sample="supplemental" bates="682207578" isource="bw" decade="1980" class="ue" date="19800829" KOPI 19 Europäisches Patentamt European Patent Office Office européen des brevets 11 BW-179-1 0 025 327 A1 12 EUROPEAN PATENT APPLICATION 21 Application number: 80303027.9 51 Int. Cl3 A 24 D 3/18 A 24 D 1/04 22 Date of filing: 29.08.80 30 Priority: 07.09..79 US 73394 43 Date of publication of application: 18.03.81 Bulletin 81/11 84 Designated Contracting States: CH DE GB IT LI 71 Applicant: PHILIP MORRIS INCORPORATED 100 Park Avenue New York, New York 10017 (US) 72 Inventor: Dwyer, Rowland William Jr. c/o Philip Morris Incorporated P.O. Box 26583 Richmond VA 23261 (US) 72 Inventor: Fleming, Mable Louise c/o PHILIP MORRIS INCORPORATED P.O. Box 26583 Richmond VA 23261 (US) 74 Representative: Bass, John Henton et al. REDDIE & GROSS 16 Theobalds Road London WC1X 8PL(GB) 54 Cigaret mouthpiece. 57 The flow of filtered, diluted smoke from a cigarette mouthpiece is given improved sensory effect by concentrating it into a narrow, collimated, preferably centralized pattern. This can be achieved by fitting the filter 12 of the cigaret with a mouthpiece 13 having a restricted channel opening at an orifice 14 of smaller cross sectional area than the filter. The effect is most useful with cigarettes having relatively low delivery of particulate matter. CIGARET MOUTHPIECE Many filters, mouthpieces, or holders for smoking products have provided for a localized exit orifice or orifices for the smoke, either central, peripheral, or in between. These were incidental and a result of the construction for filtering, cooling the smoke, or other purposes. Examples of a filter mouthpiece which provides for partial localization of exit smoke at the periphery are certain embodiments disclosed by Kiefer et al. in U.S. 3,768,489 and by Labbe in 3,685,523. Miller, U.S. 3,062,219, discloses an offset opening to partially localize the exit smoke at one side of the filter tip. Central orifices in cigarete mouthpieces or holders which are associated with some or substantial filtration are disclosed by Streule et al., 3,840,029, by Doppelt, 3,460,544, by Thomson et al., 3,394,713, and by Lebert, 2,954,784, Norman in 3,860,011 provides a narrow central tube for exit of non-filtered smoke, surrounded by a filter having peripheral ventilation. Ventilation is also found in the holder of Doppeit above. The invention is a mouthpiece or exit tip baffle for a filtered cigaret or cigaret holder having a filter, which serves to focus or collimate the exit smoke to a narrow pattern. This is done not merely with a central opening, but with a 3-dimensional funneling mouthpiece. Such a pattern improves the subjective perception of cigarets which have a low "tar" delivery as a result of filtration, usually with air dilution. In the accompanying drawings: Figure 1 is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of the mouth end of a filter cigaret provided with a mouthpiece of the invention. Figure 2 is a similar section of a cigaret having an alternative embodiment of the mouthpiece. Figure 3 is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of the mouth end of a filter cigaret, unmodified. Figure 4 is a similar section of a known type of filter cigaret, commonly called a recessed filter. Figure 5 is a cross-sectional view of a filter cigaret provided with a different embodiment of the mouthpiece from that of Figures 1 and 2. In Figure 1, the smoke from cigaret rod 11 passes through a filter 12 and is collimated by a plastic mouthpiece 13 to exit through orifice 14, diameter 0.44 cm, in a stream which is shown schematically as 15 based on observations made during smoking by an automated smoking machine by using high speed cinematography. Figure 2 shoes a similar mouthpiece 16 having a very much smaller orifice 17, 0.16 cm in diameter, which produces a smoke pattern 18 converging to a focus and diverging thereafter. In contrast, Figure 3 illustrates the exit pattern 19 diverging directly from an unmodified filter of a conventional 0.78 cm diameter. In Figure 4 the pattern 20 is kept nearly constant by hollow mouthpiece 22. Figure 5 shows a filter cigaret equipped with an alternative mouthpiece 23 having cone-shaped baffle 24 (supported in its central location by fins or prongs not shown) and giving an exit smoke pattern 21 which is likewise cone-shaped. As the trend toward cigarets of lower delivery (i.e., lower "tar," nicotine, or the like) continues, smokers sometimes complain of too little impact, smoke flavor, or satisfaction. One solution for this is addition of flavor above what is conventional. The present invention employs a different approach: a reinforcement of the impact perceived by the smoker through the addition of a mouthpiece baffle having such a configuration that the issuing smoke is confined to a narrow stream. This configuration is not simply an orifice alone, but an orifice as a termination of a funnel-shaped mouthpiece shaped to focus the smoke stream or cause it to converge. The convergence of the smoke may be toward a central point or into another defined exit pattern such as a cone. The result is enhancement of the subjective effect of the smoke which may have been attenuated by dilution or filtration. The effect is particularly noticeable with a centralized delivery (Figures 1 and 2). Comparative tests with smokers have shown that the smoke pattern from a low-delivery cigaret which results from attaching the same cigaret terminating in a conventional filter. Apparently the concentration of the attenuated smoke in this fashion results in the smoker's perceiving greater impact than would otherwise be the case. Subjective ratings of the smoke from filter cigarettes of varying delivery levels were made by expert smokers. These samples ranged from 16 to 2 mg of "tar" delivery. Each was smoked unmodified (see Figure 3) and also with the mouthpiece attachment of Figure 1, 8 mm long with a 4 mm constriction length, 0.44 cm diameter orifice, and with the attachment of Figure 5, also 8 mm long. The panel of smokers found that for the lowest delivery samples (2 and 5 mg) they preferred the configuration of Figure 1. The mouthpiece of Figure 5, when attached to filter cigarets and smoked by an expert panel in comparison with comparable cigarets without mouthpieces, were said to have less burnt flavor when the cigarets were "conventional" (of relatively high delivery) and to have less green flavor with 5 mg delivery cigarets. CLAIMS 1. A cigaret filter having a mouthpiece with an inlet end adjacent to the filter and a channel connecting said inlet end to at least one outlet orifice at the opposite end the mouthpiece, characterized in that the orifice or orifices are of smaller area in transverse section than the filter, and that said channel is of substantially the same area at the inlet end as the filter and is of substantially unchanging or slightly diminishing transverse sectional width from the orifice to a point approximately midway between the outlet and inlet ends. 2. A filter according to Claim 1 characterized in that said orifice is a circular hole centered on the longitudinal axis of the filter. 3. A filter according to Claim 1 characterized in that said orifice is an annular opening centered on the longitudinal axis of the filter, said channel being defined from the orifice to said midway point by a frustrum of a cone with apex at said midway point.