COMBINATION BOTTLE AND SYSTEM
A combination bottle and system for devising combination bottles for the retention of liquids and other pliable items is provided. A base container unit with an open mouth is configured to retain liquids and exhibits a base unit perimeter lip with an attachment configuration and the base container unit may be combined with various capacity adding units which have perimeter lips with a variety of attachment configurations that allow attachment between the base unit and the capacity-adding unit(s). The base container unit may be combined either alone or with various numbers of capacity adding units with one or more top units that have top unit perimeter lips with top unit attachment configurations mateable with the various constituent members of the combination bottle system. Various top units are provided which exhibit functional end selected from the group of: sippy cup functional end, straw functional end, and nipple functional end. By varying the size of perimeter lips and projection aspect, necks may be created in constituted bottles providing convenient hand-holds. Some embodiments of the present invention are also directed to kits that include various bottle components suitable for particular applications. Some embodiments of the present invention are directed to a method for assembling a combination bottle from a combination bottle system and changing the capacity (volume) of the combination bottle “on-the-go” by interchanging components of the combination bottle system.
This application is a Continuation-in-Part application of U.S. application Ser. No. 14/639,710, filed Mar. 5, 2015, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to combination bottle systems that provide flexible capacity and function for containers.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONA variety of styles and configurations of bottles and containers are used to hold liquids and foods ranging, for example, from baby formula and milk to consumables oriented for more adult tastes such as, for example, nutritional or energy drinks consumed on long commutes, vacation shores or the high vistas of the Rocky Mountains.
Millions of bottles are discarded each year. For example, of the large variety of bottles used in tending growing babies and children, approximately 70 million end in landfills across the US each year. A part of this disposal load results when babies “outgrow” both the size and function of their bottles. For example, they outgrow their nipple-topped bottles and move up the maturity ladder to what are often called “sippy cups” and then finally to bottles topped by lids configured to securely include a straw.
Fixed capacities also reduce the utility of bottles and containers. Small babies can more readily hold a smaller bottle while the grasp as well as appetite of large children is better suited to bottles of greater capacity.
Hikers sometimes include a mix of bottles in their equipment to allow adaptation to the dry conditions of desert hiking with 1500 cc water bottles while in cooler mountain environments they may employ standard 1 liter bottles. Yet, for some foods and recreational drinks, a 1 liter capacity bottle may be too much and a separate smaller bottle is required for smaller amounts of drink and food if valuable pack space is to be conserved.
Further, many bottles are still constructed from potentially mutagenic materials that may raise the risk of some cancers and birth defects.
What is needed, therefore, is a bottle and container system that provides capacity and function flexibility in an integrated system constructed from safe materials and which adapts to the age, abilities and interests of the user.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONEmbodiments of the present invention are directed to methods and systems for combination bottle systems that provide flexible capacity and function for containers.
Some embodiments of the present invention are directed to a combination bottle system having a base unit that is combined with various capacity-adding units and/or top units having various functional ends to provide a combination bottle and system of wide flexibility and use. Various capacities may be devised by combining one or multiple capacity-adding units to a base unit while various functions for the combined bottle may be implemented through various functional ends for the employed top unit. In some embodiments, combinations of attachment configurations of various perimeter lips of the constituent bottle units create neck features in devised combination bottles. Various configurations of attachment configurations may be combined to impose particular stacking or combination rules on constituted combination bottles devised from various embodiments of the combination bottle systems provided.
Some embodiments of the present invention are also directed to a combination bottle system includes various bottle components that are interchangeable with each other.
Some embodiments of the present invention are also directed to kits that include various bottle components suitable for particular applications.
Some embodiments of the present invention are directed to a method for assembling a combination bottle from a combination bottle system and changing the capacity (volume) of the combination bottle “on-the-go” by interchanging components of the combination bottle system.
The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features and technical advantages of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be described hereinafter. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the conception and specific embodiments disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. It should also be realized by those skilled in the art that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
For a more thorough understanding of the present invention, and advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to methods and systems for combination bottle systems that provide flexible capacity and function for containers. In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, for example, a baby bottle can be transformed into a sippy cup. The sippy cup can be transformed into a straw bottle. The effective life of the bottle is extended from approximately 1 year to 4 years. In the old way of doing things, for example, parents might buy 16 baby bottles and throw them out when the baby stopped using baby bottles as a toddler. Then the parents would buy 10 sippy cups for the toddler and throw them out when the toddler stopped using sippy cups as a child. Then the parents would buy 10 straw bottles for the child, and so on. Embodiments of the present invention enable parents to simply buy a baby bottle and then buy conversion kits to change it as the child grows older.
Embodiments of the present invention can further expand the life of the bottle beyond the straw bottle. The bottle itself can be separated into three main, interchangeable components: a base unit, a ring or capacity adding unit, and then a top unit. The base unit as used herein refers to the bottom-most unit of the combination bottle in assembly. The top unit as used herein refers to the top-most unit of the combination bottle in assembly, including and caps that may be part of the functional end. The base unit does not need to change from bottle to bottle. One or more capacity adding units can be added between the top unit and the base unit to increase the capacity or volume of the bottle assembly, for example, from 200 mL to infinite, depending on the need or use. The top unit includes a functional end that adapts the bottle to a particular use, such as baby bottle nipples, baby spouts, straw tops, coffee tops, spray nozzles, sports top, flip top and on and on. The top units can be interchangeable and substituted for each other to provide variable function for the bottle assembly. The capacity adding units can be added or removed to provide variable capacity for the bottle assembly. Multiple components can be kept with the user of the combination bottle system (for example in a carrying bag, diaper bag, gym bag, purse, backpack, etc.) to provide the ability to make rapid “on-the-go” changes to the bottle assembly as the user's needs change (e.g., a coffee cup can be quickly changed into a sports bottle having a large capacity).
The bottle components can be made of plastic, stainless steel, or any material suitable for holding beverage or food items that are intended to be ingested. The bottle components can be single colors or multiple colors. The bottle components can be single walled or double-walled for insulation and/or ruggedization. For example, the capacity adding units can be made available in multiple different colors that can be added to the other bottle components to personalize the bottle assembly. Different colored bottle components can be used to indicate the contents of the bottle (e.g., orange juice=orange, apple juice=yellow, milk=white, water=blue). Different colored bottle components can be used to indicate the user of the bottle (e.g., blue for one child, green for another child, yellow for a parent). Different color bottle components can be used to indicate capacity. For example, a blue capacity adding unit can indicate that the capacity adding unit adds 50 mL of additional volume to the bottle assembly; a green, 100 mL; a red, 200 mL; and so on. If the user needs to add 300 mL, the user can quickly grab a red capacity adding unit (200 mL) and a green capacity adding unit (100 mL). The different colored bottle components can be combined so that the bottle displays the user's school or team colors.
The bottle components can include other design elements such as words or logos. In one example, a bottle could be used by a boy from childhood to adulthood. As he gets older and his interests change, instead of buying new bottle, he can just replace a capacity adding unit with one design element with another capacity adding unit have a different design element (e.g., Thomas the Tank Engine as a toddler, a favorite superhero as a young boy, favorite sports team as an older boy, high school logo as a high school student, college logo as college student, company logo as an employee, etc.). Further, as bottle components are damaged or worn out, an individual bottle component can be replaced (or perhaps repaired) instead of discarding and replacing the entire bottle.
The capacity adding units attach and secure to each other, and to the base units and the top units, so that the bottle assembly does not come open and leak. In some embodiments of the present invention, the capacity adding units can screw and snap into place for easy assembly and prevention of unintentional disassembly. Users can be required operate a release mechanism (e.g., push a button) to then unscrew the levels of the bottle components. Such an embodiment would prevent the bottle from accidentally coming apart and leaking when being carried in a bag. The release mechanism can also be adapted to be inoperable by babies and young children to child-proof the bottle so that a baby or toddler cannot disassemble the bottle and cause a spill.
Some embodiments of the present invention are also directed to a combination bottle system includes various bottle components that are interchangeable with each other. For example, a user can go to a store and mix-and-match compatible bottle components to design a combination bottle system that has the variable capacity and interchangeable functional ends so that a user can change the bottle capacity and configuration for different uses on-the-go. For example, a user may buy an 8 ounce base unit, an 8 ounce capacity adding unit, a 16 ounce capacity adding unit, a top unit having a spill-resistant beverage lid for use in a car, a top unit having an open beverage lid, and a top unit have a sports bottle functional end. In the morning, the user configures the bottle for the morning commute by putting the spill-resistant beverage lid on the 8 ounce base unit and filling it with coffee for the morning commute to work. At work, the user adds the 8 ounce capacity adding unit to the bottle assembly and replaces the spill-resistant beverage lid with an open beverage lid so she can keep a 16 ounce beverage container on her desk while she works during the day. In the evening, when leaving the office, the user adds the 16 ounce capacity adding unit to the bottle assembly and replaces the open beverage lid with the sports bottle functional end so that she can have a 32 ounce sports bottle filled with water while she works out at the gym.
Some embodiments of the present invention are also directed to kits that include various bottle components suitable for particular applications. For example, a baby shower gift kit could include bottle components to make various combinations of baby bottles, sippy cups, and straw bottles. A sports kit could include bottle components to change the capacity and functional ends for commons sports, such as running and cycling.
Some embodiments of the present invention are directed to a club that users can join to buy new tops or get new colors or designs of bottle components.
Various exemplar top units are shown in
Top unit 301 is shown having a shell 31 and a separable nipple 32 as its functional end. Top units 30 that employ separable functional ends 28 are comprised from a shell 31 and a separable functional end. In
As shown in
Base unit 20 is depicted as configured with various exemplar types of attachment configurations 26X provided to illustrate, without limiting, a variety of example types of attachment configurations employable with various units of the combination bottle and system 10.
A variety of materials are preferably employed in the construction of preferred embodiments of combination bottle 60 including, for example, materials such as stainless steel, aluminum, polyethylene terephthalate (PET), copolyester, glass, polystyrene (PS), acrylonitrile styrene (AS), bio based polymers, polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyphenylsulfone (PPSU), bisphenol A (BPA), polyester (PES), acrylic, bamboo, melamine, or polyamide (PA). As those of skill will recognize, these materials are typically less toxic and more inert than many other materials and therefore are recommended for use in bottles and containers for foods and liquids. In preferred embodiments, materials free of endocrine disrupting chemicals are used.
As shown in
In some of the provided views, attachment configuration 26X is configured on a projecting perimeter lip 24 and attachment configuration 26Y is configured on an accepting perimeter lip 24 but as those of skill will understand after appreciating this disclosure, some embodiments may exhibit attachment configurations 26X and 26Y with each found on projecting perimeter lips 24. It will be noted that upper perimeter lip 24 of capacity adding unit 50 creates a diameter A2 in capacity adding unit 50 that is smaller than diameter A1 of the body 55 of capacity adding unit 50.
As shown in
It will be appreciated that because diameter B is less than diameter A1 this results in combination bottle 60 a neck of smaller diameter and shown height C which may provide a convenient hand-hold in bottle 60. Surface 54 of mid-level capacity-adding unit 50 of
Similarly, capacity adding unit 1050 screws and snaps into base unit 1020 for easy assembly and prevention of unintentional disassembly. To remove capacity adding unit 1050, the user is required operate release mechanism 1022 to be able to unscrew capacity adding unit 1050 from base unit 1020. Release mechanism 1022 is preferably adapted so that an adult can operate the release mechanism, but a young child (i.e., sippy-cup aged) would have difficulty operating the release mechanism. For example, release mechanism 1022 can comprise a button the user must push while twisting top unit 1030 and capacity adding unit 1050 relative to each other to unscrew them. In a preferred embodiment, the means of connecting and locking/unlocking top unit 1030 with capacity adding unit 1050 via release mechanism 1052 and the means of connecting and locking/unlocking capacity adding unit 1050 with base unit 1020 via release mechanism 1022 are the same and/or compatible with each other. This would enable multiple capacity adding unit to be added or removed as needed, and top units with different functional ends to be substituted for each other. When capacity adding units are not needed, top unit 1030 can be directly connected to and locked into place with base unit 1020.
In the example shown
In the example shown
Some embodiments of the present invention are directed to a method for assembling a combination bottle from a combination bottle system and changing the capacity (volume) of the combination bottle “on-the-go” by interchanging components of the combination bottle system.
Although the present invention and its advantages have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the scope of the present application is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments of the process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, means, methods and steps described in the specification. As one of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate from the disclosure of the present invention, processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps, presently existing or later to be developed that perform substantially the same function or achieve substantially the same result as the corresponding embodiments described herein may be utilized according to the present invention. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps.
Claims
1. A combination bottle system comprising:
- a base container unit configured to retain liquids, the base container unit having an open mouth with a base unit perimeter lip having an attachment configuration;
- a capacity-adding unit configured to retain liquids, the capacity-adding unit having a first perimeter lip having a first attachment configuration, the first attachment configuration of the first perimeter lip and the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip being mateable with each other, the capacity-adding unit having a second perimeter lip having a second attachment configuration; and
- a top unit having a top unit perimeter lip having a top unit attachment configuration mateable with the second attachment configuration of the second perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit.
2. The combination bottle system of claim 1 in which the material comprising each of the top unit, the base container unit and the capacity adding unit are selected from a group of materials consisting of: stainless steel, aluminum, polyethylene terephthalate (PET), copolyester, glass, polystyrene (PS), acrylonitrile styrene (AS), bio based polymers, polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyphenylsulfone (PPSU), bisphenol A (BPA), polyester (PES), acrylic, bamboo, melamine, and polyamide (PA).
3. The combination bottle system of claim 1 in which the top unit exhibits a functional end selected from the group of: sippy cup functional end, straw functional end, nipple functional end, sports functional end, coffee top functional end and open lipped functional end
4. The combination bottle system of any of claim 1 in which the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip, the first attachment configuration of the first perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit and the second attachment configuration of the second perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit are each of the same type.
5. The combination bottle system of claim 2 in which the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip, the first attachment configuration of the first perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit and the second attachment configuration of the second perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit are each of the same type.
6. The combination bottle system of claim 1 in which the top unit comprises a shell and said top unit exhibits a nipple functional end separable from the shell of the top unit.
7. The combination bottle system of claim 1 in which the top unit exhibits an integral nipple functional end.
8. The combination bottle system of claim 1 in which the first perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit and the base unit perimeter lip of the base unit are each configured with a projecting configuration so that when the first attachment configuration of the first perimeter lip of the capacity-adding unit and the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip are mated, the combination bottle exhibits a neck having a neck diameter smaller than the diameter of the base unit.
9. A combination bottle system comprising:
- a base container unit configured to retain liquids, the base container unit having an open mouth with a base unit perimeter lip having an attachment configuration; and
- first and second top units, each of said first and second top units having a top unit perimeter lip having an attachment configuration mateable with the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip, said first and second top units each exhibiting a different functional end.
10. The combination bottle system of claim 8 in which the functional ends of the first and second units are selected from the group of: sippy cup functional end, straw functional end, nipple functional end, sports functional end, and open lipped functional end.
11. The combination bottle system of claim 8 in which the first top unit exhibits a nipple functional end that is separable from a shell of said first top unit.
12. A combination bottle system comprising:
- a base container unit configured to retain liquids, the base container unit having an open mouth with a base unit perimeter lip having an attachment configuration;
- a first capacity-adding unit configured to retain liquids, the first capacity-adding unit having a first perimeter lip having a first attachment configuration and a second perimeter lip having a second attachment configuration, the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip being mateable with the first attachment configuration of the first perimeter lip or the second attachment configuration of the second attachment lip; and
- a second capacity-adding unit configured to retain liquids, the second capacity adding unit having a primary second capacity-adding unit perimeter lip having a third attachment configuration, the third attachment configuration being mateable with the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip or the first or second attachment configurations of the respective perimeter lips of the first capacity-adding unit.
13. The combination bottle system of claim 12 in which the first and second capacity adding units are comprised from materials from a group of materials: stainless steel, aluminum, polyethylene terephthalate (PET), copolyester, glass, polystyrene (PS), acrylonitrile styrene (AS), bio based polymers, polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyphenylsulfone (PPSU), bisphenol A (BPA), polyester (PES), acrylic, bamboo, melamine, and polyamide (PA).
14. The combination bottle system of claim 13 further comprising a top unit, the top unit having a top unit perimeter lip, said top unit having a top unit attachment configuration mateable with the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip or the first attachment configuration of the first perimeter lip or the second attachment configuration of the second perimeter lip of the first capacity-adding unit.
15. The combination bottle system of claim 14 in which the top unit exhibits a functional end, said functional end being selected from the group of: sippy cup functional end, nipple functional end, and straw functional end.
16. The combination bottle system of claim 14 in which the top unit comprises a shell and a separable functional end.
17. The combination bottle system of claim 12 further comprising:
- first and second top units, the first top unit having a first top unit perimeter lip having a first top unit attachment configuration mateable with the attachment configuration of the base unit perimeter lip or the first, second, or third attachment configurations and said second top unit having a second top unit perimeter lip having a second top unit attachment configuration said first and second top units each exhibiting a functional end.
18. The combination bottle system of claim 17 in which said first and second top units each have a functional end selected from the group of functional ends including sippy cup functional end, straw cup functional end and nipple cup functional end.
19. The combination bottle system of claim 18 in which the functional ends of the respective first and second top units each exhibit a different function.
20-27. (canceled)
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 25, 2018
Publication Date: Dec 27, 2018
Inventor: Kevin Brodwick (Austin, TX)
Application Number: 15/963,067