The invention relates to a process for manufacturing a laminate made up of two film-shaped substrates joined together by an adhesive layer.
Present day laminating technology in the production of packaging is based on individual layers which are applied by means of rolls. On bonding different materials together such as e.g. aluminium and polypropylene it is necessary, with respect to the type of adhesive film used, to find a compromise between the optimum properties to achieve bonding on the aluminium surface and on the polypropylene surface. To achieve bonding with an adhesive therefore, it is necessary to accept a compromise between the optimum formulation for aluminium and polypropylene. Optimum adhesive layers, therefore, often require expensive formulations. If necessary, to obtain optimum bonding an additional primer must be applied, which either requires a separate pass on the machine or an additional station for its application.
For many years now, a liquid film coating process, known under the name of “Curtain Coating”, has been employed for the production of multi-layer photographic films and papers. In this coating process several layers coming from a slit-shaped nozzle form a free-falling curtain and are applied simultaneously to a moving strip of material.
It has also been proposed to use curtain coating technology for coating paper and for manufacturing plastic laminate types of material.
In WO-A-0154828 a process for manufacturing a multi-layer packaging laminate with at least two superimposed layers is made known in which process two or more layers are deposited in a liquid form onto a substrate made of paper, cardboard or plastic film, which may if desired already be coated, and subsequently dried. Thee liquid film coatings are adhesive layers, barrier layers, intermediate layers as spacers, oxygen-scavenger layers and hot-sealing layers.
Known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,845,599 is a liquid coating process which is an alternative to curtain coating and is known by the name “Slide Coating”. In that coating process several layers are simultaneously applied from a nozzle slide surface directly onto a substrate which is passed directly over a run-off edge of the nozzle.
The object of the invention is to provide a process of the kind mentioned at the start by means of which different substrates can be adhesively bonded in a simple and cost favourable manner.
That objective is achieved by way of the invention in that a first substrate is coated, via liquid film coating using curtain coating or slide coating, with a liquid film comprising at least two adhesive layers and subsequently bonded to the second substrate.
Each adhesive layer is functionally optimised for the respective neighbouring substrate.
By the term “functionally optimised” is to be understood that the formulations used to make the adhesives are individually adapted with respect to chemical composition and/or physical properties to suit the substrates bordering the adhesive layers, with the resut that optimum adhesive bonding is achieved between each pair substrate/neighbouring adhesive layer.
Using the process according to the invention it is possible, in a simple manner, to coat two substrates that have different surface properties with adhesives each of which provides optimum adhesion for the specific substrate.
The adhesive formulations which are optimised with respect to a specific substrate are often expensive products. Preferably therefore, use is made of a liquid film which features two adhesive layers and an intermediate layer situated between the adhesive layers, whereby the thickness of the adhesive layer is less than the thickness of the intermediate layer. The thickness of the adhesive layers is usefully about 1 to 30%, preferably 1 to 10% of the thickness of the intermediate layer.
The intermediate layer comprises preferably of a cost favourable material such as e.g. a urethane based adhesive, in particular a standard urethane adhesive such as e.g. aromatic or aliphatic isocyanates.
The adhesive layers may e.g. be of plastics that are urethane based e.g. polyether, polyester, or polybutadienpolyolemers, acrylic or epoxy based or combinations of these adhesives.
The layers of liquid film may be solvent-based, solvent-free or water-based. Solvent-free coating fluids are preferred as with these the normal drying step is omitted.
Substrate materials that may be employed are plastic films such as e.g. polyethylene-terephthalate (PET), polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyamide (PA), metal foils such as e.g. aluminium foils, if desired coated with a barrier layer e.g. of SiOx, paper or a combination of at least two of the above materials.
Further advantages, features and details of the invention are revealed in the following description of preferred exemplified embodiments and with the aid of the drawing which shows schematically in
A nozzle arrangement 10 of a sliding-face coating facility—not shown in detail here—for liquid film coating using the curtain coating method shown in
The coating fluids 34, 36, 38 emerging from the distribution chambers 20, 22, 24 via the outlet slits 28, 30, 32 forming layers of superimposed fluids 34, 36, 38 run as three-layer liquid film over a run-off edge 40 on module 12 and form a free-falling curtain 42.
The three-layer curtain 42 made up of the coating fluids 34, 36, 38 meet essentially in a perpendicular manner a first substrate strip 44 moving in the direction x and forms the fluid coating on its surface as shown in
A second substrate strip 46 is fed in direction x to the first substrate 44 coated with the coating fluids 34, 36, 38, and bonded to the coated first strip 44 to form a laminate 48 shown in
Using the process shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
05405524.9 | Sep 2005 | EP | regional |