Isothermal package material

Special receptacle or package – Article adhesively secured to support

Patent

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Details

229 87R, 206521, B65D 8545

Patent

active

048816469

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
This invention relates to an isothermal packaging material for fresh or
deep-frozen products, especially foodstuffs, pharmaceuticals and vegetable products.
Every day, millions of people are faced with the problem of carrying products whose quality, flavour or appearance deteriorates rapidly if they are not kept below or above certain temperatures.
The critical temperature varies very widely depending on the nature of the products. By way of example, it is +8.degree. C. for butter and cheese, +13.degree. C. for meat and fish, about +42.degree. C. for ready-cooked or prepared foods intended to be eaten hot (roast chicken, hot ham, etc.), -8.degree. C. for deep-frozen foods, this being the temperature above which the products may not be re-frozen without risk to the consumers' health, about +18.degree. C. for some pharmaceuticals (suppositories, etc.), about +20.degree. C. for flowers and plants, etc., etc.
It is possible with the material of the invention to package these products and keep them for a fairly long period at a temperature which only very slowly approaches ambient temperature and their critical temperatures. It thus makes it possible to preserve these products for several hours (from 2 to 12, depending on the circumstances) at a temperature at which they are suitable for consumption or use. This period of time is at least long enough to cover the normal transport period. This material is characterised by the fact that it consists of a flexible sheet with one highly reflective surface and comprises at least one layer of material of low heat conductivity, e.g. plastic foam or unwoven textile fibres. The package is obtained by wrapping the sheet once or several times around the product to be preserved, with the reflective side outwards, and then closing the package by independent or specially designed means by fastening together the juxtaposed parts of the longitudinal edges and applying the free transverse edge against the body of the package.
The package thus obtained is cheap, occupies very little space, is unbreakable, re-usable and in addition affords good shock protection.
The attached drawings illustrate diagrammatically and by way of example an embodiment of the object of the invention.
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the package ready for use.
FIGS. 2 and 3 are cross-sections through a package made by means of this embodiment in perpendicular planes.
FIG. 4 is a graph showing the temperature of the packed product as a function of time.
FIG. 5 illustrates the mass production and storage of the material.
The isothermal packaging material shown in the drawing consists of a flexible rectangular sheet 10 of polyvinyl, 40 cm wide, 90 cm long and 0.5 mm thick, which is white and shiny on its outer surface and self-adhesive on the inner, and a layer of open-celled plastic foam 11, 5 mm thick, adhesively secured to the inner surface of the sheet.
This layer 11 is discontinuous in order to reveal the self-adhesive surface of sheet 10 along a transverse section 12 and along two longitudinal strips 13.
FIGS. 2 and 3 show how the sheet illustrated in FIG. 1 is used to wrap a 400 g block of ice cream.
The sheet is wrapped three times around the block and the package thus obtained is closed by pressing self-adhesive strips 12 and 13 against the corresponding surfaces of the shiny side of sheet 10.
This package, placed in an environment with an ambient temperature of +22.degree. C., is capable of keeping the block of ice cream, initially at a temperature of -20.degree. C., cool for about 2 hours before it reaches the temperature of -8.degree. C. at which it begins to melt (FIG. 4). The package thus gives a much better performance than the aluminium carriers or bags found in supermarkets, which will keep the same block in the same conditions for hardly an hour.
Sheets as shown in FIG. 1 will best be continuously mass-produced, stored on rolls and used as required by cutting the sheets off one after the other.
The packaging material shown in the drawing is more especially intended for pre-packed products.

REFERENCES:
patent: 492306 (1893-02-01), Meech
patent: 2127029 (1938-08-01), Hermanson
patent: 2502749 (1950-04-01), Reid
patent: 2553923 (1951-05-01), Lambert
patent: 2954912 (1960-10-01), Kauffeld
patent: 3038811 (1962-06-01), Reading
patent: 3203618 (1965-08-01), Andrews et al.
patent: 3291377 (1966-12-01), Eggen
patent: 3314211 (1967-04-01), Wolff
patent: 3366313 (1968-01-01), Culberg et al.
patent: 3597302 (1971-08-01), Gerard

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