Feature article on InLine blending Solutions focusing on process control for the adhesives and coatings industry.
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Avoiding Delamination and Waste in Flexible Packaging
‘Intelligent’ blending and dispensing of adhesives is critical to proper lamination,
yet is often lacking.
I n the vast world of flexible packaging,
it is critically important to control the adhesives used to bond laminates such as films and foils, which require meticulous accuracy of blending, problematic packaging travels farther down the distribution chain. “The ultimate dilemma created by delaminated packaging is when it reaches the store shelf, which is a terrible situation dispensing and applying adhesives to for the product manufacturer and substrate materials. Yet, the adhesive packaging supplier and could easily cost controls required for such accuracy are hundreds of thousands of dollars,” says astonishingly missing from nearly all Ray Mayes, a packaging controls specialist systems, even though the consequences are whose firm, Cereal City Electric (Battle quite dire – packaging failure, product loss, Creek MI), services the Midwestern food and significant downtime. industry. If not applied in the correct coat “And if you were to seal a food weight, whether too light or too heavy, the product into packaging material that later lamination bonding will fail, causing the began to delaminate, you would then be overlay to bubble, blister or otherwise wasting the product as well as the delaminate from the base material, a packaging,” he adds. nightmarish scenario that worsens as the Even when delaminated packaging never leaves the plant, it normally takes equipment uses only single gages to meter adhesive coat weight, if they use any at all, the process can slip out of control without the operator or system being aware of it. “Unless the adhesive’s viscosity and flow rate are validated by a secondary metering system, you have no real control at all,” says Bruce Schuetz, who has worked in the metering and blending industry for over 30 years. “It is shocking to most controls experts that such a situation could exist in the flexible packaging industry, but it does.” The need for a comprehensive adhesive blending and dispensing feedback and control system led Schuetz to found InLine Blending Solutions (Forest Lake, IL), and to develop a line of solid and solvent-borne adhesive blending and dispensing equipment that focuses on true process control. To provide the required level of control, the equipment is designed to enable accurate, validated metering and dispensing to high-volume inline blending adhesives about three days to cure. At that and mixing operations that are completed point, if there is a quality problem, the automatically, on demand. packaging producer has to go all the way However, as he developed products back to reprinting the packaging, and then in collaboration with customers, Schuetz laminate it once again. realized that through improved process “This is a JIT world,” Mayes control he could also incorporate other explains. “When you have a lamination beneficial adhesive mixing and dispensing error, it is almost impossible to really make systems, including improved system up for it. You have to squeeze back in the availability, a more healthful working production queue, which is very difficult. environment, reduced maintenance Schedules are always tight and the printer requirements, and enhanced plant may be backed up. The printer or appearance. packaging house may be short of materials, and it can take considerable time to Serving multiple needs replenish them. In any event, it’s a very Fundamental to innovating advanced difficult and costly situation.” systems, InLine Blending Systems works closely with prospective customers, The need for controls collaborating on system analysis and Mayes attributes most delamination and performing a no-commitment site survey other coatings problems to a lack of to optimize applications and reduce risks. control with the blending, metering and The outcome of this preliminary work can dispensing of adhesives. Because most lead to important innovations as well as adhesive blending and dispensing customer benefits that impact lamination operations in multiple ways. For example, Schuetz worked directly with Ray Mayes when he was plant engineer with Cello-Foil, now Exopack, in Battle Creek. Mayes wanted to improve the verification of coat weight on two-component polymer adhesives used in laminating 10-gauge films on packages. “Before we had the control system, it wasn’t uncommon that we could have a delamination claim from a customer that could be as high as $100,000,” says Mayes. “Once we got the new control system in place, we had complete reliability and never saw any claims.” Mayes explains that the InLine Blending Solution’s equipment includes two independent metering technologies, and they are also working on a solid-state polyurethane coat weight analyzer that measures the coat weight. Until recently, such “intelligent” microprocessor-based control of adhesive blending and dispensing has not been available. simply roll up another unit containing “With this unique system it is a whatever other adhesive was required for simple matter to verify mix ratio and coat the particular job. weight,” says Mayes. “This is a very “We had each unit built on wheels, powerful capability. You would not think so that we could pull it right up to the this would be unique, especially in the machine and run one adhesive,” Mayes world of controls that we have nowadays. explains. “If the next order was using a But nobody else can do it, as far as I know. different adhesive, we’d just roll the first You can do anything with a unit out of the way and replace it with microprocessor, but InLine Blending another machine that was already equipped Systems is the only adhesive blending and with the needed adhesive. Using that dispensing equipment that actually has that method, we didn’t have to clean it up and capability. These advanced systems are go through a lot of changeovers. The constantly monitoring and validating flow benefit, of course, was increased system rates.” availability as well as a reduction in the In the collaborative process of cleanup of the machines.” designing the equipment, Mayes saw Another very significant opportunities to improve productivity as maintenance and productivity benefit came well as ensuring that lamination problems from the incorporation of PTFE (Teflon) were eliminated. He adapted the adhesive coating on components and seal-less unit design so that it became modular, pumping cylinders of the blending and enabling operators to remove a unit dispensing equipment. containing one type of solid adhesive and Many manufacturers use cylinder equipment and makes it look more rod-type pumps that are exposed to the professionally maintained to visitors who adhesive. Because the rods eventually get visit the plant. adhesive on them, that adhesive begins to In every plant today the occurrence adhere and is cured by the air. On models of VOCs is a major environmental and containing seals, the rods ultimately employee safety concern. Because the become sticky enough that they literally solvents used in many adhesive systems tear the seals out of the cylinders, creating are both an OSHA and EPA concern, uncontrolled flow and a messy situation. minimizing the yield of VOCs is another “The way the new system is goal of the InLine Blending Systems designed, the cylinder and rod are design. encapsulated,” explains Mayes. “They are “With this system, the operator seal-less and airless. So they never come in never touches the product,” says Mayes. contact with the atmosphere. Any parts “We applied it out of a drum that was that might be coated with adhesive are not sealed with a valve on it. You simply bring a problem because the adhesive is not up the drum on a cart, quick-connect the exposed to the atmosphere, and it never hose, and turn the valve on. Everything gets the chance to cure. Therefore, we else is automatic. That minimizes the could put the equipment aside for two VOCs that can escape from the adhesive months and the adhesive would not have and into the plant air.” cured, whereas other equipment couldn’t For more information, contact be left for more than two days without Inline Blending Solutions Inc., 23535 Park having to be cleaned.” Road N, Forest Lake, IL 60047; Phone: The appearance of equipment is (847) 875-2066; Fax (847) 438-2664; E- another advantage, and the PTFE coating mail [email protected], of the InLine equipment both eliminates or visit the web site the extensive cleanup problems of other inlineblendingsolutions.com