This application is based on and claims priority to United Kingdom Patent Application No. 0705451.3, filed Mar. 22, 2007.
This invention relates to valve bags, including a method of producing valve bags.
Valve bags, such as for carrying powder, grain, cement, animal foodstuffs, etc., are widely known. A typical valve bag is formed of thick paper having a stitched top and a valve formed in the side of the bag. The valve is opened and impaled onto a chute tube through which material is conveyed into the bag. The bag is effectively self-sealing, as once it has been removed from the chute tube, the valve closes, therefore, preventing the contents of the bag from escaping through the valve.
Disadvantages of the bag described above are the lack of resistance to moisture, such as rain or humidity, and tendency to tear.
Plastic valve bags, and a method and apparatus for making them, are also known. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,890,290 (Amplas) discloses a valve bag wherein a film web is formed into a continuous tube, and the tube is sealed internally by a device which is disposed within the tube of material.
The valve bag disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,890,290 is more resistant to moisture and damage such as tearing than a thick paper valve bag. However, the method of forming the bag is complex, and the required equipment is expensive. Therefore, it is only commercially viable to use this method of forming a valve bag for certain applications.
Valve bags are currently used for fairly large quantities of material, and not for small quantities of discrete parts such as nuts, bolts or spare parts. The use of current valve bags for such small quantities is not economical due to the cost of equipment. The use of paper valve bags could also lead to damage of the items by moisture, or the parts themselves could cause damage to a paper valve bag. Therefore, small quantities of discrete parts are usually packaged in bags which must be further sealed after the contents have been put into the bag.
It is an aim of the present invention to overcome or at least mitigate the above problems.
Accordingly, the present invention provides, in one aspect, a method of forming a valve bag comprising steps of:
unrolling a first web of material and a second web of material, the first and second webs of material both having an upper and a lower side;
creating a combined web by contacting material from the upper side of the first web with material from the lower side of the second web, the combined web being formed of a plurality of bag sections and having a valve side and an opposing open side;
applying a sealing process to the combined web such that the first web is sealed to the second web along part of the valve side, the sealing process defining at least one valve portion in the valve side of each bag section;
separating the first web and the second web at the open side, and folding the first web and the second web outwardly, until a section of the lower side of the first web contacts a section of the upper side of the second web;
sealing together the contacting sections of the lower side of the first web and the upper side of the second web; and
separating adjacent bag sections.
Preferably, sealing lines defining the valve extend from a predefined distance from the valve side to the periphery of the valve side.
The invention provides, in a second aspect, a valve bag formed of a first web and a second web, wherein the bag has a valve side having a valve defined by sealing lines, and an opposing side, and wherein at the valve side, an upper side of the first web contacts and a lower side of the second web and is partially sealed thereto, and at the opposing side, the lower side of the first web is sealed to the upper side of the second web.
The present invention provides a much simpler and less expensive method of production than prior art methods. An advantage of the present invention is that conventional machinery can be used, therefore, providing an inexpensive and simple method of manufacture of valve bags. Therefore, various sizes and quantities of valve bag may be produced economically. Small valve bags can be produced, for example, to hold small items such as nuts, bolts or spare parts. Once the small items have been put into the bags, the bags do not need to be further sealed, thus, resulting in a time and cost saving.
A further advantage of the present invention is that various materials can be used to form the bag, thus, allowing choice of material according to required properties.
The web material used in the present invention may be a heat sealable plastic material. An advantage of a heat sealable plastics material is that it is resistant to moisture and less susceptible to damage such as tearing. The thickness of the material may be selected according to the application of the valve bag and therefore the strength required.
One or both of the webs of material may be clear. The use of one clear and one opaque web would provide easy identification of the contents of the bag, and allow for the printing of product details on the opaque web.
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a and 5b are cross-sectional views through a bag portion having a gusset formed on the valve side and the open side respectively.
In the present invention, a first web of material 2, such as a heat sealable plastics material, is positioned in registry with to a second web of material 4, as shown in
In the second stage of production, as shown in
As illustrated in
In a third stage of production, as illustrated in
The contacting sections of the lower side 28 of the first web 2 and upper side 30 of the second web 4 are then sealed together at Y in the fourth stage of production, effectively forming a tube of material 36 (
a illustrates a bag portion having a gusset 40 formed in the valve side 20. The forming of the gusset would occur during the third stage of production, with the first and second webs being flattened together before the combined web has been turned fully inside out.
A gusset could also be formed on the open side 18, as illustrated in
Filling of the valve bags can then be achieved by usual the usual method of inserting a impaling the valve portion 26 of the bag onto a chute tube and flowing the contents through the chute tube into the bag. Once the chute tube is removed from the valve, the valve will be urged closed therefore preventing the escape of the contents of the bag.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0705451.3 | Mar 2007 | GB | national |
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20080232723 A1 | Sep 2008 | US |