This invention relates to laminate structures and methods of making the same.
United States of America Patent Application Publication U.S. 2003/0180489 discloses a non-foil barrier laminate structure. Containers constructed from the barrier laminates disclosed therein can be hot filled or cold filled and can be stored at either ambient conditions or refrigerated conditions. The laminate structures progressing inwardly have a polyamide layer for mechanical strength and thermal resistance; a first EVOH layer as a barrier to oxygen ingress applied in direct contact with the polyamide layer and a second barrier layer of EVOH, nylon or the like positioned closer to the contact surface of the product that may act as a barrier to oxygen, water vapour, flavour/aroma, or a combination, which is not in contact with the first oxygen barrier layer of EVOH, and layers of polyolefin on both the matte side (interior) and the gloss side (exterior) of the laminate for heat sealing. The laminate structures of that Publication are all provided with the polyamide layer applied directly on the paperboard substrate in a coating process. This results in a production line that is relatively inefficient, when changes need to be made to the materials that are being laminated onto the substrate.
It is therefore an object of the invention to improve upon the known art.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of producing a laminate structure comprising
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a laminate structure comprising, from the outside to the inside,
According to a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a laminate structure comprising, from the outside to the inside,
According to a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method comprising, at a laminating station on a production line for a laminate structure, laminating together (i) a multi-layer barrier film comprising a first polymer layer, a gas barrier layer and a second polymer layer, wherein at least one of the layers comprises a polyamide, and (ii) a substrate, and, subsequently, laminating together at said station a substrate and another multi-layer barrier film differing from the first-mentioned film.
Owing to these aspects of the invention, it is possible to provide a low flavour-scalping laminate structure for use in creating a container for liquid food products. The method of producing the structure using a multi-layer barrier film allows shorter runs on a production line without greatly affecting the overall efficiency of the production line, as different barrier films can be used at different times. There is no need to purge extruders, which is a lengthy process, which is required when changing the layers used to produce a laminate in a coating production line. A more flexible production solution is provided as a result.
The lamination may take the form of thermal lamination, by heating that surface layer of the multi-layer barrier film which is to contact the substrate, thereby to render that surface layer tacky prior to application thereof to the substrate. Preferably, however the multi-layer barrier film is extrusion laminated to the substrate by way of an adhesive layer.
In the event that the substrate is paperboard or another moisture-absorbent material, it preferably has on the outside thereof an outer layer of a substance which is a barrier to moisture. This outer layer may be extrusion-coated onto the substrate or be the innermost layer of a multi-layer barrier film laminated to the substrate either by thermal lamination, or preferably, by extrusion lamination.
Preferably, the first polymer layer, the gas barrier layer and the second polymer layer form a first barrier block, and the multi-layer barrier film further comprises a second barrier block, substantially identical to the first barrier block, whereby there can be two barrier blocks in the multi-layer film, one of which will be relatively closer to the liquid food contents in the ultimate container to provide optimal scalping properties, and the other of which will be relatively closer to the substrate (such as paperboard) to provide oxygen barrier properties. The layer distribution of the components of the barrier blocks provides a better barrier structure with greater consistency.
Advantageously, the gas barrier layer comprises an EVOH layer, and each of the first and second polymer layers comprises a polyamide layer. The layer which comprises EVOH (ethylene vinyl alcohol), which has excellent gas and odour barrier properties, is provided with improved flex-crack resistance, by the provision of the polyamide (nylon) layer on one or both sides of the EVOH. In the preferred embodiment, the first polymer layer (polyamide) contacts the gas barrier layer (EVOH) and the gas barrier layer (EVOH) contacts the second polymer layer (polyamide). Alternatively, one of the first and second polymer layers can comprise a polypropylene layer. As an alternative to the polyamide on both sides of the gas barrier EVOH, one side of the EVOH can be a layer of polypropylene.
The film of n-layers is blow extruded as a single co-extrusion, and then bubble collapsed in on itself while the internal polymer layer is still hot, in order to form the barrier film that is twice the thickness of the original blown film, i.e. 2n-layers, with each layer repeated twice in the final barrier film. The internal layer welds to itself as the bubble collapses, forming a seal.
The use of a blown film that is collapsed in on itself to form the barrier film has a number of advantages. Firstly, it provides an efficient solution to the provision of two barrier blocks in the barrier film, as the layers in the blown film are duplicated in one step, when forming the barrier film. Blowing the film provides good mechanical strength for the layers within the film, as the polymers will be bi-axially oriented in each layer, providing a good strength solution for a given weight of a layer. In addition, the blown film process provides good ventilation of the film as it is being manufactured (as air is circulated inside and outside the film prior to collapse, which helps to remove low molecular weight (volatile) components from the film. The removal of these components prevents them from adversely affecting the flavour and odour properties of the ultimate liquid food contents of a container made using the laminate structure that includes the barrier film, as otherwise these components can migrate into the product. Additionally, the production of the blown film can be carried out offline, separately from the main production line that is producing the laminate structure. Different barrier films can be swapped in and out of the production line with very little downtime compared to a normal change in extruders in a coating line.
A preferred example of a value of n within the blown film is n=7. In this case, the n-layer blown film comprises, from the outside to the inside, a polymer layer, a tie layer, the first polymer layer which comprises a polyamide layer, the gas barrier layer which comprises an EVOH layer, the second polymer layer which comprises a polyamide layer, a tie layer and a polymer layer. This film is extrusion laminated onto the substrate with an adhesive layer to create the finished laminate structure.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
An extruder 30 at the station 24 provides an adhesive layer 32 (such as LDPE) onto the inside of the coated substrate 22 which adheres the film 26 to the coated substrate 22, as it is passed between a pair of rollers 34. The final laminate structure 12 is wound onto a roll 36. At the extrusion lamination station 24, as shown in
Part of the production of the multi-layer barrier film 26 is shown in
As discussed above, the step of producing the multi-layer barrier film 26 comprises producing a blown film 38 of n layers, by a blown extrusion process. After the blown film 38 is produced, the process of producing the multi-layer barrier film 26 further comprises collapsing the n-layer blown film 38, between a pair of rollers (not shown), to form the multi-layer barrier film 26, the multi-layer barrier film 26 consisting of 2n layers. An example of the finished barrier film 26 is shown in
Other methods of producing the barrier film 26 are possible, such as using a cast co-extrusion process to create the multi-layer barrier film 26. The layers of the barrier film do not have to be all formed in one process. For example, if a 14 layer film is desired, then a 7 layer film can be produced and this could be extrusion laminated to the coated substrate 22 twice to give the required number of layers.
In the preferred embodiment, the n-layer blown film 38 comprises, from the outside to the inside, a polymer layer, a tie layer, the first polymer layer comprising a polyamide (nylon) layer, the gas barrier layer comprising an EVOH layer, the second polymer layer comprising a polyamide layer, a tie layer and a polymer layer. Once this is collapsed to form the barrier film 26 then these layers are repeated. This process provides a multi-layer barrier film 26 which comprises a first polymer layer (polyamide), a gas barrier layer (EVOH) and a second polymer layer (polyamide), wherein both of the first and second polymer layers comprise a polyamide layer.
The first polymer layer, the gas barrier layer and the second polymer layer form a first barrier block 54, and the multi-layer barrier film further comprises a second barrier block 56, substantially identical to the first barrier block 54. In the barrier film 26, the first polymer layer contacts the gas barrier layer and the gas barrier layer contacts the second polymer layer. In the preferred embodiment, the gas barrier layer comprises an EVOH layer.
The completed barrier film 26 is extrusion laminated to the substrate 16, as described above with reference to
Each of the barrier blocks 54 and 56 in the laminate structure 12 performs a different function. The first barrier block 54 is located relatively closer to the paperboard substrate 16, and performs an oxygen barrier function in the laminate 12. The second barrier block 56 is located relatively closer to the ultimate liquid food contents of the eventual container formed from the laminate structure 12. This second barrier block provides an anti-scalping function in the laminate structure 12, preventing flavour and odour components from leaching into the laminate structure 12 from the liquid food contents.
The
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
The embodiment of
The outer layers 50 shown in the embodiments of
The new production line 10 of
Instead of using a complicated line equipped with several multi-layer coating stations, the production line 10 is better through being a relatively simple (cheaper) high speed line that is able to run the normal standard LDPE-based coating structures but is also able to extrusion laminate the off-line made barrier film 26 in the coating structure.
The line 10 can be a simple two-station, high-speed state of the art coating line with gravimetric blending and throughput control with investment in a 2.4 metre wide, 7-layer state of the art high output blown co-extrusion line to be able to manufacture the 20 to 35 microns high-barrier, very cost efficient, lamination film 38, which excels in very low thickness variation, optimal usage of different state of art barrier resins, very high mechanical strength and very high flex-crack resistance (avoiding micro pinholes).
The line 10 provides uninterrupted running of the main coating procedures with no down time because of purge procedures for changing on-and back to barrier resin co-extrusion in the coating stations. The line 10 provides a major improvement in net usable production hours. The fact that the extrusion coating line 10 can be running at the same location as the blown line, provides increased efficiency and avoids highly inefficient transportation of mother rolls of blown co-extruded barrier lamination film.
The laminate structure in the preferred embodiment provides a significantly improved EVOH-based barrier board 12, with the ability to use the blown film 38 as a mechanical support in the board structure because the choice of resins in blown film co-extrusion is at least 10 times higher than in extrusion coating, so that mechanically supportive resins can be used more readily. The result is thickness- and cost-reduction without loss of chemical and physical properties.
The production line 10 provides the ability to run newly available barrier resins like PGA (polyglycol alcohol) without additional purging. The production line 10 can be the platform for development of, for example, board versions that are based on non-oil based renewable polymers like PLA (polyalactic acid) and PGA (polyglycol alcohol) as well as extrusion lamination of state-of- the-art, high-barrier, coated oriented films; all of this development can be provided without significantly interfering with the day-to-day production of the coating line 10.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0802813.6 | Feb 2008 | GB | national |
0807582.2 | Apr 2008 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/051670 | 2/12/2009 | WO | 00 | 11/4/2010 |