The present invention relates to a method for applying labels to articles—such as bottles, pots, cans, and the like—travelling along an article path, e.g. in a labelling machine.
More particularly, the present invention refers to a method for the application of labels of the type cut off a roll of labelling material at appropriate lengths, then glued and transferred onto the surface of containers.
Labelling machines for automatically performing these operations are well known in the art and their use is widespread in the packaging industry.
In these machines, containers are typically carried by a carrousel along an article path so as to advance towards a labelling station. At the same time, a web of labelling material is fed from a roll-feeding group to a “vacuum drum”, whereby said web is brought into contact with cutting means to be cut into labels of appropriate length. Subsequently, glue is applied on the labels as they are borne by the vacuum drum, e.g. by means of a gluing drum, spray and injector systems or the like. Glued labels are finally transferred from the vacuum drum to the containers.
For proper performance of these operations, accurate handling of the labels is pursued through retention thereof on the surface of the vacuum drum, i.e. by applying vacuum on the labels in a controlled manner. To this purpose, the surface of the vacuum drum comprises a plurality of orifices that can be fluidically connected with a vacuum source.
In particular, this type of labelling process is commonly applied with flexible containers, such as bottles of PET, the use of which is customary in the food and drink industry.
An effort is currently being made, especially in the beverage industry, to lightweight PET containers, with a view to reducing household packaging waste originating, in particular, from the retail sector.
In fact, lightweighting beverage packaging provides a powerful way to minimise waste at source, and to reduce raw material processing and distribution costs. In particular, the energy consumed in the drying of resin and in the melting of PET to make a pre-form and then a bottle is directly related to its weight. Therefore, the potential reduction in energy consumption is proportional to the weight that may avoid being processed.
The weight of PET bottles is determined predominantly by the bottle performance requirements and specification of the neck and base.
In particular, the neck design is influenced by handling requirements, e.g. during filling operations, and by the style of closure used. Different neck finishes have different weights associated with their design features.
The design and weight of the base is mainly related to the requirement to withstand the internal pressure, hence still water bottles can have thinner, and therefore lighter, bases than bottles intended for filling with carbonated beverages.
In general, the mid-section body of a PET bottle has consequently been the obvious focus for manipulation of design for lightweighting, since there are less strict requirements to be accounted for in this respect. In practice, lightweighting has been achieved by pursuing better material distribution during the blow moulding steps, by exploiting novel PET resin compositions and improvements in pre-form heating in blow moulding machines.
However, lightweight PET bottles have a drawback in that they exhibit a peculiar creep behaviour, i.e. they expand quite dramatically with time after filling (especially with carbonated products). Plastics are visco-elastic materials, hence they continue to respond to applied pressures over time, even well after completion of the filling and labelling operations.
Unfortunately, labels, or any other wrapped-type packaging, applied onto the surface of the mid-section body of a lightweight bottle in accordance with the labelling methods known in the art, are highly likely to be severely damaged upon the progressive expansion described above.
The need is therefore felt, in the art, for a method for handling and applying labels to articles travelling along an article path, whereby the drawback described above can be overcome in straightforward and inexpensive fashion.
More particularly, the need is felt for a method for handling and applying labels to articles, whereby lightweight PET bottles can be effectively labelled substantially without the creep-related expansion thereof interfering with the accuracy of application and positioning of the label onto the surface of the mid-section body of the bottles.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method for applying labels to articles which satisfies at least one of the above needs.
This object is achieved by a method for applying labels to articles as claimed in claim 1.
A non-limiting embodiment of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
At least for a portion of article path P, the articles 3 are carried by a carousel 50 comprising a number of support plates 51 which are equally spaced about a rotation axis A, are mounted along a peripheral edge of the carousel and are moved by the latter along a substantially circular path.
Each support plate 51 is, in turn, rotatable about a respective axis A′, parallel to the axis A of the carousel, so that articles 3 may be rotated as they are advanced along the substantially circular portion of article path P.
As illustrated schematically in
The vacuum drum 4 therefore receives a succession of labels 2 at an input location I, which is proximal to the cutting unit 6, and transfers said succession of labels 2 to the articles 3 at an output location O arranged at a given angular distance from the input station I about an axis of rotation A″ of the vacuum drum 4.
As illustrated with further reference to
In the embodiment illustrated in
As shown in
In practice, the pads 14a and 14b define the zones of the periphery of the drum 4 where label transfer occurs.
The lateral surface 9 of the vacuum drum 4 further comprises at least one second section 9b, usually called “inter-pad” zone, which extends between a relative pair of pads 14b, 14a. In the embodiment illustrated in
In other words, considering the direction of rotation of the vacuum drum 4 (which direction is indicated in
As commented above with reference to the first sections 9a, also the overall number of second sections 9b provided in the lateral surface 9 of the vacuum drum 4 can vary, accordingly, depending on the capacity of the labelling machine and, even more so, on the length of the labels 2 to be processed, the minimum number being one.
As visible in
The vacuum drum 4 works conventionally by rotating in the direction indicated by the cross-hatched arrow, so that it first receives, substantially at the input location I, the web 5 of labelling material, which is cut to obtain a label 2 of the desired length as it engages the cutting means 8.
More particularly, the web 5 first advances with the cutter drum 7 and is secured to the surface thereof by vacuum supply. The vacuum supply is conveniently discontinued when the web 5 of labelling material reaches the input location I, at which the leading edge of the web 5 can be picked by the vacuum drum 4.
As it is transferred substantially at the input location I, the labelling material is subject to a tension created by the simultaneous supply of vacuum from both the vacuum drum 4 and the cutter drum 7. As the transfer progresses, the influence of the vacuum supplied at the cutter drum 7 decreases, as the portion of labelling material retained by the vacuum drum increases. As a consequence, the web 5 comes to engage the cutting means 8.
At the cutting point, the cut label 2 is carried solely by the vacuum drum 4. The completion of the transfer can be considered to occur instantly at the cutting point, since the label mass is negligible with respect to the entity of the tractive forces acting thereupon.
As it is carried on the lateral surface 9 of the vacuum drum 4, the label passes by the gluing group 16, which comprises, in particular, a gluing drum 17, whereby a predetermined glue pattern is applied onto the side of the label 2 which will contact the surface of the container 3.
By virtue of the structure of the vacuum drum 4 described above, the through holes in the pads 14a, 14b and in the at least one section 9a of the lateral surface 9 of the vacuum drum can independently and controllably be fluidically connected with the vacuum source. Thus, each label 3 can be handled with accuracy over the whole course of operations.
For ensuring a good performance, precise positioning of the label 2 over the lateral surface 9 of the vacuum drum 4 can advantageously be pursued by retaining each label 2 received from the cutting unit 6 with the leading edge 20 held at a pad 14a, and the trailing edge 21 held at the pad 14b of the same pair of pads. This is achieved through accurate timing of the different drums by which the labels 2 are retained and by controlling the supply of vacuum throughout operation.
In particular, suction can be applied to each label 2 independently and controllably through each of three distinct retaining areas which are defined by the pads 14a, 14b and the section 9a comprised therebetween, respectively.
In practice, the non-rotatable base on which the vacuum drum 4 is mounted works as a stationary distributor member. The orifices or manifolds 12 of the base are connected to one or more independent vacuum sources, e.g. so that a different degree of vacuum can be associated to different orifices 12. As the vacuum drum 4 rotates about its axis A″, the internal passages 11 communicate with certain orifices or manifolds 12 at certain predetermined angular positions corresponding to the performance of certain operations on the web 5 of labeling material/the labels 2. The degree of vacuum supplied at the pads 14a, 14b and at each section 9a comprised therebetween can accordingly be finely tuned with the operations of the labeling process.
As a consequence, the desired contact between label 2 and vacuum drum surface 9 may be ensured at all times, e.g. for allowing proper application of a complete glue pattern on the portions of label, as it is held at least at the pads 14a, 14b. Preferably, over the course of glue application, the label 2 is also retained at the relative section 9a.
Following glue application, the labelling operation is then completed by transferring the label 2 from the vacuum drum 4 to a respective article 3 being carried by carousel 50 and rotating, in turn, about the axis A′ of a respective support plate 51.
In a so-called positive-spin arrangement, carousel 50 and vacuum drum 4 rotate in opposite directions, thus—at the label transfer—their respective outer surfaces move substantially in the same direction. This is the case illustrated in
Alternatively, in a so-called negative-spin arrangement, carousel 50 and vacuum drum 4 rotate in the same direction, thus—at the label transfer—their respective outer surfaces move in opposite direction.
In both arrangements, however, the support plates 51 and the vacuum drum 4 shall rotate in opposite directions.
At the output location O, the motion of the label 2 being transferred from the vacuum drum 4 to the article 3 shall be affected by the velocity resulting from the combination of the simultaneous rotations of vacuum drum 4, carousel 50 and support plate 51.
In particular, the label 2 shall arrive at the output location O with a label process speed V1 which corresponds to the tangential speed of vacuum drum 4.
At label transfer, the outer surface of the article 3 (onto which the label 2 has to be transferred) moves with a velocity which results from the composition of:
a primary tangential speed V2 given by rotation of the support plate 51, upon which the article 3 is placed, about its own axis A′; with
a secondary tangential speed V3 given by rotation of the same support plate 51 about the axis A′ of carousel 50.
Reference can be made to
Advantageously, for transfer of a label 2 from the vacuum drum 4 onto a relative article 3:
the supply of vacuum at the pad 14a by which the leading edge of the label 2 is being retained is curtailed, approximately upon said pad 14a reaching the output location O, i.e. when the leading edge of label 2 can effectively engage with the outer surface of the article 3; and
the supply of vacuum at the section 9a is shut off, preferably immediately after curtailing the supply of vacuum at the pad 14a.
Furthermore, the speeds of rotation about the respective axes of vacuum drum 4, carousel 50 and support plate 51 are advantageously set such that, at the output location O the label process speed V1 is greater than the speed resulting from the combination of primary tangential speed V2 and secondary tangential speed V3.
The suppression of the supply of vacuum at section 9a during label transfer results into the absence of contact between the label 2 being transferred and the surface of the vacuum drum, if not for the trailing edge of the label which is still being retained at pad 14b.
As a consequence, as illustrated in
To complete label transfer (see
In particular, because at label transfer the label 2 is gripped strongly but solely at its leading and trailing edges, i.e. because vacuum is supplied at label transfer at the pads 14a, 14b but not at section 91, and because the support plate 51 is rotated at a controlled speed in relation to the speed of the other moving parts of the labelling station 1, it is possible, according to the method of the invention, to apply a label 2 on an article 3 with a precisely controlled slackness.
Advantageously, said slackness can therefore be tailored and matched to the expected ultimate level of expansion of the article 3, particularly in the case where the article 3 is a flexible container, e.g. a bottle, which undergoes a significant creep-related expansion upon filling. The expected ultimate level of expansion can be estimated as a function of the material properties and of the pressurisation and storage conditions.
Besides, the method of the invention allows light labelling material to be applied to lightweight containers with minimum glue application levels and good results.
The method can advantageously be applied to both positive-spin and negative-spin arrangements of carousel 50 and vacuum drum 4 in a labelling machine.
In particular, in a negative-spin arrangement, since the relevant component of the secondary tangential speed V3 shall have opposite direction with respect to the primary combination shall nearly inevitably be lower than the label process speed V1. In other words, the kinematic relationship described above shall not require a particularly fine tuning of speed control to be maintained.
On the other hand, in a positive-spin arrangement, a more thorough care shall be required to ensure that the label process speed V1 be greater than the speed resulting from the combination of primary tangential speed V2 and relevant component of secondary tangential speed V3, since these will have the same direction.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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TO2010A000894 | Nov 2010 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP11/69780 | 11/9/2011 | WO | 00 | 7/30/2013 |