Title of Invention

CONTAINER FOR PACKAGING A LIQUID TO BE DISPENSED IN DROPS REVERSIBLY DEFORMED BY AIR INPUT

Abstract The invention concerns a container for packaging a liquid (1) to be dispensed in drops, said container being reversibly deformed by air drops, said container being reversibly deformed by air input and being equipped with a head (3) for dispensing liquid through a nozzle (5). The latter (3) comprises a recessed body (4) which is nested inside a neck (10) of the container and which holds a hydrophobic microporous pad (8) arranged upstream of a chamber (9). Said chamber (9) provided with an air reservoir for preventing the liquid from passing through the microporous pad between two liquid dispensing operations when the nozzle (5) is sealingly obstructed with a cap (6) and for drying a partly hydrophilic and hydrophobic filtering membrane (7) arranged in the dispensing head (3).
Full Text FORM 2
THE PATENTS ACT, 1970 (39 of 1970)
& THE PATENTS RULES, 2003
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION
[See section 10, Rule 13]
CONTAINER FOR PACKAGING A LIQUID TO BE DISPENSED IN DROPS, REVERSIBLY DEFORMED BY AIR INPUT;
LABORATOIRES THEA, A CORPORATION
ORGANIZED AND EXISTING UNDER THE LAWS
OF FRANCE, WHOSE ADDRESS IS 12, RUE
LOUIS BLERIOT, ZONE INDUSTRIELLE DU
BREZET, F-63100 CLERMONT-FERRAND,
FRANCE
THE FOLLOWING SPECIFICATION
PARTICULARLY DESCRIBES THE INVENTION AND THE MANNER IN WHICH IT IS TO BE PERFORMED.
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The invention is of the field of the packaging and dispensing of liquids, such as pharmaceutical solutions, particularly eye drops. The subject of the invention is a container equipped with a dispensing head, which is organized to contain a liquid, while at the same time protecting it from the external environment, and to deliver this liquid in a controlled manner, particularly drop by drop.
Containers for containing a liquid which are organized to preserve this liquid from the external environment and to deliver it in a controlled manner, particularly drop by drop, are known. The applications of such containers are numerous, and a favoured application, although this is non-restricting as far as the scope of the present invention is concerned, lies in the keeping and dispensing of a pharmaceutical solution, particularly eye drops.
With regard to the preserving of the liquid, this liquid needs to be protected from the external environment by preventing it from coming into contact with the ambient air which is likely to contain contaminants, particularly bacteria. To dispense the liquid, it is common practice to give the container a deformable nature allowing its volume to be reduced, at least temporarily, so as to discharge the liquid it contains. Such containers are more specifically flexible-walled containers, so that the liquid can be expelled as a result of compression exerted by the user on these walls, and are equipped with a dispensing head in order to achieve the two-fold objective of preserving and of dispensing the liquid in a controlled manner.
However, the solutions provided for specifically achieving one and other of these objectives are likely to be antagonistic, and designers in the field in particular concentrate their efforts on the search for a compromise between the various solutions. Consideration has also to be given to the fact that the container is desired to have a simple structure, the cost of production of which must not be prohibitive given its consumable nature, and that it must be convenient for the user to use.
It will be noted at this stage of the description that it is common practice within this field to use a filter membrane to prevent
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contaminants from passing from outside the container towards the liquid it contains. This membrane, placed near a nozzle of the
dispensing head for discharging the liquid from the container, allows
the liquid to pass through it under the effect of the compression exerted in the container by the deformation of the walls.
In a first approach, it has been proposed for the container to be given an irreversible or almost irreversible deformable nature. An
internal wall of the container delimiting the volume in which the liquid is housed is organized as a bellows, and is encased in an outer sheath. The container also comprises a filter membrane which has an
air-impermeable nature so as to prevent external air from being admitted towards the liquid contained in the container under the effect of shrinkage by liquid delivered. Reference may, for example, be made to Patent Documents FR 2 661 401 and FR 2 770 495 (or US 6,336,571) which describe such containers.
There then arises the problem of the controlled delivery of the liquid. According to document FR 2 770 495 (US 6,336,571), a microporous pad regulating the flow of liquid is positioned in the dispensing head of a container the walls of which are strictly irreversibly deformable. An intermdiate reverse is formed downstream of the pad and upstream of a filter air-impermeable membrane. Such a container has a complex structure, and the cost of production, of the reservoir containing the liquid to be delivered as well as of the dispensing head, is high. Furthermore, it is not possible with such a container the walls of which are irreversibly deformable to deliver all the liquid contained in the reservoir. Indeed, the belows form does not allow to expulse the very last drops, so that part of the liquid is wasted.
In the second approach, it has been proposed for the container to be given a reversible deformation facility, the membrane for its part being air-permeable. Reference may, in particular, be made to document FR 2 816 600 (or US 2004/0074925) which describes such a container. The structure of the dispensing head of this container is simple. It contains a filter membrane being deemed to be sufficient to preserve the liquid against contaminants likely to be present in the ambient air. Furthermore, it is provided for the liquid to be strictly preserved from the ambient environment prior to
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first use. To achieve this, the dispensing head is mounted movably on the neck of the container so as to perforate a sealing disc extemporaneously at the time of the first delivery operation. However, the result of this arrangement, and more particularly, of the mobility of the dispensing head with respect to the container, is that there is a risk of a loss of leaktightness between the dispensing head and the container once the sealing disc has been perforated and the dispensing head has been assembled by the user inside a neck of the container, particularly as a close-fitting push-fit. While this risk can be reduced, such an approach tends to increase the complexity of the dispensing head, to the detriment of the benefit first sought of simplifying its structure. Furthermore, the residual presence of the sealing disc is likely to form an obstacle impeding the controlled delivery of the liquid.
As a result, the designers in this field are still faced with the need to reach a compromise between the simplicity of the dispensing head, the preserving of the liquid from contaminants which might be present in the ambient air, the ease with which the delivered liquid can be metered, and the optimal use of all the liquid contained in the reservoir.
The present invention falls within the scope of this search for a compromise and aims to propose a container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop which offers a solution that addresses such a compromise. The invention falls more specifically within the scope of the packaging of a sensitive liquid, such as a pharmaceutical, biological or similar solution, particularly eye drops.
The inventive approach of the present invention has consisted in general in choosing first of all a container of the type comprising a reservoir the walls of which are reversibly elastically deformable through the intake of air into the container. This choice is aimed at allowing the liquid to be delivered under the effect of pressure exerted against these walls, and at allowing the container to return spontaneously to its initial shape after a dose of liquid has been delivered. Such a reservoir the walls of which are reversibly deformable has in itself the advantage of being highly simple to produce, with respect to the irreversibly deformable reservoirs of the
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prior art, which require a high number of components and of assembly operations.
In general, such a container according to the present invention would be recognized in that it is equipped with a dispensing head comprising a hollowed-out body which is equipped with a nozzle for delivering the liquid and which contains a microporous pad of hydrophobic material placed downstream of the reservoir across the body of the dispensing head. The said body is assembled irreversibly inside the neck of the container.
Furthermore, it is proposed for the container to be equipped with a removable cap for tightly sealing the nozzle which, combined with the said microporous pad made of hydrophobic material, impedes the spontaneous flow of the liquid from the volume of the container reserved for storing it towards the nozzle. These provisions are such that the spontaneous passage of liquid through the hydrophobic microporous pad is prevented when the cap is tightly sealing the nozzle, this being the case throughout the usage life of the container. Conversely, the free flow of the liquid from the volume of the container reserved for storing it, through the hydrophobic microporous pad, is allowed when the nozzle is uncovered, to allow the desired delivery of a dose of liquid through pressure exerted on the walls of the container. Furthermore, the passage of air is allowed by suction through the hydrophobic microporous pad towards the storage volume after a dose of liquid has been delivered, through the elastic return of the walls of the container allowing it to return to its initial shape in spite of the removal of a dose of liquid.
It will be noted that the microporous pad is preferably made of polyethylene or similar material which gives it a hydrophobic nature so that it cannot be wetted, its microporous nature nonetheless allowing the liquid to pass through it provided that the pressure differential brought about by the pressure exerted by the user is sufficient.
Such a configuration of the container according to the invention, and more particularly the combination of the reversibly
deformable reservoir, the microporous pad and the sealing cap, is advantageous. Indeed, when the cap is put back in a position where it tightly seals the nozzle, after air intake following the delivery of a
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dose of liquid and the elastic return of the walls of the reservoir to their initial shape, there is created a pressure differential between the parts upstream and downstream of the pad through which there is created a head loss. This pressure differential prevents the liquid contained in the container from passing through the pad, even if the walls of the reservoir are accidentally pressed, and it ensures the tightness of the flask, together with protecting the liquid it contains from external contaminants. Furthermore, such a configuration prevents stagnation of the liquid downstream of the pad, since the liquid which has not been expulsed is succed back towards the volume of the container.
The container according to the invention advantageously addresses an objective of the invention, which is to ensure an optimal use of all the content of the container, in two different ways. On one hand, owing to its elastically reversibly deformable walls, the container keeps an intact ability to expulse the liquid until the last drop of liquid. Indeed, since some air is succed into the container in replacement of each dose of the liquid expulsed, the pressure available in the container for the expulsion is always the same all along use, and until the delivery of the last drop. On the other hand, as it has been described above, there remains upstream of the pad no drop of liquid which is likely to be contaminated by external contaminants, and which should be eliminated before any new delivery of a clean dose.
Furthermore, the microporous pad, through which is created a head loss, regulates the flow of liquid, thereby encouraging the controlled delivery of doses of liquid. Moreover, it prevents the liquid contained in the flask from flowing when the cap is removed, even when the flask is turned down, the dispensing head being directed downwards, as long as no pressure is exerted on the container walls.
In the context of an application of the container to a sensitive liquid, particularly a pharmaceutical solution, the dispensing head is preferably equipped with a filter membrane intended to protect the liquid from an intake of contaminants present in the ambient air, particularly bacteria. According to the invention, a membrane is chosen that is at least partially hydrophilic and at least partially hydrophobic, so as to allow alternately the liquid and the air
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to pass through it, and that is positioned in the dispensing head upstream of the nozzle, between the latter and the pad. The partially hydrophilic nature of the membrane allows the liquid to pass through it under the effect of the compression exerted in the container by deformation of the walls, whereas its partially hydrophobic nature allows an input of ambient air inside the container, when the latter elastically returns to its initial shape after each compression exerted by the user.
The membrane also advantageously constitutes an additional head loss which prevents, in combination with the hydrophobic microporous pad, any leak of liquid out of the container as long as no pressure is exerted on the container's walls.
In order to encourage the passage of the air through the membrane, the invention then anticipates for it to be possible for this membrane to be kept dry between two deliveries of liquid, when the container is standing on its base, by virtue of the presence of an intermediate chamber formed between the microporous pad and the membrane. Such an intermediate chamber may also be put to use to form a chamber to even out the delivery of the liquid. For this, it may advantageously be given sufficient volume that it can collect at least one drop of liquid that is to be dispensed during a liquid delivery operation so as to cause it to leave the dispensing head drop by drop.
The volume of the intermediate chamber also and advantageously constitutes a reserve of air, which, when the nozzle is sealed by the cap, maintains a pressure which tends to prevent the liquid from passing through the microporous pad. It will be noted that, in combination with the intermediate chamber, the hydrophobic nature of the microporous pad acts as an obstacle opposing the passage of liquid through it.
The intermediate chamber also and advantageously
constitutes a volume for accommodating the liquid that has not yet passed across the membrane when pressure ceases to be applied to the walls of the container. For that, it is advantageous to ensure that the intermediate chamber extends over the entire surface of the membrane and that it is situated a sufficient axial distance away from it to encourage the drying out of the membrane as soon as the
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pressure exerted on the walls of the container ceases after a delivery of liquid and when this container is returned to its position of rest, standing on its base with the dispensing head uppermost. As a result, any residue of liquid, which, having not been expelled, remains contained in the intermediate chamber, does not succeed in wetting the membrane by capillarity. It will be noted that the hydrophobic nature of the microporous pad also encourages the drying out of the membrane.
Through its various characteristics, as mentioned hereinabove and as will be defined and described more fully hereinbelow, the invention has the advantage, on an industrial scale, of doing away with the complicated dynamic closure systems that were used earlier. By virtue of the measures provided by the invention, there is no need either for a sealing disc or any other
tearable partition, or of a valve of some other form, or of a procedure for opening the bottle via translation or rotational movement of the dispensing head with respect to the reservoir container of liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop.
Of particular note is the advantageous combination of the presence of the microporous pad of hydrophobic nature, the presence of the filter membrane and the presence of the intermediate chamber between these, which, together with the dispensing head, confer both the function of evening out the flow of liquid when the latter is being dispensed and a function of sealing and drying out the membrane in combination with the pressure of the air retained in the intermediate chamber as a result of the sealing of the cap onto the dispensing head.
A microporous pad that is entirely appropriate in the context of the invention has, for the passage of liquid in the longitudinal direction, microducts, the mean pore diameter of which ranges between 0.3 and 10 microns.
Such a range of values is, in particular, especially appropriate in the favoured field of application of the invention which is that of the keeping and dispensing of a pharmaceutical solution, particularly eye drops.
Furthermore, it ensures that the pad produces a sufficient head loss to isolate the membrane from the liquid contained in the
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container before the first use. Degradation of the membrane upon
contact with the liquid is therefore advantageously prevented during the storage of the container before the first use.
Furthermore, it is entirely advantageous within the context of the invention for this microporous pad to be combined with a partially hydrophilic and partially hydrophobic membrane, the pore diameter of which is smaller than that of the pad, particularly ranging between 0.1 and 0.2 microns. There is thereby obtained improved tightness and flow regulation properties.
The membrane may be formed of a polymeric material, based for example on polyamide or polyether sulphone resin, which confers its hydrophilic nature. It is then given a partially hydrophobic nature by modifying its structure on part of its surface. Such a modification may be carried out in a classical way, for example by grafting in the presence of an radicalar reactions initiator. The treatment is advantageously carried out so as to confer to the membrane an hydrophobic nature on a median strip occupying 20 to 50 percent of its surface that is wetted during the deliverey of liquid.
As a preference, the body is assembled inside the neck as a push-fit with close contact.
The body is preferably elastically deformable so that it can be forcibly introduced into the neck of the container, a centring member preferably being formed at the base of the body so as to facilitate such a forcible introduction. This centring member preferably consists of radial fins for joining, by push-fitting, the body of the dispensing head to the neck of the container, the fins delimiting open sectors between them.
To further encourage the sealing of the container and the introduction with close contact of the body into the neck of the container, the exterior surface of the body of the dispensing head is advantageously equipped with a peripheral ring originating from the said body of which it forms an integral part, this ring preferably being in a plurality and axially repeated along the body.
It will be noted that the body is advantageously obtained by
moulding under conditions such that a ring, originating from the parting line, is radial to the overall line along which it extends and, in particular, as appropriate, parallel to the abovementioned peripheral
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ring. This ring resulting from the parting line is more particularly situated at the distal end of the body, at the boundary where the centring member is attached, so as to encourage the best possible seal between the dispensing head and the container.
The removable cap, for its part, is preferably screwed onto the container so as to encourage the firm holding of the cap on the dispensing head and therefore the sealing between these two items.
To this end, the cap advantageously comprises a combination of sealing members combining a pip that penetrates the nozzle of the dispensing head and a skirt fitting over this nozzle. The pip and the skirt advantageously stem from the cap, when the latter is being obtained as a single piece, particularly by moulding.
The present invention will be better understood from reading the description thereof which will be given in conjunction with the figures of the attached plate, in which:
Figure 1 and Figure 2 are diagrams in axial section illustrating a container for packaging a liquid according to respective variants of embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 3 is a view in section of the container illustrated in Figure 2, the section being taken radially in the region of a centring member that the latter comprises.
In Figures 1 and 2, a container for packaging a liquid 1 has spontaneously reversible deformation so as to allow liquid 1 to be dispensed from manual compression exerted by a user on its walls 2 and spontaneous return to its initial shape by the admission of air. This container forms a volume 15 for storing the liquid 1 and is equipped with a dispensing head 3 for dispensing the liquid drop by drop. This dispensing head 3 mainly consists of a hollowed-out body 4 equipped with a nozzle 5 and with a removable cap 6 sealing the nozzle 5. A filter membrane 7 which is antibacterial, partially hydrophilic and partially hydrophobic, therefore permeable to air but also to the liquid, is positioned upstream of the nozzle 5 to protect the liquid from the undesirable ingress of contaminants that might be present in the ambient air, particularly bacteria.
The body 4 of the dispensing head 3 houses, within its interior recess, a microporous pad 8 which is made of a hydrophobic material, particularly polyethylene, so as to prevent liquid 1 from
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passing towards the nozzle 5 when there is no compression exerted on the walls 2 of the container. This microporous pad 8 is positioned
upstream of and some distance from the membrane 7 so as to form an intermediate chamber 9 between itself 8 and this membrane 7.
The chamber 9 extends over the entire surface of the pad so as to constitute a reserve of air which, when the nozzle 5 is sealed by
the cap 6, exerts pressure over the entire surface of the pad 8 preventing the liquid 1 from passing through the microporous pad 8 when the nozzle 5 is sealed by the cap 6. More specifically, the cap 6 impedes the discharge of air from the container and more particularly from the intermediate chamber 9. As the air is confined downstream of the microporous pad 8, the latter impedes the passage of the liquid 1 through it as long as the nozzle 5 is sealed by the cap 6. Conversely, in order to deliver liquid 1, the microporous pad 8 does not impede this delivery provided air can be discharged from the container through the nozzle 5. The intermediate chamber 9 is put to use to spontaneously even out the flow of liquid 1 through the microporous pad 8 prior to its being dispensed through the nozzle 5.
The intermediate chamber 9 extends over the entire surface of the membrane so as to form a volume for collecting the liquid 1 away from the membrane 7 when pressure ceases to be exerted on the walls 2 of the container and thus encourage the drying-out of the membrane between two deliveries of liquid.
The body 4 is partly assembled inside the neck 10 of the container by forcible push-fitting. According to the various variants illustrated in Figure 1 and Figure 2, this push-fit is achieved either directly by close contact between the exterior surface of the body 4 and the interior surface of the neck 10, as illustrated in Figure 1 or, and preferably, via O-rings 11 formed at the periphery of the body 4, as illustrated in Figure 2. The preferred presence of a centring member 12 formed at the base of the body 4 to facilitate its introduction into the neck 10 of the container will be noted in these exemplary embodiments. The centring member 12 illustrated by way of example consists overall of radial fins 13 for joining, by push-fitting, the body 4 to the neck 10, the fins 13 delimiting open sectors between them, these being more particularly visible in Figure 3.
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Finally, the variants illustrated disclose the assembly of the cap 6 onto the neck 10 of the container by screw-fastening, using collaborating reliefs 14. To facilitate the screwing of the cap 6 onto the container and enhance the sealing between the two, the cap 6 comprises a pip 15 penetrating the nozzle 5 of the dispensing head and a skirt 16 fitting over the nozzle.
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WE CLAIM
1. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop, this container being characterized in that it comprises a reservoir, the walls (2) of which are reversibly elastically deformable through the intake of air into the container so as to deliver the liquid (1) under the effect of pressure exerted against these walls (2) and so as to allow the container to return spontaneously to its initial shape after a dose of liquid (1) has been delivered, and in that the container is equipped with a dispensing head (3) comprising a hollowed-out body (4) which is equipped with a nozzle (5) for delivering the liquid (1) and which contains a hydrophobic microporous pad (8) placed downstream of the reservoir, the body (4) being assembled irreversibly inside a neck (10) of the container, the latter also being equipped with a removable cap (6) for sealing the nozzle (5) and which, in combination with the hydrophobic microporous pad (8), impedes the spontaneous flow of the liquid (1) from the volume (15) of the container reserved for storing it towards the nozzle (5) so that, first of all, the spontaneous passage of liquid (1) through the microporous pad (8) is prevented when the cap (6) is sealing the nozzle (5) and, conversely, secondly, the free flow of liquid (1), from the volume (15) of the container for storing it and through the hydrophobic microporous pad (8), is allowed when the nozzle (5) is uncovered with a view to the desired delivery of a dose of liquid (1) through pressure exerted on the walls (2) of the container, and thirdly so as to allow the air drawn in through the hydrophobic microporous pad (8) to pass towards the storage volume (15) after a dose of liquid (1) has been delivered by elastic return of the container to its initial shape.
2. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 1, characterized in that the microporous pad (8) is made of polyethylene so as to give it its hydrophobic nature, its microporous nature nonetheless allowing the liquid to pass through it under the effect of a pressure differential
brought about by pressure exerted by a user against the walls of the container.
3. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed
drop by drop according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the
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microporous pad (8) has microducts, the mean pore diameter of which ranges between 0.3 and 10 microns.
4. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to either one of the preceding claims, characterized in that an antibacterial filter membrane (7) is positioned upstream of the nozzle (5).
5. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 4, characterized in that the said filter membrane (7) is a membrane that is partially hydrophilic so as to allow the liquid to pass through it under the effect of the raised pressure created in the container by the pressing of its walls, and partially hydrophobic so as to allow air to pass through it under the effect of the depression created in the container when the pressure exerted on its walls has been released.
6. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 4 or 5, characterized in that the said dispensing head comprises an intermediate chamber (9) for evening out the delivery of the liquid, which chamber is formed between the microporous pad (8) and the membrane (7).
7. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 6, characterized in that the said chamber has sufficient volume to collect at least one drop of liquid that is to be dispensed during the delivery operation.
8. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 6 or 7, characterized in that the said chamber extends over the entire surface of the pad in sufficient volume to constitute a reserve of air which, when the nozzle (5) is sealed by the cap (6), exerts pressure preventing the liquid (1) from passing through the microporous pad (8).
9. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to any one of Claims 6 to 8, characterized in that the intermediate chamber (9) extends over the entire surface of the membrane at a sufficient axial distance that it can accommodate the liquid that has not yet crossed the membrane when pressure ceases to be exerted on the walls of the container and so as thus to encourage the membrane to dry out between two deliveries of liquid.
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10. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the body (4) is assembled inside the neck (10) of the container as a push-fit with close contact.
11. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 10, characterized in that the body (4) is elastically deformable so that it can be forcibly introduced into the neck (10) of the container, a centring member (12) being formed at the base of the body (4) so as to facilitate such forcible introduction.
12. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 11, characterized in that the centring member (12) consists of radial fins (13) for joining, by push-fitting, the body (4) of the dispensing head to the neck (10) of the container, the fins (13) defining open sectors between them.
13. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to any one of Claims 10 to 12, characterized in that the exterior surface of the body (4) of the dispensing head is equipped with at least one O-ring (11) originating from the said body (4) of which it forms an integral part, possibly a plurality of axially
distributed O-rings.
14. Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed
drop by drop according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the body (4) of the dispensing head is obtained by moulding under conditions such that a ring (17), resulting from the parting line of the mould, is situated at the distal end of the body (4), at the boundary where the centring member (12) is attached, encouraging the obtaining of a sealed connection between the dispensing head and the container.
Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the removable cap (6) is screwed onto the container.
Container for packaging a liquid that is to be dispensed drop by drop according to Claim 15, characterized in that the cap (6) comprises a combination of sealing members combining a pip (15) that penetrates the nozzle (5) of the dispensing head and a skirt (16) fitting over this nozzle (5).
Dated this 21st day of December, 2006.



Abstract
The invention concerns a container for packaging a liquid (1) to be dispensed in drops, said container being reversibly deformed by air input and being equipped with a head (3) for dispensing liquid through a nozzle (5). The latter (3) comprises a recessed body (4) which is nested inside a neck (10) of the container and which holds a hydrophobic microporous pad (8) arranged upstream of a chamber (9). Said chamber (9) is provided with an air reservoir for preventing the liquid from passing through the microporous pad between two liquid dispensing operations when the nozzle (5) is sealingly obstructed with a cap (6) and for drying a partly hydrophilic and hydrophobic filtering membrane (7) arranged in the dispensing head (3).
Figure 1
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Documents:

1596-MUMNP-2006-ABSTRACT(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-ABSTRACT(21-12-2006).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-ABSTRACT(GRANTED)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-abstract.doc

1596-mumnp-2006-abstract.pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CANCELLED PAGES(14-9-2011).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-claim.doc

1596-MUMNP-2006-CLAIMS(AMENDED)-(14-9-2011).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CLAIMS(AMENDED)-(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CLAIMS(GRANTED)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CLAIMS(MARKED COPY)-(14-9-2011).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CLAIMS(MARKED COPY)-(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-claims.pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE(13-9-2011).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE(20-1-2011).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-correspondence(28-6-2007).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-correspondence(ipo)-(3-5-2010).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-CORRESPONDENCE(IPO)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-correspondence-received.pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-description (complete).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-DESCRIPTION(GRANTED)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-drawing(21-12-2006).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-DRAWING(GRANTED)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-english transalation(4-1-2007).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-ENGLISH TRANSLATION(20-1-2011).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form 1(4-1-2007).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form 18(28-6-2007).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-FORM 2(GRANTED)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-FORM 2(TITLE PAGE)-(COMPLETE)-(21-12-2006).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-FORM 2(TITLE PAGE)-(GRANTED)-(31-1-2012).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-FORM 3(14-9-2011).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-FORM 3(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form 3(5-4-2007).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form-1.pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form-2.doc

1596-mumnp-2006-form-2.pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form-3.pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form-5.pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-form-pct-isa-237.pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-OTHER DOCUMENT(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-PETITION UNDER RULE 137(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-power of attorney(23-1-2007).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-REPLY TO EXAMINATION REPORT(16-12-2010).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-REPLY TO HEARING(14-9-2011).pdf

1596-MUMNP-2006-US DOCUMENT(14-9-2011).pdf

1596-mumnp-2006-wo international publication report(28-6-2007).pdf

abstract1.jpg


Patent Number 250812
Indian Patent Application Number 1596/MUMNP/2006
PG Journal Number 05/2012
Publication Date 03-Feb-2012
Grant Date 31-Jan-2012
Date of Filing 21-Dec-2006
Name of Patentee Laboratoires Thea
Applicant Address 12, rue Louis Bleriot Zone, Industrielle du Brezet, F 63100 Clermont-Ferrand
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 Faurie Michel 10 rue Jean-Moulin F-63960 Veyre-Monton
PCT International Classification Number B05B11/04
PCT International Application Number PCT/IB2005/001791
PCT International Filing date 2005-06-24
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 0407042 2004-06-24 France