in its position, but only loosely, so that, with a further evaporation of liquid nitrogen, any oxygen still present is forced out of the headspace of the container together with a certain proportion of the nitrogen. The time available for this corresponds to the distance between the closure transfer station 10 and the sealing station 11, i.e. the duration of one movement phase of the timed transport movement or a multiple thereof.

As the nozzle opening 14 is in the way described previously on a level underneath the level of the closure supply position 10.1 of the closure transfer station 10, and the nozzle head 15 is oriented in the way described previously in the container transport direction B, diagonally downwards in the direction of the movement path of the container mouths 2.1, along with the nitrogen emerging from the nozzle opening 14 or along with the resulting and in part rising nitrogen mist, also the gaseous nitrogen on the inside of the container mouth 2.1 after the sealing, of the closure 12 waiting in the slideway 13 or already in place in the closure transfer station 10.1 of the sealing station 11, is trapped and oxygen is forced out. Thus, the gas volume on the inside of the particular closure 12, which is in the closure transfer element of the closure transfer station 10, is also deprived of oxygen before or while it is placed on a container 2. In this way, the quality of the oxygen-free or low-oxygen filling and sealing of the containers 2 is quite substantially improved.

The nozzle head 16 is furthermore formed and arranged or inclined such that its channel 16.1 and the inner surface of this channel likewise have an incline from the horizontal in all areas. The channel 16 can thus be completely emptied in particular when the nozzle opening is fully or largely open, namely for example at the end of a production phase or during a cleaning and sterilization phase, in which then not only the nozzle head 16, but also all other components of the installation 1 are treated with a suitable cleaning and/or sterilization medium.

In the embodiment shown, at least the final filling of the containers 2 by a filling station 18 occurs a few cycles, generally two to four cycles, before the application of the closures 2 on the filled containers 2, i.e. in the stationary phase of the timed movement, before the containers are moved in the next movement phase of this movement to the closure transfer station 10 and, in this movement phase before the next stationary phase, are charged with the nitrogen emerging from the nozzle opening 14.

In the sterile chamber 9, preferably only the functional elements, in particular the closure transfer station 10, the sealing station 11, the filling station 18 and also the nitrogen dosing units 15 that interact directly with the containers are provided, while the other parts or elements of such stations are disposed outside the sterile chamber 9, preferably above the sterile chamber 9, in particular also the device for the supply of the liquid nitrogen emerging at the nozzle opening 14.

In section 7, during the cleaning and sterilization phase in a cleaning and/or sterilization operation of the installation 1, the cleaning and/or sterilization media used, the media being, for example, vaporous and/or gaseous and/or liquid media, for example H2O2 in aqueous solution at a high concentration and as an aerosol or vapor, are supplied inter alia through the channels 16.1 of the nozzle heads 16, whereby the cleaning and/or sterilization medium emerging at the particular nozzle opening 14 is removed by means of a pipe section 19 arranged directly on the particular nozzle opening 14. Moreover, during the cleaning and/or sterilization operation, the particular cleaning and/or sterilization medium inter alia, is also supplied to the sterile chamber 9 at suitable places for the cleaning and/or sterilization of this chamber and the functional elements disposed there, and removed again from the chamber 9 for example at places between the movement paths 4.1 of the containers 2. The functional elements used for the supply and removal of the cleaning and/or sterilization media, in particular also pipe sections 19, are, insofar as they are disruptive during the normal filling and sealing profile, made such that they can be moved or swiveled out of the installation 1 or at least out of the area of movement of the containers 2 for this filling and sealing operation.

One particular feature of the installation 1 consists inter alia of a dosed treatment of the filled containers 2 with liquid nitrogen in the case of a linear installation 1 or linear machine for the cooling and sealing of the containers 2 under aseptic conditions, wherein a relatively long degassing phase is achieved for the nitrogen for oxygen reduction with nonetheless a safe nitrogen pressure build-up in the containers within tight tolerances.

The invention has been described above using an example of an embodiment. It is clear that numerous modifications and variations are possible without thereby departing from the inventive idea underlying the invention.

REFERENCE DRAWING LIST

  • 1 Installation for the filling and sealing of containers
  • 2 Container
  • 2.1 Container mouth
  • 3 Container inlet
  • 4 Transporter
  • 4.1 Conveyor belt
  • 5, 6,7 Section
  • 8 Container outlet
  • 9 Sterile chamber
  • 10 Closure transfer station
  • 10.1 Closure supply position
  • 11 Sealing station
  • 11.1 Sealing element
  • 12 Container closure
  • 13 Sideway for the closures 12
  • 14 Nozzle opening
  • 15 Dosing head
  • 16 Channel
  • 17 Valve body
  • 18 Filling element
  • 19 Pipe section
  • A, B, C Container transport directions
  • D Axial shift

Claims

1-15. (canceled)

16. A method for filling containers with a filling material and subsequently sealing said filled containers with container closures, said method comprising using a linear transporter, moving said containers in a container-transport direction and in a timed manner, toward a sealing device, at said sealing device, sealing said containers with a container closure during a stationary phase of a timed movement, moving said containers onward in a subsequent movement phase of said timed movement, and during said subsequent movement phase, and before applying a container closure on said containers, dosing headspaces of said containers with liquid nitrogen to force air out of said headspace and to achieve an internal pressure in said sealed containers.

17. The method of claim 16, wherein dosing headspaces of said containers with liquid nitrogen comprises arranging a dosing nozzle such that a jet of nitrogen emerging from said dosing nozzle has a component of velocity oriented along a container transport direction.

18. The method of claim 16, wherein said container closure is a cap-type container closure having an interior, said method further comprising charging said interior to force out air using nitrogen emerging from said dosing nozzle.

19. The method of claim 16, further comprising, after dosing headspaces of said containers with liquid nitrogen, placing container closures on said containers in way such that said closures are fixed in an area of said container mouth, and gas can continue to escape from said headspace.

20. The method of claim 19, further comprising, after a further movement phase, finally fixing said container closures at a sealing station.

21. The method of claim 16, wherein dosing headspaces of said container with liquid nitrogen comprises placing said containers in a sterile chamber.

22. The method of claim 16, further comprising filling said containers, wherein filling said containers and sealing said containers occur together with dosing a headspace of said container with liquid nitrogen on a number of parallel movement paths.

23. An apparatus for filling and sealing containers with liquid filling material, said apparatus comprising a linear installation comprising a linear transporter for moving said containers along a movement path, a filling section, and a sealing section, wherein said linear transporter is configured to move said containers along said movement path in a timed movement through said filling section and said sealing section, a dosing nozzle disposed above said movement path, said dosing nozzle being disposed to dose headspaces of filled containers with nitrogen during said timed movement of said containers.

24. The apparatus of claim 23, wherein said dosing nozzle is disposed along said movement path between said filling station and a closure transfer station.

25. The apparatus of claim 24, wherein a distance between said dosing nozzle and said closure transfer station is smaller than a length of a movement step of said timed movement.

26. The apparatus of claim 24, wherein said closure transfer station comprises a closure supply station at which container closures are arranged, and wherein said dosing nozzle is disposed on a level below a level at which said container closures are arranged.

27. The apparatus of claim 24, wherein said closure transfer station is configured for loose application of container closures.

28. The apparatus of claim 23, wherein said nozzle extends along a nozzle axis, wherein said movement path extends along a container transport direction, and wherein said nozzle axis and said container transport direction define an acute angle that opens in a direction opposite said container transport direction.

29. The apparatus of claim 23, further comprising a nitrogen dosing station, wherein said dosing nozzle comprises a nozzle head of said nitrogen dosing station and a channel, said channel being inclined against said container transport direction.

30. The apparatus of claim 23, further comprising a sterile chamber into which container mounts are moved.

31. The apparatus of claim 30, further comprising functional elements that interact directly with said containers during filling and sealing thereof, wherein said functional elements are disposed in said sterile chamber, and wherein said nozzle is disposed in said sterile, and wherein remaining functional elements are disposed outside said sterile chamber.

32. The apparatus of claim 30, further comprising means for cleaning said sterile chamber and functional elements disposed in said sterile chamber, wherein said means for cleaning with a cleaning medium.

33. The apparatus of claim 32, further comprising means for supplying said cleaning medium and means for removing said cleaning medium from a movement area in which containers move during a filling and sealing operation.

Patent History
Publication number: 20140137521
Type: Application
Filed: Jun 2, 2012
Publication Date: May 22, 2014
Inventor: Thomas Niehr (Bad Munster am Stein Ebernburg)
Application Number: 14/131,063
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Filling Preformed Receptacle And Closing (53/467); Vacuum Or Inert Atmosphere (53/510)
International Classification: B65B 31/02 (20060101);