Splash-proof lid

Receptacles – Container attachment or adjunct – Drinking device

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C220S707000, C220S719000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06296141

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to a removable lid for a cup and, more particularly, to a lid which has both an air hole and a drinking hole through which a user can drink the liquid contents of the cup. The lid prevents inadvertent splashing which occurs due to unintentional movement of the cup.
2. Art Related to Invention
Splash-proof lids for drinking cups are known. Typically, they comprise a round, removable cover which fits tightly over the top opening of a cup to prevent unwanted spillage of the contents of the cup while allowing the user to drink the contents of the cup even though the lid remains on the cup. To allow the user to drink the contents of the cup while the lid remains on the cup, both a drinking hole and an air hole are provided in the lid. Both holes are configured to prevent unwanted loss or spillage of the contents of the cup which occurs when the cup is unintentionally moved. Typically, such lids are used on disposable cups which the user takes on a train, a plane, in a boat, or in a car.
The drinking hole is usually positioned at the edge of the lid next to the side wall of the cup, while the air hole is positioned either centrally in the lid or along the edge of the lid next to the side wall of the cup, opposite the drinking hole.
One example of such a lid is taught in U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,014. In the '014 patent, a splash-proof lid has both a drinking hole and an air hole wherein both holes have a baffle arrangement to prevent the liquid contents of the cup from exiting the cup. The baffle arrangement is such that the axis of the baffle, taken along the fluid flow lines, forms a straight line and does not follow the contour or radius of the exterior of the lid. The baffle arrangement in the '014 patent is rather complicated.
Another example of such a lid is taught in U.S. Pat. No. 4,394,928. Here a special cup having a ledge functions with the lid to form a curved channel through which liquid flows to the drink hole. Thus, a special cup must be employed to allow the lid to function.
There is a need for a simplified design for a splash-proof lid which can function with a conventional disposable cup.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A simplified splash-proof drinking lid for a cup has now been discovered. The lid is intended to be disposable and for use with disposable drinking cups such as the type used for coffee, tea, etc. The lid has an air hole and a drinking hole and is designed to avoid spillage of the contents of the cup through the drinking hole.
It has been discovered that the jiggling or unintended movement of the cup causes a wave to form on the surface of the liquid and to travel back and forth across the surface of the liquid crashing against the side walls of the cup. When the wave hits the side walls of the cup, it splashes out of the drinking hole or the air hole when the air hole is positioned next to the side wall of the cup. Thus, it is the movement of the waves on the surface of the liquid in the cup and its crashing against the side wall that causes the splashing and the spillage of the liquid.
It has also been found that when the air hole is made small and positioned in the center of the lid that splashing or spillage due to the wave through the air hole does not occur. Furthermore, it has been found that when the air hole is made rather small compared to the drinking hole, that the air hole will still function to allow liquids to flow out of the drinking hole and air in through the air hole. Thus, in the present invention, the air hole is positioned in the center of the lid and made relatively small compared to the drinking hole. To avoid spillage through the drinking hole, an arc capillary tube is employed. The arc capillary tube of the present invention has been found to redirect the liquid back into the cup and prevent spillage of the contents of the cup through the drinking hole.
The arc capillary tube is positioned on the bottom of the lid, directly below the drinking hole, and is in fluid communication with the drinking hole. The arc capillary tube follows the curvature of the lid and is centered on the drinking hole. The arc capillary tube is formed along the edge of the lid and has an opening at either end to allow for the liquid contents of the cup to travel into the capillary tube. The capillary tube is also in fluid communication with the drinking hole to allow the liquid contents to flow from the capillary tube through the drinking hole and into the user's mouth. The radius of the arc capillary tube is less than the radius of the lid and the radius of the arc capillary tube is concentric with the radius of the lid.
The lid itself has an engaging periphery to allow it to engage the rim of a cup and become removably affixed to the rim of the cup. In this way, the lid of the present invention fits a conventional disposable cup and no special arrangement need be made nor a special cup employed in the present invention.
Broadly, the splash-proof lid for a drinking cup in accordance with the present invention comprises: a circular disc having a snap fitting periphery for engagement with a cup rim; a drinking hole in said disc which is positioned adjacent to said snap fitting periphery; an air hole in said disc which is positioned in the center of said disc, said air hole being smaller than said drinking hole; and an arc capillary tube attached under said disc and centered on said drinking hole, said arc capillary tube being in fluid communication with said drinking hole, said arc capillary tube having a radius that is concentric with the radius of said disc and less than the radius of said disc, said arc capillary tube having two inlet openings, one at each end of said arc capillary tube, such that both inlet openings allow fluid communication between themselves and said drinking hole by means of said capillary tube. Preferably, the arc capillary tube forms an angle of 60°. More preferably, the arc capillary tube is rectangular in cross-section.


REFERENCES:
patent: 0908706 (1909-01-01), Sprinkle
patent: 3360161 (1967-12-01), Smith
patent: 4322014 (1982-03-01), Philip
patent: 4394928 (1983-07-01), Philip
patent: 4767019 (1988-08-01), Horner
patent: 5542670 (1996-08-01), Morano
patent: 2053865-A (1981-02-01), None

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