Coating implements with material supply – Including means to apply material-moving force – Including pressurized reservoir
Reexamination Certificate
1999-11-09
2002-02-19
Walczak, David J. (Department: 3751)
Coating implements with material supply
Including means to apply material-moving force
Including pressurized reservoir
C401S205000, C401S206000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06347899
ABSTRACT:
DESCRIPTION
The invention relates to a device for applying liquid media to the skin, composed of a vessel which contains a fluid and of an application element which is attached to this vessel and to which the fluid from the vessel can be fed.
Devices for applying liquid media to the skin are known in the prior art.
Thus, EP 0 155 350 A2 discloses an application device for applying liquid media to the skin, which is composed of a vessel which contains the fluid and of a porous head which is held in position on the vessel by means of a flexible connecting element. By pressing on the head, the latter is pressed vertically downwards into the vessel, the resulting rise in pressure in the vessel being used to press the fluid out of the vessel and into the head. The fluid passes through the pores of the head to the surface of the head and is distributed on the skin.
EP 0 374 339 A1 shows a pressurized can which represents a storage vessel for deodorants or comparable fluids. The sponge, on which the fluid which forces it way out of the can acts when the valve is activated, is arranged on the valve of the can. The sponge is attached to a cylindrically shaped carrier which can simultaneously permit the valve to be triggered. Furthermore, the carrier is pressed onto the neck of the can.
DE 40 16 139 makes available a fluid applicator for cosmetic fluids, which has a discharge head which itself has a hood of a porous material. Furthermore, a closure on the neck of a flacon is part of the discharge head, the flacon containing at least one opening which connects the flacon to the hood and to a casing. The casing has support elements for the hood and is mechanically connected to the closure and can be moved manually. The hood is fabricated from a porous, inelastic material. In this applicator, the opening of a valve, through which the fluid located in the applicator can pass into the porous hood, is also affected by means of pressure on the discharge head.
Finally, EP 0 655 208 A1 presents a device for applying a fluid to the skin, which is composed of a vessel for the fluid which is to be applied to the surface to be treated, and of a distributor cap. The distributor cap is connected to the aforesaid vessel by means of a spray head. The distributor cap is made of a porous material which is suitable for applying the fluid by simply rubbing the outer surface of the cap on the surface to be treated. The vessel is a pressurized tank which is equipped with a spray valve. The distributor cap is held by a support which is a component of the spray head and is mechanically connected to an attachment which can cooperate with the aforesaid valve in order to cause it to open as a result of the effect of mechanical activation which is exerted on the distributor cap. When it opens, the fluid which is ejected from the tank is guided through the attachment to the surface of the distributor cap which is opposite the outside of the cap. The spray head which constitutes a plastic part shaped in an element has a securing device which can be used to connect the aforesaid head to the tank to form one element. The securing device is composed of an inelastic jacket which is secured on the tank by engaging an engagement area.
It is essential to the invention that an elastic part connects the aforesaid holding device and the support of the distributor cap to one another, the inelastic jacket being connected, in addition to its other enclosure, to a cylindrical wall which actually forms this elastic part.
EP 0 037 903 A1 discloses a fitting for an aerosol can in which a cylindrical mounting element is plugged onto this aerosol can and tilted. The mounting element has a central bore into which a carrier is introduced, the movement of the latter being limited by a stop. The carrier serves to hold a sponge or a brush.
Then, U.S. Pat. No. 5,230,579 discloses a further fitting for an aerosol can. The spray head of the fitting has a distributor head which is formed from a fixed porous material and which, moreover, is also of a curved shape. Polyethylene is specifically mentioned as the material for the distributor head.
The invention is based on the object of making available a device for applying liquid media, in particular to the skin, which device ensures that the media are applied in a simple and pleasant way and which is of a simple design.
This object is achieved by means of a device such as is characterized in more detail in the claims. Advantageous developments of the device are the subject matter of the subclaims here.
Accordingly, the invention proposes a device for applying liquid media to the skin, for example deodorants under the armpit, which is composed of a vessel containing a fluid, the vessel being formed from a pressurized gas package with a spray valve and an application element which is attached to this vessel and to which element the fluid can be fed from the vessel. The application element itself is composed of a mount which is fitted onto the vessel, and of a moveably mounted carrier element, the mount being shaped in such a way that the carrier element can be held.
The carrier element has the following features:
It bears on the spray valve.
It holds a distributor head which has the filling applied to it when the spray valve is triggered.
It can be guided in the mount essentially parallel to the axis of the spray valve mount, the spray valve being activated by lightly pressing on or tilting the distributor head.
In one preferred embodiment, the spray valve is a tilt valve. Furthermore, it is proven advantageous if the spray valve has a pin which emerges from it and which is, to a certain extent, pressed tightly into a duct in the interior of the carrier element.
The application element can be attached to the vessel by means of the spray valve, and the mount can be attached to the valve poppet.
In a further preferred embodiment of the device according to the invention, the vessel is composed of a cylindrical metal bottle whose upper part is shaped as an arc. The arc is fitted with a spray valve, an engagement groove being provided in the connecting area between the cylindrical wall and the arcuate wall. The mount is of a cylindrical shape and has in the region of one of its edges an engagement device which can interact with the engagement groove.
In order to ensure the releasable connection between the mount and carrier element, the carrier element can have a cylindrical wall which has a downwardly directed, annular widened portion. The cylindrical wall of the carrier element is guided here in a portion of the mount in such a way that the annular widened portion undercuts the mount. The undercut should move within a range of a few millimetres so that the carrier element and mount can be separated by pulling on the carrier element. Furthermore, in this way it is possible for the carrier element to be easily pressed into the mount when the device is being mass produced.
The carrier element can be equipped with an eddy chamber in order to homogenize the fluid emerging from the vessel before said fluid enters the distributor head. In this way a larger area of the distributor head is wetted. A further improvement in the distribution of the fluid in the eddy chamber can be achieved by spraying the fluid from the spray valve and into the eddy chamber through a bottom plate with 2 to 5 nozzles. The diameter of the preferably circular nozzles is 0.5 to 2 mm in an advantageous embodiment.
In a further preferred embodiment of the device according to the invention, the distributor head is composed of porous material. The distributor head should have a thickness of between 1 mm and 4 mm above the eddy chamber. Furthermore, it has turned out to be advantageous if the distributor head is composed of a sintered material which is fabricated by compressing plastic particles or an open-celled foam; this material is possibly covered by a fabric. The shape of the distributor head is preferably matched to the armpit.
The porosity of the material of which the distributor head is composed can be between 10 &mgr;m and 500
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