Two-compartment dispenser
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United States of America Patent
Stats
-
Jul 3, 1984
Issued Date -
N/A
app pub date -
Oct 26, 1981
filing date -
Oct 26, 1981
priority date (Note) -
Expired
status (Latency Note)
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Abstract
A two-compartment dispenser of fluent material includes a primary compartment having a collapsible wall and initially holding the main body of the material, a secondary compartment, and a compartment separator that forms a barrier between the two compartments and has a passage for the fluent material to flow from the primary to the secondary compartment. A dispensing nozzle as connected to the secondary compartment, which also has a movable wall portion resiliently biased to expand the volume of the secondary compartment to its fullest extent. A check valve controls the passage through the compartment separator and is closed when the movable part of the secondary compartment is pressed inwardly to force fluent material from the secondary compartment out through the dispensing nozzle. Release of pressure on the movable part reduces pressure in the secondary compartment and allows the check valve to open so that fluent material can flow from the primary compartment to the secondary compartment. Ambient air pressure on the collapsible wall reduces the volume of the primary compartment an amount equal to the volume of material transferred to the secondary compartment. A rigid outer casing vented to the atmosphere protects the collapsible primary compartment from being inadvertently squeezed. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention This invention relates to the field of dispensers of fluent material. In particular, it relates to a two-compartment dispenser in which fluent material in a collapsible primary compartment is transferred through a valve-controlled passage to a secondary compartment and from the latter out of the dispenser by way of a discharge nozzle in response to alternate depression and release of a resiliently biased part of the wall of the secondary compartment. 2. The Prior Art My U.S. Pat. No. 4,008,830 describes a dispenser of liquid or viscous materials from a collapsible bag by means of a non-vented pump. The mouth of the bag is joined liquid-tight to the pump. As the pump is actuated to expel the material within it and is then released, atmospheric pressure collapses the bag and forces another quantity of the material into the pump. While that dispenser works quite well, it requires a pump which is somewhat complex. Another dispenser that includes a pump and operates on the same principle is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,420,413 of Corsette. Spatz discloses, in U.S. Pat. No. 3,088,636, a dispenser that has a deformable, spring-biased cover at one end of a rigid cylindrical body. Pressure on the cover to reduce the space in it forces open a spring-biased mouth through which fluent material is then discharged. Releasing the pressure allows the mouth to reclose and the cover to return to its original volume, which reduces pressure in the dispenser. As a result, atmospheric pressure pushes a piston at the other end of the cylinder inward to occupy a volume equal to that of the material just discharged. The piston has resilient fingers that engage the part of the cylinder wall just vacated by the piston, thus preventing the piston from moving in the opposite direction. However, leakage at that end of the cylinder is prevented only by the accuracy of fit between the piston and cylinder. Other Spatz patents that show similar one-way pistons are U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,268,123 and 3,870,200. U.S Pat. No. 4,154,371 to Kolacziuski et al shows a similar dispenser with the same type of piston at one end of a cylinder and, at the other end, a compressible, generally dome-shaped cover that includes an integral actuator terminating in a discharge nozzle. All of the foregoing, one-way piston dispensers have only a single compartment in which the fluent material is contained. As a result, pressure on the compressible or movable member at the other end requires that the piston hold firmly in position against any force that would tend to push it backward. The resilient fingers must dig into the cylinder wall enough to prevent any such backward movement, which means that only certain materials can be used for the cylinder. U.S. Pat. No. 3,223,289 to Bouet discloses various embodiments of dispensers having a collapsible inner compartment within an outer container. In several embodiments, the side walls of the outer container are slightly deformable, and, when they are compressed, they cause pressure to be transmitted to the collapsible compartment by air in the space between the collapsible compartment and the outer container. A check valve in the wall of the outer container allows additional air to enter the space when pressure on the outer container wall is released. In one embodiment, the wall of the container surrounding the collapsible compartment is rigid, and a separate compartment is provided that has an elastomeric wall that can be squeezed to reduce its volume. The squeezable compartment has two check valves, one of which controls a passage to the space surrounding the collapsible compartment in the rigid-walled container and the other of which controls a passage between the squeezable compartment and the surrounding air. The collapsible compartment has a nozzle that is always open and through which fluent material can either be drawn into or discharged from it, either each time the squeezable compartment is squeezed or each time it is released, depending on the way the check valves are arranged. OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION It is one object of this invention to provide a simplified two-compartment dispenser in which fluent material is initially protectively held in a collapsible compartment and a wall of the other compartment is manipulated to transfer the material to that compartment and then to discharge it. Further objects will be apparent from the following specification together with the drawings. In accordance with this invention, one compartment of a two-compartment dispenser has a collapsible wall joined fluid-tight to a second compartment by a compartment separator that defines at lease part of a wall common to both compartments. A passage through the compartment separator is controlled by a valve responsive to movement of a resiliently biased, movable part of the wall of the second compartment. When pressure is exerted on that part of the wall to reduce the volume in the second compartment, the valve closes the passage and fluent material in the second compartment can only be expelled through a discharge nozzle. When such pressure is released, the valve opens the passage between compartments at the same time that return of the movable part of the wall to its original position reduces pressure in the second compartment, allowing atmospheric pressure on the collapsible compartment to force enough fluent material through the passage to replace the material expelled through the discharge nozzle. The valve can be a ball or flap type of check valve or it can be a piston attached to the movable part of the wall and aligned with the passage to plug up the passage when the movable part of the wall is pressed inwardly. The piston can include an internal passage with an entrance to the second compartment and an exit to which a discharge nozzle is connected and through which fluent material squeezed out of the second compartment is discharged from the dispenser. The entrance should be spaced well away from the end of the piston that enters the passage through the compartment separator. A closure may be attached to the outer end of the nozzle to be opened only when it is desired to discharge material from the nozzle and to be closed at all other times to prevent air from reaching the fluent material just inside the nozzle.

First Claim
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- 15 United States
- 10 France
- 8 Japan
- 7 China
- 5 Korea
- 2 Other
Patent Owner(s)
Patent Owner | Address | |
---|---|---|
MESHBERG PHILIP | PALM BEACH FL 33480 |
International Classification(s)
Inventor(s)
Inventor Name | Address | # of filed Patents | Total Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Meshberg, Philip | 2500 S. Ocean Blvd., Palm Beach, FL 33480 | 42 | 1199 |
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Maintenance Fees
Fee | Large entity fee | small entity fee | micro entity fee | due date |
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Fee | Large entity fee | small entity fee | micro entity fee |
---|---|---|---|
Surcharge after expiration - Late payment is unavoidable | $700.00 | $350.00 | $175.00 |
Surcharge after expiration - Late payment is unintentional | $1,640.00 | $820.00 | $410.00 |
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