Technical Field
[0001] The invention relates to carbonating system for adding carbon dioxide into drinking
water comprising a carbonating apparatus and a water container that is removably attachable
to the carbonating apparatus, whereby the apparatus comprises a carbon dioxide supply
and an feeding outlet for introducing carbon dioxide into the drinking water that
is contained within the water container, and whereby the water container comprises
an carbon dioxide intake opening that allows for receiving carbon dioxide from the
feeding outlet of the carbonating apparatus.
Background of the invention
[0002] There are many different embodiments of carbonating systems and carbonating apparatuses
known from prior art. According to the carbonating mechanism that is used for adding
carbon dioxide into drinking water and to the design of the carbonating apparatus
as well as of the water container, there are specific advantages and drawbacks for
each of the carbonating systems.
[0003] Some carbonating systems feed pressurized carbon dioxide into a water container,
which allows for carbonating the content of the water container within a few seconds.
However, such carbonating systems require a pressurized carbon dioxide supply that
is usually provided by a pressure cylinder that must be mounted within the carbonating
apparatus and replaced after the carbon dioxide supply of the pressure cylinder is
spent after several carbonating cycles. Feeding pressurized carbon dioxide into the
interior of the water container also requires the water container to be pressure-tight
and to withstand the pressure that is built up within the water container during operation
of the carbonating apparatus.
[0004] Other types of carbonating systems make use of a carbonating tank that is arranged
inside of the carbonating apparatus. During operation of the carbonating apparatus,
drinking water is filled into the carbonating tank and then pressurized carbon dioxide
is feed into the drinking water inside of the carbonating tank. After the desired
level of carbonation has been reached, the carbonated drinking water is discharged
from the carbonating tank into a water container like e.g. a bottle or a glass for
storing the carbonated drinking water until consumption.
[0005] Yet other carbonating systems add a carbonating source like a powder or tablet into
the water container, whereby the carbonating source generates carbon dioxide that
will be absorbed by the drinking water. However, obtaining and adding a carbonating
source into the water container adds unwanted burden onto the user. Furthermore, the
dissolution of a carbonating source is time consuming and usually requires a large
amount of the carbonating source in order to achieve the desired carbonation of the
drinking water.
[0006] It is also possible to introduce gaseous carbon dioxide without a large pressure
difference into the water container that contains the drinking water. Corresponding
carbonating systems can be operated without the need for extensive safety measures
for compressive strength. However, the required treatment period for adding gaseous
carbon dioxide without a large pressure difference into the water container is usually
quite large, compared to the much shorter treatment period that is required for the
introduction of pressurized carbon dioxide.
[0007] Accordingly, there is a need for a carbonating system that efficiently adds carbon
dioxide to drinking water.
Summary of the invention
[0008] The present invention relates to a carbonating system as described at the beginning,
whereby the carbon dioxide intake opening is arranged at or near a bottom side of
the water container, whereby the bottom side is the underside of the water container
when the water container is connected to the carbonating apparatus during an intended
use of the carbonating system, whereby the water container comprises a bubble creating
means for creating small bubbles of carbon dioxide that is arranged inside of the
water container above the carbon dioxide intake opening, and whereby the bubble creating
means forms small bubbles of carbon dioxide that rise towards the upper filling level
of the drinking water within the water container during operation of the carbonating
system.
[0009] Such bubble creating means provide for at least two beneficial effects. The small
diameter of carbon dioxide bubbles that pass through the bubble creating means result
in a significantly enlarged total surface of the bubbles compared to the same volume
of carbon dioxide that is accumulated within fewer but larger bubbles. A large surface
of the carbon dioxide bubbles allows for an enhanced uptake of carbon dioxide into
the drinking water. Furthermore, the small diameter of the carbon dioxide bubbles
results in a slow rising motion of the small bubbles within the drinking water. Thus,
the total time that is required for adding a given amount of carbon dioxide into the
drinking water will be significantly reduced by the bubble creating means that is
arranged within the water container. It is also possible to reduce the amount or volume
of a carbonating source that is introduced into the drinking water to add carbon dioxide
into the drinking water.
[0010] The water container with the bubble creating means can be adapted for use with many
different methods of carbonating drinking water. The added bubble creating means results
in an enhanced uptake of carbon dioxide into the drinking water during the feeding
of pressurized carbon dioxide as well as of gaseous carbon dioxide without high pressure
difference into the water container. The added bubble creating means also enhance
the uptake of carbon dioxide into the drinking water in case that a carbonation source
like e.g. a tablet or a powder containing dissolvable carbon dioxide is introduced
into the water container. The advantageous effect of the added bubble creating means
will be large if the carbon dioxide intake opening is at or near the bottom side of
the water container, and the bubble creating means are arranged just above the bottom
region where the gaseous carbon dioxide enters into the drinking water inside the
interior of the water container, resulting in a long distance for the rising bubbles
between the bubble creating means and the upper filling level of the drinking water
within the water container.
[0011] It is considered yet another important advantage of the invention that no modification
of the carbonating apparatus is required. The same carbonating apparatus can be used
in combination with water containers without a bubble creating means or with water
containers that comprise a bubble creating means. In particular, a carbonating apparatus
that feeds carbon dioxide without a large pressure difference into the water container
can be operated much more efficiently without altering the design or the operation
of the carbonating apparatus.
[0012] According to a very advantageous aspect of the invention, the bubble creating means
comprises a sieve. The carbon dioxide must be fed below the sieve in order to force
the rising bubbles to pass through the sieve, which will break up large bubbles into
small bubbles. The design and the volume of the sieve can be adapted to provide for
sufficiently small bubbles and for a sufficient retention period for the bubbles which
then leave the sieve and rise up to the upper filling level of drinking water within
the water container. Sieves with a mesh- or hole size that defines the mean size of
the bubbles can be produced by different manufacturing methods that are well-known
from prior art. Furthermore, bubble creating means like sieves can be manufactured
from a material that is food safe and suitable for being in contact with drinking
water that is intended for human consumption. Suitable sieves can be manufactured
by introducing holes with a small diameter into a plate, panel or sheet. It is also
possible to manufacture the sieve from non-woven material made from e.g. plastic or
metal. The sieve can be rectangular or disk-shaped. The thickness of the sieve can
be adapted to provide for an efficient adding of carbon dioxide into the drinking
water.
[0013] Preferably, the sieve has 3 to 100 holes, more preferably 21 to 76 holes, most preferably
40 to 64 holes.
[0014] Preferably the holes of the sieve have a diameter of 0.5 to 5 mm, more preferably
0.7 to 2 mm, and most preferably 0.8 to 1.8 mm.
[0015] The holes of the sieve preferably are spaced apart from one another for 1 to 20 mm,
more preferably 2 to 15 mm, most preferably 3 to 7 mm.
[0016] It is preferred that the holes located at the center of the sieve have a smaller
diameter than the holes located distal from the center.
[0017] Preferably, the center of the sieve is essentially congruent with the carbon dioxide
intake opening of the water container.
[0018] Preferably, the sieve is arranged in the lower third of the water container, with
respect to its height, most preferably, it is arranged at the bottom of the water
container.
[0019] In the sieve, the holes may be concentrically arranged around the sieve's center,
preferably arranged in a concentric pattern of rectangles or circles, more preferably
arranged in a concentric pattern of circles. It is preferred that the sieve has 3
to 8 concentric patterns in which form the holes are arranged, more preferably 4 to
6. The phrase "concentric patterns in which form the holes are arranged" as used herein
means e.g. that in case of a concentric pattern of rectangles, the holes are arranged
on (thought) lines of rectangles, i.e. a plurality of holes is arranged in the form
of a rectangle respectively but there are no continuous lines of the rectangle due
to the distance between the holes, and in case of a concentric pattern of circles
on (thought) circular lines of circles, i.e. a plurality of holes is arranged in the
form of a circle respectively but there's no continuous circular line due to the distance
between the holes.
[0020] Preferably, in the sieve, the number of holes of the innermost concentric pattern
is smaller than the number of holes of the outermost concentric pattern, more preferably
4 to 8 holes are arranged in the innermost concentric pattern, 18 to 30 holes are
arranged in the outermost concentric pattern, and the number of holes arranged in
the concentric pattern located between innermost and outermost concentric pattern
is between 8 and 18.
[0021] The upper part of the sieve, which surface is most distal from the carbon dioxide
intake opening of the water container preferably has an essentially flat surface in
which the holes are arranged. It is preferred that the upper part of the sieve fully
covers a cross-sectional area of an interior of the water container.
[0022] The lower part of the sieve, which is closest to the carbon dioxide intake opening
of the water container preferably has channels for distributing the carbon dioxide
to the holes. The term "channel" as used herein means any means providing for the
aforementioned distribution. Preferably, the channels are formed by walls arranged
at the bottom of the essentially flat surface. More preferably, the channels are formed
at least by radially arranged walls reaching from the center of said surface to its
outermost part. Most preferably, said radially arranged walls together with walls
formed around the circumference of the surface define a channel.
[0023] The walls forming the channel provide for distribution of carbon dioxide from the
center of said surface to its outermost part. It is preferred that the sieve has 3
to 15 channels, more preferably 8 to 12. Preferably, each channel provides 1 to 10
holes with carbon dioxide, more preferably 2 to 8 holes, most preferably 3 to 5 holes.
[0024] According to an embodiment of the invention, a cross-sectional area of the bubble
creating means fully covers the carbon dioxide intake opening of the water container.
Thus, all the gaseous carbon dioxide that is fed into the water container through
the carbon dioxide intake opening is forced to pass through the bubble creating means.
Large bubbles that are created by accumulation immediately after exiting the dioxide
intake opening are divided into many small bubbles during the passage through the
bubble creating means.
[0025] In yet another embodiment of the invention, a cross-sectional area of the bubble
creating means fully covers a cross-sectional area of an interior of the water container.
All carbon dioxide that is fed through the carbon dioxide intake opening into the
water container can distribute freely over the entire cross-sectional area of the
interior of the water container. Due to the large cross-sectional area of the bubble
creating means, a large surface of the bubble creating means faces towards the carbon
dioxide intake opening and allows for a large volume of carbon dioxide that can enter
into the bubble creating means simultaneously and therefore pass through the bubble
creating means at the same time. Thus, the total time that is required for a given
amount of carbon dioxide to pass through the bubble creating means can be reduced
in comparison with a smaller bubble creating means with a smaller cross-sectional
area that only covers the carbon dioxide intake opening of the water container.
[0026] The bubble creating means is preferably made from a food safe material that can be
fully covered by drinking water over a long period of use. The bubble creating means
can also be coated with a bacteria-killing coating like e.g. a silver coating or a
coating that contains silver molecules.
[0027] However, it is considered an advantageous but optional aspect of the invention that
the bubble creating means is removably mounted within the interior of the water container.
The removably attached bubble creating means can be removed from the water container
if need arises. A user can replace an already used bubble creating means by a new
bubble creating means. It is also possible for a user to clean and sterilize a used
bubble creating means e.g. by placing the bubble creating means into boiling water,
and to remount the cleaned bubble creating means back into the water container. Furthermore,
it is also possible to make use of different bubble creating means e.g. with a different
mesh size in order to modify the total addition of carbon dioxide into the drinking
water, or to modify the operation characteristics of the carbonating system by increasing
the surface of the bubble creating means that is accessible for the carbon dioxide
that is fed into the water container through the carbon dioxide intake opening.
[0028] According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the water container comprises
a gas outlet opening that is arranged on a side of the water container opposite to
the carbon dioxide intake opening and that can be connected to a gas inlet opening
of the carbonating apparatus, and in that the carbonating apparatus comprises a gas
reusing conduit that connects the gas inlet opening of the carbonating apparatus with
the feeding outlet of the carbonating apparatus to reintroduce gas that is removed
from the water container through the gas outlet opening back into the water container
through the feeding outlet of the carbonating apparatus. With the gas reusing conduit
it is possible to enable a cycle in which the carbon dioxide circulates through the
drinking water within the water container, which results in an increased adding of
carbon dioxide into the drinking water without increasing the volume of carbon dioxide
that is being used up from a carbon dioxide source during the operation of the carbonating
system. After the carbon dioxide is fed through the carbon dioxide inlet opening into
the water container, the bubbles pass through the bubble creating means and then rise
through the drinking water until the bubbles reach the upper filling level of the
drinking water inside the interior of the water container. The carbon dioxide then
mixes into the air that is trapped inside of the water container. By sucking the gas
mixture from the water container through the gas outlet opening of the water container
and through the gas inlet opening of the carbonating apparatus into the gas reusing
conduit and by feeding the gas mixture from the gas reusing conduit back into the
water container, the gas mixture with the enhanced content of carbon dioxide is broken
up into small bubbles by the bubble creating means and rises again through the drinking
water, thereby adding to the content of carbon dioxide that is added into the drinking
water. During usual procedure durations of e.g. two or three minutes, such a cycle
of repeated passes of carbon dioxide through the drinking water can be repeated several
times.
[0029] The recycling of the carbon dioxide that accumulates above the upper filling level
of the drinking water can be operated manually by a user e.g. with an actuating button
that moves a piston within a cylinder for creating a suction force that removes the
gas mixture from the water container and that creates a pressing force that feeds
the gas mixture through the gas reusing conduit and back into the water container.
[0030] However, in order to be able to perform and control the recycling of the carbon dioxide
through the gas reusing conduit, the carbonating apparatus comprises a pump for extracting
gas out of the water container and for feeding the extracted gas through the feeding
outlet back into the water container. The pump can be activated together with the
operation of the carbonating system, preferably after a short delay to allow for the
accumulation of some carbon dioxide above the drinking water, or optionally as an
additional operation step during normal operation of the carbonating system. The pump
can be operated electrically and activated or deactivated by a switch or any other
control means.
[0031] In order to allow for a simple and convenient mode of operation, the carbonating
apparatus further comprises a drinking water supply and a drinking water outlet that
can be connected with a drinking water inlet of the water container in order to fill
drinking water into the water container before introducing carbon dioxide into the
drinking water that is contained within the water container. Thus, a user is only
required to connect the empty water container with the carbonating apparatus and to
activate the operation of the carbonating apparatus. In a first filling step, the
desired amount of drinking water is filled into the water container. The filling of
drinking water into the water container can be performed through the drinking water
inlet that is arranged preferably at the upper side of the water container or within
a cap or lid of the water container. The cap or lid can be removably attached to the
water container to also allow for a manual filling of the water container after removal
of the cap or lid from a housing of the water container. After the drinking water
is filled into the water container, the drinking water inlet is closed and a carbonation
cycle of the carbonating apparatus is initiated. During the carbonation cycle, a predefined
amount of carbon dioxide is fed into the water container. The carbonation cycle may
also include one or more cycles of reusing the gas mixture that accumulates above
the upper filling level of the drinking water inside the water container.
[0032] The invention also relates to a water container for use as part of a carbonating
system with a carbonating apparatus as described above. According to an advantageous
aspect of the invention, the water container comprises a carbon dioxide intake opening
that allows for receiving carbon dioxide from the feeding outlet of the carbonating
apparatus, whereby the carbon dioxide intake opening is arranged at or near a bottom
side of the water container, and whereby the water container comprises a bubble creating
means for creating small bubbles of carbon dioxide that is arranged inside of the
water container above the carbon dioxide intake opening, whereby the bubble creating
means is designed for and suitable for forming small bubbles of carbon dioxide that
passes through the bubble creating means. The bubble creating means can be a sieve
or any other structure through which gaseous carbon dioxide may pass through and leave
the bubble creating means as small bubbles. The bubble creating means is be arranged
above the carbon dioxide intake opening, but as near as possible towards the bottom
side of the water container. The water container may comprise any feature or combination
of features as described above with respect to the carbonating system that includes
such a water container.
Brief description of the drawings
[0033] The present invention will be more fully understood, and further features will become
apparent, when reference is made to the following detailed description and the accompanying
drawings. The drawings are merely representative and are not intended to limit the
scope of the claims. In fact, those of ordinary skill in the art may appreciate upon
reading the following specification and viewing the present drawings that various
modifications and variations can be made thereto without deviating from the innovative
concepts of the invention. Like parts depicted in the drawings are referred to by
the same reference numerals.
Figure 1 schematically illustrates a water container with a bubble creating means,
Figure 2 schematically illustrates the water container with another embodiment of
the bubble creating means,
Figure 3 schematically illustrates a small section inside the water container around
the bubble creating means and the effect of the bubble creating means during a carbonating
operation that adds carbon dioxide into the water container, and
Figure 4 schematically illustrates a carbonating system with a carbonating apparatus
and a water container that is connected with the carbonating systems.
Figure 5 schematically illustrates the top view of a particularly preferred bubble
creating means 17 in the form of a sieve.
Figure 6 schematically illustrates the bottom view of the sieve depicted in Figure
5.
[0034] Figure 1 and Figure 2 illustrate two different exemplary embodiments of a water container
1 that can be used in combination with a carbonating apparatus 2 that is shown in
Figure 4. The water container 1 comprises a housing 3 that can be made from a transparent
plastic or glass or any other suitable material. The housing 3 has a carbon dioxide
intake opening 4 that is positioned in a middle region at a bottom side 5 of the water
container 1. A bottom cover 6 covers the bottom side 5 and the carbon dioxide intake
opening 4 of the housing 3. A valve mechanism 8 that can be operated from outside
of the water container 1 allows for feeding carbon dioxide by the carbonating apparatus
2 through the carbon dioxide intake opening 4 into an interior 9 of the water container
1, but closes the carbon dioxide intake opening 4 if the water container 1 is removed
from the carbonating apparatus 2. The valve mechanism 8 is neither illustrated nor
described in detail, as many different embodiments of a suitable valve mechanism 8
are known to a person skilled in the art. The housing 3 also has an open neck section
10 that is covered by a cap 11. The water container 1 has an overall bottle-like shape.
[0035] The carbonating apparatus 2, for which an exemplary embodiment is shown in Figure
4, comprises a needle-like feeding outlet 12 that passes through the valve mechanism
8 if the water container 1 is arranged on a platform 13 of the carbonating apparatus
2 and properly connected to the carbonating apparatus 2. During operation of the carbonating
apparatus 2, carbon dioxide is fed from the feeding outlet 12 through the carbon dioxide
intake opening 4 into drinking water 14 that has been filled into the interior 9 of
the water container 1 before placing the water container 1 on the platform 13.
[0036] Usually, the gaseous carbon dioxide forms large bubbles 15 as soon as the carbon
dioxide leaves the feeding outlet 12 of the carbonating apparatus 2. The large bubbles
15 then rise towards an upper filling level 16 of the drinking water 14 within the
water container 1. Due to the large volume of the bubbles 15, only a small amount
of large bubbles 15 are created during the feeding of carbon dioxide into the drinking
water 14, and the large bubbles 15 rise with a high rising rate that describes the
height distance travelled by the large bubbles 15 within the drinking water 14 per
unit time.
[0037] Above the carbon dioxide intake opening 4, a bubble creating means 17 is arranged
within the interior 9 of the water container 1. The bubble creating means 17 can be
e.g. a sieve with a small mesh size that allows for the carbon dioxide to pass through
the bubble creating means 17, but to leave the bubble creating means 17 in the form
of small bubbles 18 with a mean diameter that is significantly smaller than a mean
diameter of the large bubbles 15. Due to the smaller size of the small bubbles 17
that exits the bubble creating means 17 and subsequently rise to the upper filling
level 16 of the drinking water 14, the interface between the carbon dioxide and the
drinking water 14 is much larger than with the large bubbles 15, and the rising rate
is much slower than with the large bubbles 15. Thus, for the same amount of gaseous
carbon dioxide that is fed through the carbon dioxide intake opening 4 into the water
container 1, there will be a larger uptake of carbon dioxide into the drinking water
14, which results in a better and more efficient performance of a carbonating system
that comprises the carbonating apparatus 2 and the water container 1.
[0038] The larger rising rate of the large bubbles 15 before passing through the bubble
creating means 17 is indicated by long arrows in Figure 3. The smaller rising rate
of the small bubbles 18 that leave the bubble creating means 17 and rise towards the
upper filling level that is not shown in Figure 3 is indicated by small arrows in
Figure 3.
[0039] The exemplary embodiment of the bubble creating means 17 that is shown in Figure
1 fully covers the cross-sectional area of the interior 9 of the housing 3 of the
water container 1. Another embodiment of the bubble creating means 17 as shown in
Figure 2 is arranged on top of the carbon dioxide intake opening 4 and only covers
the carbon dioxide intake opening 4. Irrespective of the design and shape of the bubble
creating means 17, the bubble creating means 17 can be mounted either detachable or
permanent inside of the water container 1. The bubble creating means 17 can be fixed
e.g. either by snap-in elements or via a screw thread.
[0040] Figure 4 illustrates the carbonating system with the carbonating apparatus 2 and
the water container 1 during a carbonating operation. Carbon dioxide that is supplied
through a carbon dioxide supply 19 is pumped by a pump 20 through the feeding outlet
12 of the carbonating apparatus 2 and through the valve mechanism 8 and the carbon
dioxide intake opening 4 into the water container 1. The at first large bubbles 15
pass through the bubble creating means 17 and become small bubbles 18 that slowly
rise towards the upper filling level 16 of the drinking water 14 within the water
container 1. During this rise of the small bubbles 18, a volume fraction of the carbon
dioxide is added into the drinking water 14. The remaining volume of the carbon dioxide
accumulates in the upper region 21 of the water container 1 above the upper filling
level 16 and mixes with the air volume in this upper region 21.
[0041] Figures 5 and 6 illustrate top and bottom view of a particularly preferred bubble
creating means 17 in the form of a sieve. This sieve has a planar surface with a plurality
of holes 26 at its upper part, and its lower part has channels 27 defined by walls
28 arranged at the bottom of the surface, which walls 28 provide for guiding carbon
dioxide from the center of said surface to the outermost part of said surface. In
this specific embodiment, channels 27 are formed by radially arranged walls reaching
from the (circle) center of surface to its outermost part and walls formed around
the (circular) circumference of the surface, wherein both radial walls and circumferential
wall(s) define a channel having the shape of a circular segment.
[0042] According to an optional mode of operation, the carbonating apparatus 2 also includes
a needle-shaped gas inlet opening 22 that protrudes through a gas outlet opening 23
within the cap 11 into the upper region 21 inside the interior 9 of the water container
1. By controlling a three-way valve 24 the pump 20 also sucks a mixture of carbon
dioxide and air from the upper region 21 and pumps this mixture through a gas reusing
conduit 25 that connects the gas inlet opening 22 of the carbonating apparatus 2 with
the feeding outlet 12 of the carbonating apparatus 2. Thus, the mixture of carbon
dioxide and air that has been sucked out of the upper region 21 of the water container
1 will be fed back into the water container through the carbon dioxide intake opening
4 and subsequently agains rise through the drinking water 14. Another volume fraction
of the reused amount of carbon dioxide will then be uptaken from the drinking water
14 and add into the drinking water 14.
Experimental part
[0043] In the below described Experiments 1 and 2, a bubble creating means in the form of
a sieve was used, namely the sieve illustrated in Figures 5 and 6. The sieve had a
circular shape and a diameter of 52 mm, which circular shape fully covered the cross-sectional
area of the interior of the water container of the carbonating system. As shown in
Figure 5, the sieve had a pattern of four concentric circles in which holes are arranged
in the form circles respectively, the innermost circle had 4 holes having a diameter
of 1 mm respectively, the second circle had 12 holes having a diameter of 1.2 mm respectively,
the third circle had 12 holes and a diameter of 1.4 mm respectively, and the outermost
circle had 24 holes having a diameter of 1.5 mm respectively.
[0044] As shown in Figure 6, the sieve had 12 channels in the form of 12 circular segments,
wherein each channel respectively provides 4 holes of second to outermost concentrical
circle with carbon dioxide by guiding carbon dioxide provided by carbon dioxide intake
opening 4 from the center of the sieve's surface to the outermost part of said surface,
while the 4 holes arranged in the inner circle are directly provided with carbon dioxide
by carbon dioxide intake opening 4.
Experiment 1
[0045] A carbonating system was applied in which carbon dioxide was provided by a pressure
cylinder. The system pressure of carbon dioxide was 5 bar, and water temperature was
15°C. The carbon dioxide was circulated for 150 seconds, wherein carbon dioxide was
introduced through the intake opening at the bottom of the water container of the
carbonating system, and sucked off in an upper part of the water container, and recirculated_by
means of a gas reusing conduit enabling circulation of carbon dioxide within the water
container filled with water.
Table 1: Results of Experiment 1
Test run No.: |
Characteristic: |
Result (CO2 concentration) : |
1 |
Carbonisation without sieve |
4.3 g/L |
2 |
Carbonisation with sieve |
4.8 g/L |
Table 1 shows that test run no. 2 in which the sieve was applied provides carbonated
water with a significantly higher CO
2 concentration compared with test run no. 1 in which no sieve was applied.
Experiment 2
[0046] A carbonating system was applied in which carbon dioxide was provided by chemical
reaction of citric acid and sodium hydrogen carbonate. The system pressure of carbon
dioxide was 1.2 bar, and the water temperature was 7-9°C. The carbon dioxide was circulated
for 150 seconds, wherein carbon dioxide was introduced through the intake opening
at the bottom of the water container of the carbonating system, and sucked off in
an upper part of the water container, and recirculated by means of a gas reusing conduit
enabling circulation of carbon dioxide within the water container filled with water.
Table 2: Results of Experiment 2
Test run No.: |
Characteristic: |
Result (CO2 concentration) : |
1 |
Carbonisation without sieve |
4.9 g/L |
2 |
Carbonisation with sieve |
5.6 g/L |
Table 2 shows that test run no. 2 in which the sieve was applied provides carbonated
water with a significantly higher CO
2 concentration compared with test run no. 1 in which no sieve was applied.
1. Carbonating system for adding carbon dioxide into drinking water (14) comprising a
carbonating apparatus (2) and a water container (1) that is removably attachable to
the carbonating apparatus (2), whereby the carbonating apparatus (2) comprises a carbon
dioxide supply (19) and an feeding outlet (12) for introducing carbon dioxide into
the drinking water (14) that is contained within the water container (1), and whereby
the water container (1) comprises an carbon dioxide intake opening (4) that allows
for receiving carbon dioxide from the feeding outlet (12) of the carbonating apparatus
(2), characterized in that the carbon dioxide intake opening (4) is arranged at or near a bottom side (5) of
the water container (1), whereby the bottom side (5) is the underside of the water
container (1) when the water container (1) is connected to the carbonating apparatus
(2) during an intended use of the carbonating system, and in that the water container (1) comprises a bubble creating means (17) for creating small
bubbles (18) of carbon dioxide that is arranged inside of the water container (1)
above the carbon dioxide intake opening (4), whereby the bubble creating means (17)
forms small bubbles (18) of carbon dioxide that rise towards an upper filling level
(16) of the drinking water (14) within the water container (1) during operation of
the carbonating system.
2. Carbonating system according to claim 1, characterized in that the bubble creating means (17) comprises a sieve.
3. Carbonating system according to claim 1 or claim 2, characterized in that a cross-sectional area of the bubble creating means (17) fully covers the carbon
dioxide intake opening (4) of the water container (1).
4. Carbonating system according to one of the preceding claims, characterized in that a cross-sectional area of the bubble creating means (17) fully covers a cross-sectional
area of an interior (9) of the water container (1).
5. Carbonating system according to one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the bubble creating means (17) is removably mounted within the interior (9) of the
water container (1).
6. Carbonating system according to one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the water container (1) comprises a gas outlet opening (23) that is arranged on a
side of the water container (1) opposite to the carbon dioxide intake opening (4)
and that can be connected to a gas inlet opening (22) of the carbonating apparatus
(2), and in that the carbonating apparatus (2) comprises a gas reusing conduit (25) that connects
the gas inlet opening (22) of the carbonating apparatus (2) with the feeding outlet
(12) of the carbonating apparatus (2) to reintroduce gas that is removed from the
water container (1) through the gas outlet opening (22) back into the water container
(1) through the feeding outlet (12) of the carbonating apparatus.
7. Carbonating system according to claim 6, characterized in that the carbonating apparatus (2) comprises a pump (20) for extracting gas out of the
water container (1) and for feeding the extracted gas through the feeding outlet (12)
back into the water container (1).
8. Carbonating system according to one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the carbonating apparatus (2) further comprises a drinking water supply and a drinking
water outlet that can be connected with a drinking water inlet of the water container
(1) in order to fill drinking water (14) into the water container (1) before introducing
carbon dioxide into the drinking water (14) that is contained within the water container
(1).
9. Water container (1) for use as part of a carbonating system with a carbonating apparatus
(2) according to claims 1 to 8, whereby the water container (1) comprises a carbon
dioxide intake opening (4) that allows for receiving carbon dioxide from a feeding
outlet of the carbonating apparatus (2), whereby the carbon dioxide intake opening
(4) is arranged at or near a bottom side (5) of the water container (1), and whereby
the water container (1) comprises a bubble creating means (17) for creating small
bubbles (18) of carbon dioxide that is arranged inside of the water container (1)
above the carbon dioxide intake opening (4), whereby the bubble creating means (17)
is designed for and suitable for forming small bubbles (18) of carbon dioxide that
passes through the bubble creating means (17).