Cushioning Laminate

views updated Jun 11 2018

Cushioning Laminate

Background

Bubble wrap is the trademarked name for a packing material consisting of two plastic sheets laminated together in a way that traps air bubbles in small, uniform pockets. This plastic sheet assembly is used as a flexible cushion to protect fragile objects during storage or shipping. The name Bubble wrap is registered by Sealed Air Corporation of Saddle Brook, New Jersey, however the name has become synonymous with the packaging material itself. Similar materials are known in the industry as cushioning laminates.

The need for efficient, protective packing material has been long recognized. Originally, shredded paper and rags were used for this purpose. Other materials that have been used historically include pulverized mica and corrugated cardboard. As plastics technology matured in the 1950s and 1960s, new and improved packing materials were developed. Foam beads made from polystyrene plastic are one popular example of plastic packing material; these are more commonly known as Styrofoam peanuts. Another innovation based on plastic technology is cushioning laminates, a packing material that relies on air to cushion and protect highly fragile objects. The first use of these laminates dates back to the early 1970s when methods used to process plastics became increasingly sophisticated, allowing cheap and rapid manufacturing. Today, they are made by a number of companies both in the United States and abroad. While a variety of manufacturing methods are used, the basic process involves trapping air bubbles between two laminated sheets of plastic.

Raw Materials

Plastic resin

Cushioning laminate is primarily made of plastic film or thin sheet formed from resins such as polyethylene and polypropylene. These resins are widely used because they perform well and are relatively inexpensive. They can be cast into strong, flexible films, which have the ability to hold air without leaking. Furthermore, these resins are thermoplastic materials, which means they easily can be melted and molded. This is an important property since the plastic sheets may be reheated during processing. Different types of resins may be used to make the top and bottom sheets to give the cushioning laminate special properties. For example, one layer could be made with a more rigid material to give the finished product increased stiffness.

Other additives

The polypropylene or polyethylene films are formed with a variety of additives mixed with the base polymers in order to modify their properties and to facilitate processing. These additives include lubricants and plasticizers which control the flexibility of the resin blend; ultraviolet light absorbers, heat stabilizers, and antioxidants which inhibit different types of degradation; and coupling agents and strength modifiers which improve the bond between the polymer and the filler. Furthermore, antistatic agents are added to reduce buildup of static electricity and biocides may be included to inhibit microbial growth.

The Manufacturing
Process

Cushioning laminate is manufactured in a process that consists of three primary steps: plastic compounding and sheet extrusion, lamination, and finishing operations.

Plastic compounding and sheet extrusion

  • 1 Plastic resin that has been compounded to the manufacturer's specifications is purchased in bulk from a supplier. In this compounding process, the polyethylene resin is heated and mixed with the additives described above. This mixture is then melted and formed into small pellets 0.125 in (0.3175 cm) in diameter. At the beginning of the manufacturing process, these pellets are introduced into a molding machine, known as an extruder. At one end of the extruder is a hopper into which the pellets are dumped. This hopper feeds the pellets into a long heated barrel. This barrel is equipped with a screw mechanism, which pushes the plastic forward. At the other end of the barrel is a stainless steel sheeting die that can produce sheets up to 10 ft (3 m) wide.
  • 2 The resin melts as it moves along the heated barrel, and by the time it reaches the end, it can be easily forced out through the opening in the die. As the molten resin is squeezed through the die it is shaped into a sheet which is then processed further. Depending on the process, the sheet can be laminated to another layer immediately while it is still warm or it can be cooled and laminated later. In either case, after being extruded the sheet passes through a series of stainless steel rollers, known as a three roll finisher or a three roll stack. These rollers are 10-16 in (25.4-41 cm) in diameter and are internally cooled with water. As the plastic sheet exits the die, it enters the nip, the point where the top two rollers meet. The sheet is pulled in by the motion of the rollers and is passed through the top, middle, and bottom rollers. These rollers cool the sheet while helping it to maintain the correct size and shape. After passing through the three roll stack, the sheet enters another series of rollers known as pull rolls, which drag the sheet through the rest of the processing.

Lamination

  • 3 Lamination is the process used to seal the two sheets together in such a way that traps air bubbles. Uniform placement of these bubbles across the face of the sheet can be achieved by stretching or perforating the substrate sheet in a designated pattern. These uniformly placed deformations in the sheet will retain air and form individual pockets. The process of deforming the substrate sheet requires heat to soften the plastic. As noted, this step can be performed immediately after extrusion while the sheet is still warm or the sheet can be reheated and molded at a later time. Bubbles can then be molded into the softened sheet by exposing it to a forming surface. This surface may be a roller or a plate with protrusions in the desired shape and distribution. When the molten sheet is brought into contact with the forming surface, the plastic is molded in the desired pattern.
  • 4 One method of creating these air pockets uses a rotating belt as the forming surface. This belt has a number of holes spread across it. As substrate sheet moves along the belt, suction is applied from a vacuum source to the holes in the belt. The air pressure differential causes the plastic to stretch down into the holes on the belt, thus creating a series of pockets. Another method employs a molding plate as the forming surface. The plastic sheet is moved into place below this plate through which a vacuum is drawn. The suction causes the sheet to conform to the bumps in the mold plate and produces a molded sheet having the desired irregular surface. A third method uses a rotating molding cylinder to form the air pockets in the plastic.
  • 5 After the air pockets have been formed by one of the methods described above, the substrate sheet and a second sheet are fed together through a set of laminating rollers. At least one of the sheets must be at the proper temperature to ensure bonding will occur. The pressure and heat seals together the sheets and the air bubbles remain trapped.

Special operations

  • 6 After lamination is complete, the sheets are cooled, if necessary, by open or forced air systems. Air can be blown across from above and below the sheet. Water cooling is sometimes done but this requires extra time for drying and may cause cleaning problems. Depending on the type of cushioning laminate being made, other special processing may be required. For example, some types of cushioning laminate are treated with an adhesive coating on one side. Others are formed into envelopes to hold small fragile objects. Depending on the processing involved, these additional operations may be performed before or after lamination process.

Finishing operations

  • 7 After the cushioning laminate is completed, the sheet material is cut to the appropriate size. This may be done as part of the primary processing or the uncut wrap may be stored on large rolls and cut to size later. This cutting process is known as slitting and is accomplished with special knives which can slice cut through the thick layers of plastic. The laminate may be packaged and sold on rolls or in sheet form.

Byproducts/Waste

The major waste product from cushioning laminate manufacturing is the plastic resin. Resin that is contaminated, overheated, or otherwise ruined must be discarded. However, sheets that fail quality checks for reasons related to physical molding problems can be reworked. This recycling process is known as regrinding and shredding the sheets, remelting them, and re-extruding them as new sheets. To ensure the plastic meets physical specifications, regrind may be mixed with virgin resin. This can be done without loss of quality because of the thermoplastic nature of polypropylene.

Quality Control

As with other plastic manufacturing processes there are several key areas that must be closely controlled to ensure a quality product is produced. During the compounding process, the resin and additives must be added carefully to ensure the formula components are blended in the proper ratios. The finished resin may be analyzed to ensure its chemical and physical properties meet specifications before sheet extrusion operations begin. At the start of the extrusion process a small amount may be flushed through the barrel of the extruder. This purging process cleans out the barrel and reveals any problems with the molding systems.

During extrusion, it is critical that the resin is kept at the proper temperature. The flow rate of the polymer will vary according its molecular weight and temperature. If the temperature is too cool, the resin will not move through the die properly. If the temperature is too high, the polymer may undergo thermal degradation. Overheating can cause chemical changes in the resin, making it unusable. Unwanted chemical interactions can also effect the quality of the plastic sheets during the extrusion process. One problem is oxidation, a reaction with air that can negatively affect the plastic. Similarly, interaction with moisture affects the quality of the plastic. If too little moisture is present, certain plastic blends can become too brittle.

After the extrusion process is complete, the extruder must be properly cleaned. Thorough cleaning is necessary before working with a different resin because traces of the previously used resin can contaminate the new batch. Die cleaning is best done while the machine is still warm and left over resin can be easily scraped out.

Other factors must also be monitored. For example, in certain methods of manufacturing it is important that top and bottom plastic sheets respond to heat differently so that during the lamination process one sheet distorts but the other does not. For this type of operation, it is critical that the heat distortion of the two sheets differ by at least 77° F (25° C) or problems will occur during lamination.

After the cushioning laminate is completed, samples may be evaluated to ensure the sheets meet specifications for strength, bubble bursting point and other criteria.

The Future

Improvements in plastics technology continue to occur at a rapid pace. These advances are likely to produce improved plastic compounds that are easier to process, provide better cushioning ability, and are biodegradable. The latter quality is of particular significance considering that packaging material is a disposable product and is used in considerable quantities. Cushioning laminate made of plastic, which could safely breakdown without negatively impacting the environment, would be a great asset to the industry. While improvements in equipment used in the manufacturing process continue to be made, they may be slow to come to market because replacing existing machines may be prohibitively expensive. One new method of manufacturing circumvents the need for costly forming equipment. Instead, this method uses a plastic substrate sheet as a pattern to form the bubbles without expensive molding equipment. In this process, a thin plastic sheet is first perforated in the desired bubble pattern. This layer is laminated to a substrate sheet and the combination is then passed through heated pinch rolls. Vacuum or gas pressure is applied to draw the film through the perforations in the substrate. This process creates bubbles without the use of a forming surface. It remains to be seen if this, or other new manufacturing methods, will be embraced by the industry in the future.

Where to Learn More

Books

Green, Joey and Tim Nybery. The Bubble Wrap Book. Harper Perennial Publishers, 1998.

Other

The Sealed Air Corporation: http://www.sealedaircorp.com/.

US Patent 4,681,648 Process for Producing Cushioning Laminate.

Randy Schueller

Soda Bottle

views updated Jun 11 2018

Soda Bottle

Background

The soda bottle so common today is made of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), a strong yet lightweight plastic. PET is used to make many products, such as polyester fabric, cable wraps, films, transformer insulation, generator parts, and packaging. It makes up 6.4 percent of all packaging and 14 percent of all plastic containers, including the popular soft drink bottle. Accounting for 43 percent of those sold, PET is the most widely used soft drink container. Aluminum, a close second, is 34 percent, while glass, which used to be 100 percent of the bottles, is only a small percentage of those sold today.

Plastics were first made in the 1800s from natural substances that were characterized by having chains of molecules. When these substances were combined with other chemicals in the laboratory, they formed products of a plastic nature. While hailed as a revolutionary invention, early plastics had their share of problems, such as flammability and brittleness. Polyesters, the group of plastics to which PET belongs, were first developed in 1833, but these were mostly used in liquid varnishes, a far cry from the solid, versatile form they took later.

Purely synthetic plastics that were a vast improvement on earlier plastics arrived in the early 1900s, yet they still had limited applications. Experimentation continued, with most of the hundreds of new plastics created over the next several decades failing commercially. PET was developed in 1941, but it wasn't until the early 1970s that the plastic soda bottle became a reality. Nathaniel C. Wyeth, son of well-known painter N. C. Wyeth and an engineer for the Du Pont Corporation, finally developed a usable bottle after much experimentation.

Wyeth's crucial discovery was a way to improve the blow-molding technique of making plastic bottles. Blow molding is ancient, having been used in glass-making technology for approximately two thousand years. Making plastic bottles by blow molding didn't happen until suitable plastics were developed around 1940, but production of these bottles was limited because of inconsistent wall thickness, irregular bottle necks, and difficulty in trimming the finished product. Wyeth's invention of stretch blow molding in 1973 solved these problems, yielding a strong, lightweight, flexible bottle.

The overwhelming success of PET soda bottlesin 1991, more than eight billion bottles were manufactured in the U.S.has resulted in a disposal problem, but recycling of the bottles is growing, and manufacturers are finding new ways to use recycled PET.

Raw Materials

PET is a polymer, a substance consisting of a chain of repeating organic molecules with great molecular weight. Like most plastics, PET is ultimately derived from petroleum hydrocarbons. It is created by a reaction between terephthalic acid (C8H604) and ethylene glycol (C2H602).

Terephthalic acid is an acid formed by the oxidation of para-xylene (C8H10), an aromatic hydrocarbon, using just air or nitric acid. Para-xylene is derived from coal tar and petroleum using fractional distillation, a process that utilizes the different boiling points of compounds to cause them to "fall out" at different points of the process.

Ethylene glycol is derived from ethylene (C2H4) indirectly through ethylene oxide (C2H40), a substance also found in antifreeze. Ethylene is a gaseous hydrocarbon that is present in petroleum and natural gas, but is usually derived industrially by heating ethane or an ethane-propane mixture.

The Manufacturing
Process

Polymerization

  • 1 Before the bottles can be made, the PET itself must be manufactured, or polymerized. In polymerization, smaller molecules are combined to form larger substances. To make PET, terephthalic acid is first combined with methanol (CH3OH). This reaction yields dimethyl terephthalate and water. Next, the dimethyl terephthalat, is combined with an excess of ethylene glycol at 305 degrees Fahrenheit (150 degrees Celsius) to yield another substance, bis 2-hydroxyethyl terephthalate and methanol.
  • 2 The final step of polymerization involves the condensation polymerization of the bis 2-hydroxyethyl terephthalate. In this process, a polymer is formed while another molecule is released, or "falls out." The condensation polymerization of bis 2-hydroxyethyl terephthalate is carried out in a vacuum at 530 degrees Fahrenheit (275 degrees Celsius) and results in chains of PET and ethylene glycol (see step #1 above); the latter substance is continuously removed during polymerization and used to make more PET. After the PET mixture reaches the required viscosity (thickness), it is cooled to avoid degradation and discoloration. Later, it can be reheated for its various uses.

Bottle-making

  • 3 PET beverage bottles are made using a process known as stretch blow molding (also called orientation blow molding). First, PET pellets are injection moldedheated and put into a moldinto a thin walled tube of plastic, called a parison. The parison is then cooled and cut to the proper length.
  • 4 Next, the parison tube is re-heated and placed into another mold, which is shaped like a soda bottle, complete with screwtop. A steel rod (a mandrel) is slid into the parison. Highly pressurized air then shoots through the mandrel and fills the parison, pressing it against the inside walls of the mold. The pressure of the air stretches the plastic both radially ("out") and axially ("down"). The combination of high temperature and stretching in the desired direction causes the molecules to polarize, line up and essentially crystallize to produce a bottle of superior strength. The entire procedure must be done quickly, and the plastic must be pressed firmly against the wall, or the bottle will come out misshapen. In order to give the bottom of the bottle its proper concave shapeso that it can stand uprighta separate bottom piece is attached to the mold during the blowing process.
  • 5 The mold must then be cooled. Different cooling methods are used. Water in pipes may flow around the mold, or liquid carbon dioxide, highly pressurized moist air, or room air is shot into the bottle to cool it more directly. The procedure is preferably done quickly, to set the bottle before creep (flow) occurs.
  • 6 The bottle is then removed from the mold. In mass production, small bottles are formed continuously in a string of attached bottles that are separated and trimmed. Other trimming must be done wherever the plastic leaked through the cracks of the mold (like the way pancake batter does when squeezed in a waffle maker). Ten to 25 percent of the plastic is lost this way, but it can be reused.
  • 7 Some soft drink producers make their own bottles, but usually finished bottles are sent from specialty manufacturers to soft drink companies in trucks. Plastic is cheap to transport because it is light. Accessories such as lids and labels are manufactured separately. Occasionally, the plastic bottle manufacturer will put labels supplied by the soft drink company on the bottles before shipping them.

Quality Control

Polymerization is a delicate reaction that is difficult to regulate once the conditions are set and the process is set into motion. All molecules produced during the reaction, some of which might be side effects and impurities, remain in the finished product. Once the reaction gets going, it's impossible to stop it at mid-point and remove impurities, and it is also difficult and expensive to eliminate unwanted products when the reaction is complete. Purifying polymers is an expensive process, and quality is hard to determine. Variations in the polymerization process could make changes that are undetectable in routine control tests.

The polymerization of terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol can yield two impurities: diethylene glycol and acetaldehyde. The amount of diethylene glycol is kept to a minimum, so that PET's final properties are not affected. Acetaldehyde, which is formed during the polymerization as well as during the production of the bottle, will give a funny taste to the soft drink if it occurs in large enough amounts. By using optimum injection-molding techniques that expose the polymer to heat for a short time, very low concentrations of acetaldehyde appear and the taste of the beverage will be unaffected.

Testing is performed on those specific characteristics of PET that make it perfect for beverage bottles. Numerous standards and tests have been developed for plastics over the years. For instance, PET must be shatter-proof under normal conditions, so bottles undergo impact resistance tests that involve dropping them from a specific height and hitting them with a specified force. Also, the bottle must hold its shape as well as resist pressure while stacked, so resistance to creep is measured by testing for deformity under pressure. In addition, soft drinks contain carbon dioxide; that's what gives them their fizz. If carbon dioxide were able to escape through the bottle's plastic walls, most beverages bought would have already gone flat. Hence, the bottle's permeability to carbon dioxide is tested. Even its transparency and gloss are tested. All tests aim for consistency of size, shape, and other factors.

Recycling

A large number of the billions of PET bottles produced every year are thrown away, producing a serious environmental concern. Action has already been taken to stem the waste flow, mainly in the area of recycling. Only aluminum fetches a higher price at the recycling center than PET, so, at a one to two pecent recovery rate, PET is the most extensively recycled plastic. Products made from recycled PET bottles include carpeting, concrete, insulation, and automobile parts. Still, it wasn't until 1991 that the first PET soda bottle using recycled PET appeared. Consisting of 25 percent recycled PET, the bottle was introduced by Coca-Cola and Hoechst Celanese Corporation for use in North Carolina. By 1992, this bottle was being used in 14 other states, and other manufacturers (such as Pepsi, in partnership with Constar International Inc.) had produced a similar bottle.

Despite PET's high recycling rate compared to other plastics, many companies and officials want to make it even higher. Current plans are to look into PET incineration, in which it is claimed that, if done properly, the products of complete combustion are merely carbon dioxide and water. Current goals of state and federal governments are that 25 to 50 percent of PET be recycled, that recycling of PET be made available to one-half of the United States population, and that 4000 curbside recycling programs be implemented in the near future. In 1990, according to the National Association for Plastic Container Recovery, there were 577 curbside programs for PET.

Where To Learn More

Books

Beck, Ronald D. Plastic Product Design. Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1970.

Kaufman, Morris. Giant Molecules: The Technology of Plastics, Fibers, and Rubber. Doubleday, 1968.

Modern Plastics Encyclopedia, 1981-82. McGraw-Hill, 1981.

Richardson, Terry A. Industrial Plastics: Theory and Application. South-Western Publishing, 1983.

Wolf, Nancy and Ellen Feldman. Plastics: America's Packaging Dilemma. Island Press, 1991.

Periodicals

"Picked Up, Dropped Off." Beverage World. August, 1992, p. 16.

Kirkman, Angela and Charles H. Kline. "Recycling Plastics Today." Chemtech. October, 1991, pp. 606-614.

Sfiligoj, Eric. "Answering the Critics: Recyclable Polyethylene Terephthalate Beverage Containers Are Replacing Glass Bottles." Beverage World. June, 1992, p. 34.

Rose Secrest