[0001] The invention relates to a dosing pump for atomizing a liquid, which dosing pump
is contained in a container and in which the following parts are arranged on a common
rotational axis:
- a pump housing is connected to the container by a cylindrical, open tubular feed
piece which extends into the interior of the pump housing,
- a first hollow pump piston is displaceably arranged in the interior of the pump
housing, the pump piston to seal off a pump chamber in the interior of the pump housing
from the atmosphere, bearing tightly against the inner wall of the pump housing as
well as being provided, on the side remote from the container, with a hollow piston
stem having a narrowed inner cross-section of an axial outlet channel as a valve seat,
- a second differential piston which is displaceably arranged in the interior of the
pump housing and, on the side facing the container, is provided with a piston skirt
whose one free end can be pushed in a sealing manner onto the open tubular feed piece
of the pump housing to close the pump chamber from the container, and, on the side
remote from the container, with a valve rod, engages into the hollow piston stem
of the pump piston and interacts with the valve seat located therein to form an outlet
valve for the delivery of the liquid contained in the pump chamber into the atmosphere,
- a return spring which is arranged between the differential piston and the pump housing
and which overlaps a guide pin and bears against the latter, which is provided on
the side of the differential piston facing the container, the differential piston
consisting of two parts, of which one part has the piston skirt and, with the tubular
feed piece, forms an inlet valve for the liquid flowing from the container into the
pump chamber.
[0002] Dosing pumps of this type of construction are being demanded more and more often
by the cosmetics and pharmaceutical industry so as to be able to offer liquids in
the form of aerosols. In fact, a dose of the liquid contained in a supply container
can be atomized every time by these pumps without using a compressed gas irrespective
of whether the latter is dissolved in the liquid, such as freon, or whether it occupies
the space in the container above the liquid, such as nitrogen. The liquid is atomized
by means of pressure pistons solely by manual actuation. This type of construction
not only appears more reasonable with regard to environmental protection and safety
but is also more economical inasmuch as preparation of the liquids which can be realized
in this way is simpler. This is because it is unnecessary in this case to introduce
gases under high pressure, e.g. 6 to 10 bar, into the already closed container or
to protect the latter from the effect of heat.
[0003] F-A 2,133,259 discloses a dosing pump of the abovementioned generic category which
is especially effective but relatively inexpensive to manufacture. The construction
of the most commonly used version of this dosing pump is described in detail following
the brief description of the drawings with reference to Figs. 1 and 2. This known
dosing pump is composed of only three movable parts. Furthermore, these parts, despite
the small dimensions, can readily be produced by the injection molding process. As
far as their use is concerned, a liquid dose can only be atomized with this type of
pump if the operator exerts a sufficiently high pressure on the pistons. This avoids
undesired leaking of the liquid or the discharge of an insufficiently atomized liquid
jet. The associated system offers greater functional capacity, e.g. related to the
position or inclination of the container or the frequency of use.
[0004] In this dosing pump, the delivery of the aerosol, as in every pump, is achieved by
reducing the volume of the pump chamber by means of the pressure pistons which the
operator has to press down against the resistance of a return spring. The return spring
then provides for the return of the pistons into the initial position and for the
increase in the volume in the pump chamber. This increase in volume takes place while
the pump chamber is sealed off from both the outer atmosphere and the container having
liquid to be atomized. Consequently, a relatively powerful vacuum develops in the
pump chamber. On the one hand, this vacuum naturally helps to refill the chamber when,
after the piston has returned almost completely into the initial position, a connection
is finally made between the pump chamber and the interior of the container. On the
other hand, however, it also entails several disadvantages. First of all it is absolutely
essential to effectively seal off the pump chamber from the ambient air. If the seal
is inadequate, the vacuum in the chamber tends to draw in air. As a consequence there-of,
the greater the air quantity already drawn in, the smaller is the amount of liquid
which passes into the chamber. Therefore pumps already known are in many cases provided
with a double sealing lip. This in turn necessitates the presence of a sufficiently
powerful return spring which returns the pressure pistons into the initial position
despite friction at the double lip. When actuating the pressure pistons, therefore,
the operator must compress this spring and in the process apply a relatively large
amount of force. Consequently, children often have difficulty in operating such pumps.
In addition, the double lip is continuously loaded. Since it is made of plastic, that
is, of a material subject to plastic flow, the tight contact produced by the sealing
lip becomes less and less as the age of the pump in-creases. After some time, therefore,
the phenomenon of the intake of air into the chamber, even if it was initially prevented
by the double lip, finally occurs anyway. This effect intensifies in the course of
time so that the quantity of liquid passing into the chamber continues to decrease.
Since this quantity is nothing but the liquid dose atomized when the pump is actuated,
the dose delivered in each case changes each time. This is troublesome in particular
in atomizers for pharmaceutical preparations where an accurate dosage is important.
[0005] Furthermore, dosing pumps are already known whose design is supposed to remove the
disadvantages of a connection between the pump chamber and the container only after
the pressure pistons have returned almost completely into their initial position.
Common to all these proposals is the capacity to expose a passage between the interior
of the container and the pump chamber at the very beginning of the piston return.
This passage is closed during the downward movement of the pressure pistons and the
reduction in the pump-chamber volume associated therewith, thus ensuring that the
liquid is suitably compressed for the atomization. As a rule, this is achieved by
fitting check valves. Some of them are simple check valves and work with ports which
are provided in the pistons acting as a separating element between the pump chamber
and the container, these ports being closed on the side facing the pump chamber. This
can be done by means of a movable element such as a cap (US patent specification 4,089,442),
a collar (French patent specification 2,433,982), a gap-shaped bore (French patent
specification 2,558,214) or a flexible seal. These check valves are relatively unreliable
or contain a polymer component which threatens to decompose in contact with certain
liquids. European patent specification 0,289,855 discloses a further type of check
valve. This check valve type is distinguished by the fact that the pressure piston
acting as a separating element between the pump chamber and the container consists
of two parts which are connected to one another via a lost-motion connection in such
a way that alternatively either a channel opens between them or they bear against
one another gas-tight. However, realizing these extremely small (in millimeter range)
parts causes a problem in the injection molding of the claws and grooves required
for the lost-motion connection. Furthermore, for the purpose of industrial production,
the small parts prove to be problematic during assembly.
[0006] The object of the invention is to improve a dosing pump as defined in the preamble
of claim 1 in such a way that the individual parts of the dosing pump, in their capacity
to reliably expose a passage between container and pump chamber at the very beginning
of the piston return, are formed simply and optimally and consequently can be reliably
and quickly produced by the injection molding process for plastics, and a simple and
quick assembly of the dosing pump is ensured for the purpose of industrial mass production.
[0007] This object is achieved by the invention in that the two parts interact through an
interposed return spring.
[0008] The two parts forming the differential piston are both formed in such a way that
they can easily be produced by the injection molding process by not having any projections
which inevitably have to be released from the injection molds or which would necessitate
complicated opening mechanisms for the injection molds. In addition, assembly can
be effected by successively lining up the parts which form the stepped piston in the
interior of the pump housing.
[0009] The sub-claims contain convenient further developments of the invention.
[0010] In order to more clearly illustrate the use of the further-developed atomizing/dosing
pump according to the invention as well as the functional improvements resulting therefrom,
an exemplary embodiment is described below by means of drawings. Despite the clarity
of these drawings, the further development concerned here is not restricted to the
configuration of the parts shown here. On the contrary, the drawings are intended
to put in concrete terms the substance of the invention, which is better defined
in the concluding claims. In the drawings:
Fig. 1 shows the sectional elevation of an exemplary embodiment of an atomizer having
a known dosing pump in the inactive position,
Fig. 2 shows the dosing pump according to Fig. 1 directly after the atomization of
a liquid dose,
Fig. 3 shows a dosing pump according to the invention in sectional elevation, the
various parts of the atomizer being shown to the left of the center longitudinal axis
of the pump in the inactive position and to the right of the center longitudinal
axis of the pump after the atomizing operation,
Figs. 4 and 5 show a detail of the second two-piece stepped piston of the dosing pump
shown in Fig. 3.
[0011] Before the dosing pump according to the present invention is described in greater
detail, the description will first of all deal with an exemplary embodiment of the
known dosing pumps to which the improvement according to the invention relates. In
this respect, reference is made to Figs. 1 and 2. These figures, in longitudinal section,
show a plurality of parts which are predominantly made of relatively hard plastic.
They illustrate the rotational symmetry of the various elements forming the atomizer
with regard to the center longitudinal axis OO. Accordingly, the dosing pump 20 in
Figs. 1 and 2 consists of a container 26 which contains the liquid to be atomized,
it being assumed from the outset that atmospheric pressure prevails in the container
26, and furthermore consists of a closure cap 22 which can be screwed gas-tight onto
the container 26 by means of a seal 41; a holder 38 which is held against the seal
41 by a radial annular flange 34 of the closure cap 22; a pump housing 48 whose exterior
is formed by a cylinder 43 which surrounds a pump chamber 80 and whose upper end,
with an annular flange 42, is snapped into place inside the holder 38 and whose lower
or inner end terminates in a nipple 30 which accommodates a dip tube (not shown) extending
down approximately to the bottom of the container; a hollow pump piston 51 which
bears against the holder 38 and is displaceable gas-tight in the interior of the pump
housing 48 at least over part of its stroke and whose hollow piston stem 86, which
is dimensioned so as to be smaller in diameter, is guided in the inner shell 72 of
the holder 38; and also an actuating device 90 as an upper closure for the piston
stem 86 of the piston 51, which actuating device 90 is guided in an axially displaceable
manner in the closure cap 22 and has on one side a nozzle 28 provided with a spray
opening 92 for laterally spraying the liquid in aerosol form.
[0012] Furthermore, the pump housing 48 encloses a second piston, namely a skirt-type piston
16 which is designed in a very specific shape. Protruding axially upward from its
upper end is a solid cylindrical valve rod 61 which ends in a valve cone 162, protrudes
into the piston stem 86 of the pump piston 51 and also bears against an inner narrowed
section of the piston stem 86 in the form of a valve seat 158. The other end of the
skirt-type piston 16 is formed by a cylindrical piston skirt 17 which is guided on
the inner wall of the pump cylinder 43. Inside the piston skirt 17, the skirt-type
piston 16 has a guide pin 44 coaxial to the main axis OO of the atomizer. A cylindrical
helical compression spring 9 arranged coaxially to the axis OO is supported and centered
with one end on this guide pin 44. In the embodiment shown in Figs. 1 and 2, the
other end of the spring 9 is supported on the base 49 of the pump housing 48. So that
the spring 9 can be satisfactorily guided and held without impairing the axial compression,
the lower end of the helical compression spring 9 is supported inside an annular space
18 on the base 49 of the pump housing 48. This annular space 18 is formed on the one
side by a cylindrical guide pin 246, coaxial to the main axis OO and protruding into
the pump chamber 80, and also by a cylindrical tubular feed piece 120 coaxial thereto.
[0013] Without an external force effect, the above-mentioned parts are allocated to one
another as shown by Fig. 1. In order to explain the mode of operation of this known
dosing pump, it is assumed that the pump chamber 80 formed by an annular space 45
between the pump cylinder 43 and the tubular feed piece 120 is filled with liquid.
The pump chamber 80 here has its greatest extent, since the helical compression spring
9 presses against the skirt-type piston 16, which in turn acts upon the pump piston
51 and presses it upward. In this arrangement, every connection between the interior
of the container 26 and the external surroundings is interrupted. On one side, the
valve cone 162 of the valve rod 61 of the skirt-type piston 16 sits on the valve seat
158 of the piston stem 86 of the pump piston 51 and thereby closes off an outlet channel
98 from the atmosphere. The relative elasticity of the parts ensures that the outlet
valve 158, 162 is sealed off. On the other side, the pump piston 51 bears tightly
against the inner shell 72 of the holder 38.
[0014] When a thrust force F is applied to the actuating device 90 so that the resistance
of the helical compression spring 9 is overcome, a plurality of successive actions
take place until finally the configuration of the parts which is shown in Fig. 2 is
obtained. First of all the contact between the pump piston 51 and the inner shell
72 of the holder 38 is broken. From this moment on, the container 26 is in connection
with the ambient air, and in fact in particular by means of an annular gap 33 between
the holder 38 and the piston stem 86 of the pump piston 51 and also various recesses
55 arranged on the inner shell of the holder 38. As will be described below, this
connection with the outside air exists as long as the pump is actuated. For this reason
the tightness of the contact point between the pump piston 51 and the pump housing
48 is important. It is ensured here by the bearing of two sealing lips 12, 14 against
the wall of the pump cylinder 43, which sealing lips 12, 14 are disposed in opposite
directions and are carried by the pump piston 51. The lower margin of the piston skirt
17 of the skirt-type piston 16 overlaps the tubular feed piece 120, which protrudes
coaxially into the interior of the pump housing 48. This ensures that the liquid originally
contained in the pump chamber 80 of the dosing pump 20 is closed off, and in fact
again on account of the relative elasticity of the parts and the tightness of the
contact resulting therefrom during any kind of pressure application. The volume of
the pump chamber 80 is then reduced. The pressure of the enclosed liquid rapidly increases.
It acts on one of the sealing lips 12, 14 on the pump piston 51. The position of this
lip, directed downward and toward the pump cylinder 43, ensures that the pump chamber
80 is sealed off from the ambient air. In addition, the pump chamber 80, via longitudinally
directed grooves 66 located in the outer wall of the piston skirt 17, communicates
with a small clearance space 65 between the pump piston 51 and the skirt-type piston
16. The liquid consequently expands in this direction. Thus the same pressure is exerted
on the lower end of the piston skirt 17 and on the upper side of the skirt-type piston
16, whose piston surface is larger. This results in forces parallel to the axis OO
whose resultant tends to move the skirt-type piston 16 back into the interior of the
pump cylinder 43. The valve rod 61 draws back from the valve seat 158. Thus the path
to the outside via an outlet channel 94 and the nozzle 28 of the actuating device
90 is cleared for the liquid under pressure. The atomization takes place until the
pressure of the liquid in the pump chamber 80 is no longer sufficient to keep the
outlet valve 158, 162 open. In other words, this approximately corresponds to the
end of the stroke of the skirt-type piston 16. The parts of the dosing pump therefore
now assume the position shown in Fig. 2.
[0015] If the operator no longer exerts the force F on the actuating device 90, the helical
compression spring 9 again presses the pump piston 51 and the skirt-type piston 16
upwardly in the pump housing 48. The volume of the pump chamber 80 correspondingly
increases. Nonetheless, a connection to the interior of the container 26 is not made
immediately. An appropriate passage 46 forms only when all movable parts 51, 16 and
90 have again assumed the position shown in Fig. 1. In the meantime, the pump chamber
80 increases without fresh liquid being fed. The liquid still remaining there after
the atomization is consequently subjected to a vacuum. As long as the parts are sufficiently
well adjusted relative to one another so that the pump chamber 80 is closed gas-tight
in this transition phase, this results in a vigorous intake of liquid when the passage
46 is opened again. Venting the container 26 therefore enables the pump chamber 80
to be filled satisfactorily. However, as a result of the material fatigue, it is possible
that the tightness of the seal produced between the pump piston 51 and the pump cylinder
43 is no longer guaranteed if a powerful vacuum prevails in the pump chamber 80. In
this way, air could be drawn in via this seal. The vacuum is thereby considerably
reduced so that, when the passage 46 is opened, only a relatively small quantity of
liquid is supplied to the pump chamber 80. This quantity of liquid may possibly no
longer correspond to the dosage quantity which the operator would like to atomize
with the pump.
[0016] Figs. 3 to 5 show a dosing pump 20 according to the present invention. According
to Fig. 3, the pump 20 is fixed in a conventional closure cap 22 which includes suitable
means, e.g. a thread 24, for fixing the cap 22 together with the pump 20 fixed therein
to the open upper side of a conventional container.
[0017] The container is filled with a liquid product (not visible below the pump 20 in the
container 26 in Fig. 3). The liquid is drawn into the pump 20 through a conventional
suction-tube or dip-tube nipple 30 which is connected to the under side of the pump
20 in a conventional manner. The dip tube (not shown) attached to the nipple 30 extends
down near to the bottom of the container. The lower end of the suction tube is therefore
normally immersed in the liquid when an associated container is orientated in a generally
upright position.
[0018] The closure cap 22 has a generally cylindrical hollow wall 31, an inner cylindrical
opening 32 being formed above and separately from the thread 24 by an annular flange
34 protruding inward. Attached inside the cap opening 32 is a holder 38 which has
an outer wall 40 which, at its lower end, forms an annular flange 42 protruding outward.
The annular flange 42 is firmly fastened and sealed off relative to the upper side
of the container opening.
[0019] The holder 38 serves to fix the pump 20 inside the cap 22. For this purpose, the
pump 20 comprises a housing 48 having an upper flange 50 protruding outward. The flange
50 is seized by a shoulder 56, protruding radially inward, on the outer wall 40 of
the holder 38. The holder 38, in order to fix the pump housing 48, can easily be mounted
with a snap seat onto the pump housing 48 and connected to it.
[0020] The pump housing 48 comprises an essentially cylindrical pump chamber 80 which is
open at the top end, into which a cylindrical inner shell 72 of the holder 38 engages.
The inner shell 72 is arranged coaxially to the outer wall 40 of the holder 38 and
is connected to the latter at the upper end by an annular end wall 64. The inner shell
72 ends in a tapered lower end 73 inside the pump chamber 80.
[0021] The flange 50 on the upper end of the pump housing 48 is provided with a perpendicular
groove 62, which is shown in the right-hand half of Fig. 3. The groove 62 forms an
air-outlet slot between the pump housing 48 and the outer wall 40 of the holder 38
and interacts with certain vent channels in the holder 38. In particular, the upper
annular end wall 64 forms an encircling groove 68 on the under side of the holder
38. The groove 68 is connected to the upper side of the groove 62, as shown in the
right-hand half of the drawing. In a position offset by 180° relative to the groove
62, the groove 68 is connected to a radial groove 70 which is provided in the under
side of the upper end wall 64 of the holder 38. The groove 70 extends inward past
the wall of the pump housing 48.
[0022] The cylindrical inner shell 72 of the holder 38 is provided with a plurality of ribs
74 arranged at a distance apart over the circumference and protruding outward. The
perpendicular outer surfaces of the ribs 74 bear against the inner wall of the pump
housing 48 and serve to coaxially orientate the holder 38 and the pump housing 48.
[0023] The entire circumference of the upper inner margin of the pump housing 48 is widened
conically upward at 75 in order to form an annular channel 71 around the holder 38
at the upper ends of the ribs 74. The intermediate spaces between the ribs 74 connect
an annular space 77 below the ribs 74 at the lower end of the cylindrical inner shell
72 of the holder 38 to the annular channel 71 which runs around the upper ends of
the ribs 74. This results in a vent channel which extends from the interior of the
pump housing 48 out through the radial groove 70, around the circumferential groove
68, through the groove 62 passed the shoulder 56 and then down between the cylindrical
outer wall 40 of the holder 38 and the pump housing 48 into the inner head space of
the container above the liquid. This vent channel, together with other pump components,
enables atmospheric air to enter into the container as described further below.
[0024] A pump piston 82 is mounted so as to be movable in a reciprocating and sealing manner
in the pump chamber 80. The pump piston 82 is provided with a hollow-cylindrical
stem 86 which extends upward and protrudes from the pump chamber 80 through the holder
38 passed the cap 22 to the outside. The cylindrical piston stem 86 serves to accommodate
an actuating and delivery head or button 90 which is provided with a delivery port
92 which is connected to the upper end of the piston stem 86 by a radial outlet channel
94. Passing through the pump piston 82 as well as its stem 86 protruding upward is
an axial outlet channel 98 which connects the outlet channels 94 inside the actuating
head 90 to the pump chamber 80.
[0025] The outside of the piston stem 86 is tapered toward the upper end so that its diameter
decreases with increasing height above the holder 38. The lower end of the pump piston
82 forms a sealing surface 102, concave toward the bottom, for the side surfaces of
the lower end 73 of the inner shell 72 of the holder 38 to bear against and be sealed
off when the pump piston 82 is located in the fully raised inactive position according
to the left-hand half of Fig. 3. However, if the pump piston 82 is pressed down partly
or essentially completely, the concave sealing surface 102 of the pump piston 82
comes away from the lower end 73 of the inner wall 72 of the holder 38. A clearance
space is therefore created between the outside of the upper part, reduced in diameter,
of the pump piston stem 86 moving downward and the lower end 73 of the inner shell
72 of the holder 38.
[0026] Consequently, ambient air can flow into the container in order to fill the volume
of the sprayed contents and to maintain the atmospheric air pressure inside the container.
In the process, ambient air flows into the cap opening 32 and also beneath the actuating
head 90.
[0027] If the piston stem 86 is located in its lowered position, the air flows through an
annular gap 23 passed the cylindrical inner shell 72 of the holder 38 and the pump
housing 48. The air then passes through the radial groove 70 and into the circumferential
groove 68. Here it disperses in both directions around the circumference of the holder
38 over about 180°, where it then flows through the groove 62 of the pump housing
48. The air then flows between the holder 38 and the pump housing 48 down into the
container.
[0028] Via the suction-tube nipple 30 and a suction channel 248, liquid is fed to the pump
chamber 80 through a fixed feedline which, in the preferred embodiment shown, consists
of a cylindrical tubular feed piece 120 which protrudes from the base of the pump
housing 48 up into the pump chamber 80 coaxially to the latter and has an open upper
end 121.
[0029] A second differential piston is composed of two parts, namely a valve body 150 and
a sealing sleeve 190. The valve body 150 is orientated axially above the fixed tubular
feed piece 120 and is also arranged so as to be movable with and relative to the pump
piston 82 above the tubular feed piece 120. The pump piston 82 encloses an enlarged
bore 154 whose upper end leads into the outlet channel 98 of smaller diameter at a
location which is formed by an annular valve seat 158. The valve body 150 is shaped
at the upper end as a valve cone 162 which bears tightly against the annular valve
seat 158 in the pump piston 82 in order to prevent liquid from flowing out of the
pump chamber 80 through the outlet channel 98.
[0030] The lower end of the valve body 150 is designed as a valve head 170. The valve head
170 has an upper piston surface 172 which is provided with four ribs 174 which are
separated by equal circumferential angles, extend radially outward and protrude up
from the upper piston surface 172. The piston surface 172 of the valve head 170 is
put under pressure by the liquid in the pump chamber 80, as described in detail below.
[0031] The under side of the valve head 170 is provided with an annular groove 179, trapezium
in cross-section, and is an integral part of an inlet valve. For this purpose, the
outer side wall of the annular groove 179 forms a valve surface 180, widening conically
downward and outward, for sealing against the upper conical contact surface 218 of
the sealing sleeve 190 which is connected to the valve body 150 in such a way that
it can be displaced axially to a limited extent. The valve surface 180 and the conical
contact surface 218, with the center longitudinal axis O-O of the pump, form an essentially
identical nose angle opening downward. The inner side wall of the annular groove 179
is formed by a cylindrical guide pin 230.
[0032] The guide pin 230 is provided with a plurality of longitudinal ribs 234, for example
four, which are distributed over the circumference at the same distance apart each
and, with lower end faces 235, partly rest on the upper end 241 of the helical compression
spring 240. The longitudinal ribs 234, with longitudinal sections 236 whose radial
height is adapted to the inside diameter of the helical spring 240 and is dimensioned
to be correspondingly smaller, extend beyond their end face 235 into the upper end
241 of the helical spring 240.
[0033] The sealing sleeve 190, on its side facing the container, comprises an essentially
cylindrical piston skirt 202. The upper end of the sealing sleeve 190 has an annular
inner flange 210 whose under side forms a shoulder 211 which rests on the upper end
241 of the helical compression spring 240 when the pump piston 82 is located in its
upper inactive position (Fig. 4). In this inactive position the inlet valve (passage
54) is open. The inner flange 210 can be axially displaced from this inactive position
into an operating position in which the inlet valve is closed (Fig. 5). The inner
flange 210 extends with its shoulder 211 and its upper front side 212 at right angles
to the pump axis O-O as well as axially in the annular groove 179 of the valve head
170.
[0034] The helical compression spring 240 consists of a spring wire round in cross-section.
It is apparent here that the upper end 241 of the spring 240, with the inner half
of the spring-wire circumference, bears against the end face 235 of the longitudinal
rib 234, that is, over an angle of contact of about 80°. The lower longitudinal sections
236 of the longitudinal ribs 234 protrude radially only by about 1/3 of the width
of the longitudinal ribs 234. It will be understood that, facultatively, instead
of a spring wire circular in cross-section, a spring wire of other cross-section,
e.g. a rectangular cross-section, can also be used as long as it is ensured that the
diameter of the spring wire is dimensioned to be larger than the radial width of the
longitudinal ribs 234 so that part of the wire cross-section forms the support for
the inner shoulder 211 of the sealing sleeve 190. At the same time, the end face 235
of the longitudinal ribs 234 should in each case be adapted to the cross-section of
the spring wire. Finally, an arrangement, facultatively differing herefrom, can be
made in such a way that a shim (not shown) is arranged between the upper end 241 of
the helical compression spring 240 and the end face 235, in this case conveniently
parallel to the inner shoulder 211, of the longitudinal ribs 234, which shim extends
radially from the longitudinal sections 236 below the end faces 235 to below the inner
shoulder 211 of the annular flange 210 of the sealing sleeve 190 and in this way forms
a stop or supporting element for the latter. Facultatively, this shim can be firmly
connected to the upper end 241 of the spring 240, whose cross-section in this case
need not necessarily protrude radially beyond the longitudinal ribs 234.
[0035] As a result of the lower abutment, formed by the upper end 241 of the helical compression
spring 240, for the sealing sleeve 190, a clearance space is created which enables
limited axial movement between the valve body 150 and the sealing sleeve 190. Here,
this relative mobility of the sealing sleeve 190 is arranged in such a way that the
contact surface 218 of the sealing sleeve 190 bears against the inner valve surface
180 of the outer margin 171 of the valve head 170 in the one end position of the relative
motional range of the sealing sleeve 190 so that the inlet valve formed by the said
parts is closed. The circumstances under which this relative movement from one end
position to the other end position occurs will be described in greater detail further
below.
[0036] The piston skirt 202 of the sealing sleeve 190 is provided with guide ribs 250 which
protrude outward and are distributed at a distance apart over the circumference and
with which the sealing sleeve 190 slides along the inner wall of the pump chamber
80 in order to maintain the axial orientation of the sealing sleeve 190 inside the
pump chamber 80 as well as relative to the tubular feed piece 120.
[0037] The inner flange 210 of the sealing sleeve 190 encloses a cylindrical opening 226.
Liquid can flow through this opening 226 to refill the pump chamber 80 during a certain
operating state of the pump, which will be described below. Air or vapors can likewise
flow in the reverse direction through the opening 226 during the venting of the pump
chamber 80 to make it possible to prime the pump. The opening 226 also accommodates
the guide pin 230 for the upper end 241 of the helical compression spring 240, which
guide pin 230 extends down from the valve head 170 coaxially to the main axis of the
pump.
[0038] The lower end of the sealing sleeve 190 is designed in such a way that it can slide
down telescope-like in a sealing manner in tight contact along the outer surface
of the fixed tubular feed piece 120. For this purpose, the lower end of the sealing
sleeve 190 is provided with an annular beading 260, protruding inward, for bearing
against the outer side of the tubular feed piece 120 when the movable sealing sleeve
190 moves down, as will be explained below.
[0039] Fig. 5 shows in correspondence with the right-hand half in Fig. 3 the upper end
position of the sealing sleeve 190 relative to the valve body 150 and the outer margin
171 of the valve head 170. The upper frustoconical contact face 218 of the sealing
sleeve 190 here bears tightly against an appropriately angled conical valve face 180,
so that a connecting channel, to be seen in Fig. 7 is closed.
[0040] According to Fig. 3, the spring 240, with its lower end, is supported inside the
pump chamber 80 on the base 49 and, inside the tubular feed piece 120, overlaps a
lower guide pin 246 which is coaxial to the main axis of the pump and protrudes up
from the housing base. The guide pin 246 is an integral part of the pump housing 48
and forms the inlet channel 248 which makes the connection between the dip tube (not
shown) and the tubular feed piece 120. It is apparent that the spring 240 normally
pretensions the valve body 150, together with the pump piston 82 bearing thereon,
in a fully raised position when the pump is located in its unactuated inactive position
(left-hand half of Fig. 3 and Fig. 5).
[0041] The valve head 170, at the circumference of its margin 171 extending downward and
outward like a truncated cone, is provided with a plurality of ribs 194 which are
arranged at a distance from one another over the circumference, extend down along
the inner wall of the pump housing 48 and help to axially guide the valve body 150.
[0042] The components of the pump 20 which are described above can be made of thermoplastic
materials. However, the spring 240 is preferably made of stainless steel. The pump
housing 48, including the fixed tubular feed piece 120, is conveniently made of polypropylene.
Other internal components, e.g. the pump piston 82, the valve body 150 and the sealing
sleeve 190 or parts of these other components can be made of polyethylene in order
to obtain a better sealing effect.
[0043] The components of the pump can easily be assembled. First of all the internal components
of the pump are assembled, and then the suction tube (not shown) is attached to the
suction-tube nipple 30 of the pump housing 48 in a conventional manner.
[0044] On account of the axially limited mobility relative to the valve body 150, the movable
sealing sleeve 190 can immediately be pushed onto the guide pin 230 of the valve body
150 without contacting other parts or overcoming flexible claws, whereupon the upper
end of the helical compression spring 240 is pushed onto the guide pin 230, and the
sealing sleeve 190 is thereby held so as to be axially movable to a limited extent
on the valve body 150.
[0045] The assembled sealing sleeve 190 and valve body 150 are then easily seated within
the pump piston 82 and its stem 86, and the three components are inserted together
with the spring 240 into the pump chamber 80 of the pump housing 48.
[0046] The holder 38 is seated on top of the pump housing 48 around the piston stem 86,
and the cap 22 is mounted around the holder 38.
[0047] Mounting the actuating head 90 onto the upper end of the piston stem 86 completes
the assembly of the pump 20, which can then be attached to the neck of a container.
[0048] If the dosing pump according to the invention is in the inactive state, the sealing
sleeve 190, with regard to the valve head 170, assumes the end position shown in Fig.
4. The force F exerted by the operator during actuation of the pump leads to the compression
of the return spring 240 so that the pump piston 82 and the valve body 150 move down
inside the pump housing 48. The sealing sleeve 190 briefly follows this movement,
while the inner flange 210, with its shoulder 211, is supported on the return spring
240. However, when the lower free end of the sealing sleeve 190 strikes the tubular
feed piece 120, the movement of the sealing sleeve is briefly interrupted. However,
the upper end of the sealing sleeve 190 stopped briefly at the tubular feed piece
120 is quickly reached by the valve head 170 so that both parts assume the closed
position in Fig. 5. From this moment on, the valve head 170 guides the sealing sleeve
190 down with it so that the sealing sleeve 190 slides telescope-like in a sealing
manner over the tubular feed piece 120. The friction resulting therefrom contributes
to a relative pressure of the inner flange 210 on the annular groove 179 so that
the connecting channel 54 between the contact surface 218 of the sealing sleeve 190
and the valve surface 180 of the valve head 170 is closed or sealed off. From this
moment on, which, moreover, commences just after the start of the pump actuation,
the pump chamber 80 is completely closed off. Pressing the pump piston 82 down further
now causes the pressure to increase in the pump chamber 80.
[0049] However, it has to be pointed out that this behavior critically depends on the selection
of that point at which the inner flange 210 is supported on the valve body 150. This
is because, as long as the pressure P in the pump chamber 45 increases, an axial force
directed outward is added to the abovementioned friction between the sealing sleeve
and the guide pin. If s is the cross-sectional area of the ribbed groove which extends
from the inner surface of the piston skirt 202 of the sealing sleeve 190 to the inner
wall of the pump chamber 80 (Fig. 3), the force is obtained from the product of s
and P. If P is even increased only slightly, the force far exceeds the friction of
the sealing sleeve 190 at the tubular feed piece 120 and is consequently critical
for the tight closure of the connecting channel 54. If this connecting channel 54
is at such a distance from the main axis OO of the dosing pump that an annular area
having the cross-section S is accessible to the liquid, under the pressure P, between
the bearing surface of the sealing sleeve 190 on the valve body 150 and the inner
wall of the pump cylinder 43, an axial force SP develops which is directed toward
the container, counteracts the force sP and tends to thrust back the sealing sleeve
190 and open the connecting channel 54. It must therefore be ensured without fail
that S is smaller than s. During the pressurizing of the pump chamber 80, the connecting
channel 54 remains closed all the better the smaller S is in relation to s. The embodiment
shown in the figures is thus optimum insofar as S equals 0. In this phase of the pump
compression, all actions consequently take place as if the sealing sleeve 190 and
the valve body 150 were inseparably connected to one another. The liquid enclosed
in the pump chamber 80 is then discharged as in known pumps.
[0050] However, this analogy no longer applies to the following operating phases of the
pump. As soon as the force F is no longer applied, the return spring 240 presses the
valve body 150 back. The valve body 150 thus moves away from the sealing sleeve 190,
which is held in place as a result of the friction at the tubular feed piece 120.
The sealing sleeve thus moves from the closed position shown in Fig. 5 into the open
position according to Fig. 4. The connecting channel 54 between the valve head 170
and the inner flange 210 of the sealing sleeve 190 is open and therefore makes a connection
between the container and the pump chamber 80 via the intermediate spaces or grooves
located between the longitudinal ribs 250. The return spring 240, on which the inner
shoulder 211 of the inner flange 210 now rests, now takes the valve body 150 up with
it at the same time as the sealing sleeve 190. This results in an increase in volume
in the pump chamber 80. Since the connecting channel 54 is open, liquid is let into
the pump chamber 80 along the path identified by arrows in Fig. 4. The connecting
channel 54 is adequate to enable the pump chamber 80 to be filled to the extent by
which the volume of the pump chamber 80 increases. If the dosing pump 20 has thus
returned fully into the initial or inactive position and the passage 46 between the
free lower end of the sealing sleeve 190 and the upper end 121 of the tubular feed
piece 120 is restored, no more liquid is drawn in through the tubular feed piece 120.
Theoretically, therefore, the passage 46 would be dispensable. However, this would
mean that a gastigth contact between the tubular feed piece 120 and the end of the
sealing sleeve 190 would have to be continuously maintained,the quality of which would
inevitably deteriorate on account of the plastic flow of the plastic parts.
[0051] When the dosing pump according to the present invention is actuated, the connecting
channel 54 therefore closes approximately at the same moment at which the passage
46 is interrupted. But, when the pump piston 82 moves upwardly connecting channel
54 opens before passage 46 is restored. A distinctly weaker vacuum therefore arises
in the pump chamber 80. Consequently, only a little air, if at all, can enter, even
if the seal of the pump piston 82 relative to the pump cylinder 43 should no longer
close particularly tightly. In particular, the pump piston 82 here only needs the
single sealing lip 14, as shown by Fig. 3. The remaining single sealing lip 14 is
directed toward the container so that, during the discharge phase of the liquid, the
pressure prevailing in the pump chamber 80 further increases the sealing effect. Dispensing
with one of the two sealing lips reduces the friction of the pump piston 82 on the
pump cylinder 43 by half. The spring 240 therefore no longer needs to be so powerful
as hitherto in order to move the pump piston 82 and the valve body 150 up again.
The operator, who compresses the return spring 240 during the downward movement of
the pump piston 82, must therefore apply less force F, which is in more favorable
proportion to the strength of a child's finger. All these advantages are achieved
with an additional part, namely the sealing sleeve 190, which represents a separately
product part. This improves the quality of the atomization, which secures the discharge
of a uniform dosage quantity virtually irrespective of the age of the dosing pump.
[0052] The two mating parts 150 and 190 of the differential piston thus interact through
the return spring 240 and thus enable the liquid to be drawn in during actuation
of the dosing pump. When the pump chamber 80 is filled with air, which as a rule is
the case when the dosing pump is actuated for the first time, the pressure in the
pump chamber 80, by the downward movement of the movable parts 82, 150, 190 inside
the pump housing 48, does not increase to such an extent that the outlet valve 158,
162 could be opened. During the upward movement of conventional pistons, the vacuum
required for the admission of liquid is thus not present in the pump chamber 80.
This disadvantage, which the known dosing pumps compensate for with various devices,
is dispensed with in dosing pumps which are equipped according to the invention.
The connecting channel 54 between the pump chamber 80 and the container 26 opens at
the very beginning of the upward movement of the pump piston 82, as a result of which
the air can disperse again by again flowing along the path identified by arrows in
Fig. 4 but this time in the opposite direction to that of the arrows. In this way,
air passes from the pump chamber 80 into the container. In the course of the further
upward movement of the pump piston 82, simply the increase in volume in the pump chamber
82 consequently produces a vacuum which can, as desired, draw liquid into the pump
chamber 80 and fill the latter with liquid.
[0053] This method of construction can just as easily be used in absolutely tight atomizers
in which air must on no account be allowed to penetrate, since, for example, the liquid
in the container will oxidize. In this case, a certain quantity of a compressed inert
gas is first introduced above the liquid. In addition, the holder 38 has grooves for
venting purposes. Here, filling of the pump chamber 80 is made possible by the expansion
of the gas.
List of reference numerals
[0054]
OO Rotational axis
9 Return spring
12 Sealing lip
14 Sealing lip
16 Skirt-type piston
17 Piston skirt
18 Annular space
20 Dosing pump
22 Closure cap
23 Annular gap
24 Thread
26 Container
28 Nozzle
30 Dip-tube nipple
31 Wall
32 Cap opening
33 Annular gap
34 Annular flange
38 Holder
40 Outer wall
41 Seal
42 Annular flange
43 Pump cylinder
44 Guide pin
45 Annular space
46 Passage
48 Pump housing
49 Housing base
50 Flange
51 Pump piston
54 Connecting channel
55 Recesses
56 Shoulder
61 Valve rod
62 Groove
64 End wall
65 Clearance space
66 Grooves
68 Circumferential groove
70 Radial groove
71 Annular channel
72 Inner shell
73 Lower end
74 Ribs
75 Conical widening
77 Annular space
80 Pump chamber
82 Pump piston
86 Piston stem
90 Actuating head
92 Spray port
94 Outlet channel
98 Outlet channel
102 Sealing surface
120 Tubular feed piece
121 Upper end
150 Valve body
154 Bore
158 Valve seat
162 Valve cone
170 Valve head
171 Outer margin
172 Upper piston surface
174 Ribs
179 Annular groove
180 Conical valve surface
190 Sealing sleeve
194 Ribs
202 Piston skirt
210 Inner flange
211 Shoulder
212 End face
218 Contact surface
222 Upper cross wall
226 Opening
230 Guide pin
234 Longitudinal ribs
235 Lower end face
236 Longitudinal sections
240 Return spring, helical compression spring
241 Upper end
246 Lower guide pin
248 Suction channel
250 Guide ribs
260 Annular beading
1. A dosing pump for atomizing a liquid, which dosing pump is contained in a container
and in which the following parts are arranged on a common rotational axis:
- a pump housing (48) is connected to the container by a cylindrical, open tubular
feed piece (120) which extends into the interior of the pump housing (48),
- a first hollow pump piston (82) is displaceably arranged in the interior of the
pump housing (48), the pump piston (82), to seal off a pump chamber (80) in the interior
of the pump housing (48) from the atmosphere, bearing tightly against the inner wall
of the pump housing (48) as well as being provided, on the side remote from the container,
with a hollow piston stem (86) having a narrowed inner cross-section of an axial outlet
channel (98) as a valve seat (158),
- a second differential piston which is displaceably arranged in the interior of the
pump housing (48) and, on the side facing the container, is provided with a piston
skirt (202) whose one free end can be pushed in a sealing manner onto the open tubular
feed piece (120) of the pump housing (48) to close the pump chamber (80) from the
container, and, on the side remote from the container, with a valve rod (162), engages
into the hollow piston stem (86) of the pump piston (82) and interacts with the valve
seat (158) located therein to form an outlet valve for the delivery of the liquid
contained in the pump chamber (80) into the atmosphere,
- a return spring (240) which is arranged between the differential piston and the
pump housing (48) and which overlaps a guide pin (230) and bears against the latter,
which is provided on the side of the differential piston facing the container, the
differential piston consisting of two parts (150, 190), of which one part has the
piston skirt (202) and, with the tubular feed piece (120), forms an inlet valve for
the liquid flowing from the container into the pump chamber (80),
wherein the two parts (150, 190) of the differential piston interact through an interposed
return spring (240).
2. The dosing pump as claimed in claim 1, wherein the part (190) of the differential
piston provided with the piston skirt (202) has an inner flange (210) having a free
end and an inner surface (226) which is displaceable between a closed position of
the inlet valve and an open position of the inlet valve on longitudinal ribs (234)
protruding from the guide pin (230), wherein the guide pin (230) on the other (150)
of the two parts of the differential piston is supported by the return spring (240),
overlapping the longitudinal ribs (234) of the guide pin (230) and bearing against
the latter, the inner flange (210) being held in the open position of the inlet valve
by the return spring (240), and the free end of the inner flange (210) bearing against
the other (150) of the two parts in the closed position of the inlet valve at a distance
from the rotational axis (OO) which is dimensioned to be greater than the inner radius
of the piston skirt (202).
3. The dosing pump as claimed in claim 2, wherein the return spring (240) protrudes
radially outward beyond the longitudinal ribs (234) of the guide pin (230) in such
a way that it forms a stop for the inner flange (210) in the open position of the
inlet valve.
4. The dosing pump as claimed in either of claims 2 or 3, wherein the longitudinal
ribs (234) on the guide pin (230), with longitudinal sections (236) whose radial height
is adapted to the inside diameter of the return spring (240), extend past the end
face (235) formed by them into the upper end (241) of the return spring (240).
5. The dosing pump as claimed in claim 2, wherein a ring is arranged between the guide
pin (230) and the piston skirt (202) and is connected between the spring (240) and
the longitudinal ribs (234), the ring protruding radially downward beyond the guide
ribs (234) while forming a stop for the inner flange (210) in the open position of
the inlet valve.
6. The dosing pump as claimed in any of claims 2 to 5, wherein the free outer end
of the inner flange (210) has a chamfered contact surface (218) and abuts against
the other part (150) in the closed position of the inlet valve at a level of the contact
surface (218), the other (150) of the two parts (150, 190) having an outer valve surface
(180) which forms an annular groove (179) into which the inner flange (210) engages.
7. The dosing pump as claimed in claim 6, wherein, in the closed position of the inlet
valve, the contact surface (180) is arranged at a distance from the base of the annular
groove (179).
8. The dosing pump as claimed in any of claims 2 to 7, wherein four longitudinal ribs
(234) are arranged at equal circumferential distances on the outer side of the guide
pin (230).
9. The dosing pump as claimed in any of claims 1 to 8, wherein the pump piston (82)
is provided with a single sealing lip (14) which faces the container and bears tightly
against the wall of the pump chamber (80) of the pump housing (48).
10. The dosing pump as claimed in claim 9, wherein the return spring (240) is dimensioned
so as to be more powerful than the friction of the sealing lip (14) of the pump piston
(82) and the friction of the piston skirt (202) of the differential piston (190) at
the tubular feed piece (120) of the pump housing (48).