Not applicable.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to improvements in bags made from polymeric film and processes for manufacturing polymeric film bags.
2. Description of the Related Art
Thermoplastic films are used in a variety of applications. For example, thermoplastic films are used in sheet form for applications such as drop cloths, vapor barriers, and protective covers. Thermoplastic films can also be converted into plastic bags, which may be used in a myriad of applications. The present invention is particularly useful to trash bags constructed from thermoplastic film.
Polymeric bags are ubiquitous in modern society and are available in countless combinations of varying capacities, thicknesses, dimensions, and colors. The bags are available for numerous applications including typical consumer applications such as long-term storage, food storage, and trash collection. Like many other consumer products, increased demand and new technology have driven innovations in polymeric bags improving the utility and performance of such bags. The present invention is an innovation of particular relevance to polymeric bags used for trash collection and more particular for larger bags used for the collection of larger debris.
Polymeric bags are manufactured from polymeric film produced using one of several manufacturing techniques well-known in the art. The two most common methods for manufacture of polymeric films are blown-film extrusion and cast-film extrusion. In blown-film extrusion, the resulting film is tubular while cast-film extrusion produces a generally planar film. The present invention is generally applicable to drawstring trash bags manufactured from a blown-film extrusion process resulting in tubular film stock. Manufacturing methods for the production of drawstring bags from a collapsed tube of material are shown in numerous prior art references including, but not limited to, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,196,757 and 4,624,654, which are hereby incorporated by reference.
In blown film extrusion, polymeric resin is fed into an extruder where an extrusion screw pushes the resin through the extruder. The extrusion screw compresses the resin, heating the resin into a molten state under high pressure. The molten, pressurized resin is fed through a blown film extrusion die having an annular opening. As the molten material is pushed into and through the extrusion die, a polymeric film tube emerges from the outlet of the extrusion die.
The polymeric film tube is blown or expanded to a larger diameter by providing a volume of air within the interior of the polymeric film tube. The combination of the volume of air and the polymeric film tube is commonly referred to as a bubble between the extrusion die and a set of nip rollers. As the polymeric film tube cools travelling upward toward the nip rollers, the polymeric film tube solidifies from a molten state to a solid state after it expands to its final diameter and thickness. Once the polymeric film tube is completely solidified, it passes through the set of nip rollers and is collapsed into a collapsed polymeric tube, also referred to as a collapsed bubble.
One common method of manufacturing trash bags involves segregating the collapsed polymeric tube into individual trash bags by forming seals which extend transversely across the entire width of the tube. Typically a line of perforations is formed immediately adjacent and parallel to each seal to facilitate separation of the trash bags one from another. After the trash bags are sealed and perforated, the trash bags can be twice-folded axially into a fractional width configuration.
It is also known to provide wave-cut trash bags. A wave-cut trash bag has a wave or lobe-shaped configuration at its open end. This provides two or more lobes, which can be used to tie the trash bag in a closed configuration after it is filled.
Wave-cut trash bags can be manufactured by providing closely spaced, parallel transversely extending seals at predetermined intervals along the collapsed polymeric tube. A transversely extending line of perforations is provided between the closely spaced, parallel seals. The collapsed polymeric tube is then separated longitudinally along a wave or lobe-shaped line located equidistant between the edges of the tube.
The lobe-shaped features, or lobes, of a wave-cut trash bags, which may also be referred to as tie-flaps, provide a convenient user feature to tie and close the opening of the bag. The lobes are grasped and knotted to seal the bag opening. Representatives of wave-cut or “tie bags” can be found in the following prior art of U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,890,736, 5,041,317, 5,246,110, 5,683,340, 5,611,627, 5,709,641, and 6,565,794.
In a further publication, U.S. Pat. Appl. Pub. 2008/0292222A1 discloses a bag having at least two “tie flaps” with gripping features embossed on at least one surface of the tie flaps. It is further disclosed that the bag may formed from a tube of thermoplastic material. However, the publication further discloses that the gripping feature is formed in a linear fashion along a length of a blown film bubble that is then slit lengthwise in a wave pattern. The bubble is then formed into bags after being collapsed with a collapsed edge forming a bottom of the bag.
It has been determined, however, that the lobes of prior art wave-cut bags are often difficult to grasp and manipulate, especially if the lobes are contaminated with slippery trash contamination such as oil or grease or moist organic contaminants. Furthermore, wave-cut bags are often manufactured with thicker film than other types of trash bags since they often are intended for use with larger and heavier debris, such as yard debris and debris from home improvement projects. These thicker films used on larger wave-cut bags can be as thick as 3 mils and make it challenging for a user to manipulate the lobes of a wave-cut bag into a knot. Hence, it would be desirable to provide a wave-cut bag that has easier to grasp lobes that are also thinner than the rest of the bag. The present invention represents a novel solution to address this need.
In at least one embodiment of the present invention, a bag of polymeric film may be formed. To form the polymeric bag, a collapsed tube of polymeric film may be formed with a machine direction. The collapsed tube may be formed from a blown film extrusion process. Once the collapsed tube is formed, a pair of intermeshing rollers may intermittently engage the collapsed tube to form a plurality of incrementally stretched sections on the collapsed tube. Within each incrementally stretched section may be defined a plurality of thin and thick ribs that extend across a width of the collapsed tube. The plurality of thin and thick ribs may be parallel to each other and transverse to the machine direction of the collapsed tube. The pair of intermeshing rollers may stretch the collapsed tube in the machine direction.
Once the collapsed tube is incrementally stretched, a bag converting operation may form the collapsed tube into a plurality of bags. Each one of the plurality of bags may have at least a fraction of one of the plurality of incrementally stretched sections. A wave-cutting operation may divide each of the incrementally stretched sections into two separate components. Each of the two separate components may be approximately one-half of an incrementally stretched section. One half of an incrementally stretched section may define an incrementally stretched portion on a first trash bag and a second half of an incrementally stretched section may define an incrementally stretched portion on a second trash bag.
The bag converting operation may further comprise forming sets of closely spaced, parallel seals extending transversely across the entire width of the collapsed tube. Each set of closely spaced parallel seals may be at equally spaced intervals from each other. The bag converting operation may also form perforation lines extending transversely across the entire width of the collapsed tube with a perforation line located between each set of closely spaced, parallel seals. A plurality of wave-shaped perforations may also be formed in the collapsed tube. A location of each wave-shaped perforation may be equidistant from adjacent perforation lines. Each wave-shaped perforation may be centered within one of the plurality of incrementally stretched sections.
The converting operation may further comprise a timing operation. The timing operation may detect the location of each perforation line and generate a timing signal. The location of each wave-shaped perforation and perforation line may be based upon the timing signal. The timing operation may be a standalone operation or may be integrated into the bag converting operation.
The pair of rollers may counter-rotate in relation to each other so that the collapsed tube is fed through the pair of intermeshing rollers. A rotational axis of each of the pair of intermeshing rollers may be perpendicular to the machine direction of the collapsed tube. Each roller of the pair of intermeshing rollers may include a plurality of protruding ridges extending completely about a circumference of each roller. The plurality of protruding ridges may also only extend about a partial circumference of each roller. Each of the protruding ridges may be parallel to each other and parallel to the axis of rotation of each roller. Each of the protruding ridges may have a tip protruding radially outward from the axis of rotation of one of the pair of intermeshing rollers. The plurality of protruding ridges of one roller may intermesh with the plurality of protruding ridges of the other roller. The pair of intermeshing rollers may intermesh with each other only over a fraction of a circumference of each roller and only incrementally stretch the collapsed tube when the pair of intermeshing rollers are intermeshed. The pair of intermeshing rollers may be separated by a gap when the rollers are not intermeshed.
The pair of intermeshing rollers may rotate at a constant speed so that a tangential (i.e. circumferential) speed of the rollers matches the linear speed of the collapsed tube. The rotational speed of the intermeshing rollers may also oscillate so that the tangential speed of the rollers match the linear speed of the collapsed tube when the rollers are intermeshed and when the rollers are not intermeshed the tangential speed of the rollers is slower than the linear speed of the collapsed tube.
In a further embodiment of the present invention, a bag is formed form a collapsed tube of polymeric film. The bag may comprise a first panel and a second panel. The first panel and the second panel may be joined along a first side edge, a second side edge, and a bottom edge. The first side edge may be formed from a first edge of the collapsed tube and the second side edge may be formed from a second edge of the collapsed tube. The first panel may have a first top edge opposite the bottom edge and the second panel may have a second top edge opposite the bottom edge. The first top edge and second top edge may define an opening of the bag. A distal end of both the top edge and second top edge may have a wave-shaped profile and the wave-shaped profile may define a plurality of lobes.
A plurality of ribs may be defined in the plurality of lobes. The plurality of ribs may be generally parallel to each other and each rib may extend from the first side edge towards the second side edge of the bag. Each rib may extend perpendicularly from the first side edge to the second side edge. A closure of the bottom edge may be formed from a seal extending transversely across the entire width of the collapsed tube. The wave-shaped profile may define a profile height and the plurality of ribs may extend below a bottom of the wave-shaped profile approximately one-half length of the profile height. The plurality of ribs may also extend below the bottom of the wave-shaped profile no more than a length of the profile height, or more than a length of the profile height. The plurality of ribs may result from incremental stretching of the polymeric film in the machine direction. The incremental stretching may be due to a pair of intermeshing rollers that intermittently incrementally stretch the collapsed tube. The pair of intermeshing rollers may have at least two rotational speeds. The pair of intermeshing rollers may rotate slower when incrementally stretching the collapsed tube than when not incrementally stretching the collapsed tube.
A full and complete understanding of the present invention may be obtained by reference to the detailed description of the present invention and certain embodiments when viewed with reference to the accompanying drawings. The drawings can be briefly described as follows.
The present disclosure illustrates several embodiments of the present invention. It is not intended to provide an illustration or encompass all embodiments contemplated by the present invention. In view of the disclosure of the present invention contained herein, a person having ordinary skill in the art will recognize that innumerable modifications and insubstantial changes may be incorporated or otherwise included within the present invention without diverging from the spirit of the invention. Therefore, it is understood that the present invention is not limited to those embodiments disclosed herein. The appended claims are intended to more fully and accurately encompass the invention to the fullest extent possible, but it is fully appreciated that certain limitations on the use of particular terms are not intended to conclusively limit the scope of protection.
Referring initially to
The polymeric resin used in the blown film extrusion process may vary. However, for forming polymeric bags, a polyethylene resin is commonly used. In the current state of the art for polymeric bags, a blend of various polyethylene polymers may be used. A polymer blend can have linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) as the primary component, but other polymers may be utilized including, but not limited to, other polyethylene resins such as high-density polyethylene (HDPE) or low-density polyethylene (LDPE). Typically, the primary component of the polymer blend, such as linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE), will comprise at least 75% of the polymer blend. The remaining portion of the polymer blend may include additives including, but not limited to, coloring additives, anti-blocking agents, and/or odor control additives. The film utilized to form polymeric bags may also comprise multiple layers of blown film resin. The resultant multi-layer film may be formed by coextrusion, a lamination process, or other methods of forming a multi-layer film known in the art. In each layer, one or more of the above-discussed polymers may be used.
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The preferred actual size and spacing of each of the plurality of protruding ridges 126 in relation to each of the rollers 122a, 122b is substantially exaggerated for ease of illustration in the figures. In one preferred embodiment, the spacing of the grooves can be 20 grooves per inch about the circumference of each roller 122a, 122b, with each groove leading to a matching thin rib/thick rib extending along the width of the collapsed tube 110. The spacing of the ribs in the film after stretching is greater than the groove spacing of the intermeshing rollers 122a, 122b, since the stretching causes the ribs to spread away from each other. The pattern of thick and thin ribs is represented by a pattern of parallel and adjacent lines in the figures.
Once again examining
Shown in
The rollers of
In one particular example, the incremental stretching operation 120 may be configured such that each incrementally stretched section 116 of the collapsed tube 110 is 15 inches in length after being stretched and each un-stretched section 118 is 85 inches in length. For rollers that rotate at a constant speed, the intermeshing rollers can be configured to stretch the collapsed tube approximately 15 percent such that the protruding ridges would extend about the circumference of each roller approximately 13 inches, stretching a length of 13 inches of the collapsed tube 110, which results in a length of 15 inches after being stretched. The remaining smooth circumference of 85 inches would then be devoid of the protruding ridges, which results in a total circumference of approximately 98 inches and a diameter of approximately 31.2 inches for each roller 122a, 122b.
Unlike rollers that rotate at a constant speed, rollers 122a, 122b configured to run at an oscillating speed could have a smaller circumference and hence a smaller overall size. For instance, when not engaged, the rollers 122a, 122b could rotate with an average tangential speed of 50 percent of the linear speed of the web. The speed of the rollers 122a, 122b would not step down instantly to 50 percent. Thus, the rollers 122a, 122b would first decelerate, then rotate at a speed of less than 50 percent, and then accelerate prior to engaging the collapsed tube 110 again. This arrangement would only require a smooth partial circumference of one-half the previous smooth circumference of approximately 42.5 inches and a 13-inch partial circumference having protruding ridges 126a, 126b for a total circumference of approximately 55.5 inches and a diameter of approximately 17.7 inches for each roller 122a, 122b. It also foreseeable that the rollers could rotate at an average tangential speed of much less than 50 percent when not engaged with the collapsed tube, such as 25 percent.
Decreasing the diameter and hence the overall size of the rollers 122a, 122b offers several advantages. First, the cost to produce the rollers is decreased with rollers of decreased size. In addition, with smaller rollers, the time to manufacture the rollers may also be reduced. Smaller rollers lead to lighter weight rollers, which can lead to a mounting system for the rollers to be proportionally smaller and less expensive to construct. Lighter rollers may also lead to smaller, less expensive motors for driving the rollers. The use of smaller drive motors may also lead to less energy consumption.
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In an alternative embodiment, the above-described incremental stretching operation 120 can be performed on a single layer web of polymeric film. For instance, the collapsed tube 110 may be slit along the first edge 112 so that the tube is open along the first edge 112. The collapsed tube may then be spread out so that the two opposing layers of the collapsed tube 110 lie in the same plane adjacent to each other. The single layer web may then be intermittently incrementally stretched as described above. Once the stretching is complete, the web may be folded so that the two layers of the collapsed tube 110 once again oppose each other. The two layers of film adjacent to the first edge 112 may then be sealed together so that the collapsed tube 100 may still be used to form wave-cut trash bags. Performing the incremental stretching on one layer of film may prevent undesired binding of the two layers of film.
In another alternative embodiment, rather than the incremental stretching operation 120 performed in-line and synchronously, as described above, with the blown film extrusion 102, the incremental stretching 120 can be performed off-line from the blown film extrusion. For instance, once the polymeric bubble 104 is collapsed by the nip rollers 108, the collapsed tube 110 can be rolled onto a master roll. The master roll can then be placed at a lead end of the incremental stretching operation 110 and the collapsed tube can be unrolled from the master roll. The collapsed tube 110 can then be fed into the incremental stretching operation 120.
Returning now to
Once again examining
Once the collapsed tube 110 is folded, it can proceed into a wave-cutter 150. The wave-cutter 150, which may also be referred to as a wave-cutting operation, creates wave-cuts 152. Wave-cuts 152 are wave-shaped perforations, extending across the width of the folded collapsed tube 110a. The wave-cuts 152 can perforate the folded collapsed tube 110a in the shape of a one-half sine wave extending across the width of the folded collapsed tube 110a. In one particular embodiment, the amplitude of the sine wave can be approximately 5 inches but may vary considerably. Due to the collapsed tube 110a being folded twice when each wave-cut 152 is made, when un-folded each wave-cut can have, in general, a shape of two full sine waves extending across the width of the collapsed tube 110.
The location of the wave-cut 152 in relation to the perforation line 144 can be controlled by a timing operation 160. The timing operation 160 can detect the location of each perforation line 144. The timing operation 160 can rely upon a laser beam, infrared light, a spark generator, or another form of an electromagnetic signal to detect each perforation line 144. The detected location of each perforation line 144, along with the fixed position of the timing operation 160 and the collapsed tube 110 traveling at a steady state, can be used to time the incremental stretching operation 120 and wave-cutting operation 150 so that each wave-cut 152 and incrementally stretched section 116 are placed at predetermined locations. The timing operation 160 may be a standalone operation or may be integrated into the bag converter 150.
In at least one preferred embodiment, each wave-cut 152 can be centered by the wave-cutter 150 about a height of an incrementally stretched section 116, in relation to the machine direction. Thus, a distance from a bottom of a wave-cut 152 to a lower boundary of an incrementally stretched section 116, the lower boundary separating an incrementally stretched section 116 from an un-stretched section 118, can be equal to a distance from a top of the wave-cut 152 to an upper boundary of the incrementally stretched section 116, the upper boundary opposite from the lower boundary. Each centered wave-cut 152 and incrementally stretched section 116 can be equidistant from adjacent perforation lines 144. In this preferred embodiment, once the collapsed tube 110 is separated at wave-cuts 152 and perforation lines 144 to form bags 154a, an approximate one-half length of an incrementally stretched section 116 is defined on each bag 154a (in relation to a mid-point or average of the waveform of the wave-cut 152).
In a particular example of this embodiment, the perforation lines 144 can be 100 inches away from each other. Each incrementally stretched section 116 and wave-cut 152 can also be separated from adjacent incrementally stretched sections 116 and wave-cuts 152 by 100 inches. Since the sections 116 and wave-cuts 152 are aligned or centered, a mid-point of each section 116 and wave-cut 152 is located 50 inches away from adjacent perforation lines 144.
Once the collapsed tube is folded and the wave-cuts 152 are placed, the folded collapsed tube 110a may be separated at the perforation lines 144 and wave-cuts 152 into individual bags 154 with each bag having a height of approximately 50 inches. Each bag 154 may then be overlapped with an adjoining bag and rolled into a roll of bags as is known in the art.
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In one particular example of the wave-cut trash bag 154a, a height of the bag from the bag bottom 144a to the upper extent of the bag top 152a may be 50 inches. A width of the bag from the first side edge 112b to the second side edge 114b may be approximately 33 inches. The wave-cut profile height H may be 5 inches with the incrementally stretched portion 158 extending 2.5 inches below the bottom of the wave-cut profile. Thus, the incrementally stretched portion 158 may have a height of approximately 7.5 inches, resulting in the remaining 42.5 inches of bag height un-stretched. The incrementally stretched portion 158 may be stretched approximately 15%. Thus, if the film of the collapsed tube is formed with a thickness of 3 mil, the incrementally stretched portion 158 may have an average thickness of approximately 2.5 mil with the remaining portions of the bag having a thickness of 3 mil.
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In one particular example of the embodiment shown in
The embodiment shown in
As previously noted, the specific embodiments depicted herein are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention. Indeed, it is contemplated that any number of different embodiments may be utilized without diverging from the spirit of the invention. Therefore, the appended claims are intended to more fully encompass the full scope of the present invention.
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