The present invention relates in general to packaging of consumer products, and in particular to traceability of Packaged Consumer Products, specifically perishable products such as pourable food products, to which the following description specifically refers purely by way of example.
As is known, on a factory floor of a food packaging plant, several specifically-aimed processes are generally performed, including incoming food and packaging material storage, food processing, food packaging, and package warehousing. With specific reference to pourable food products, food packaging is performed in Packaging Lines, each of which is an assembly of machines and equipments for the production and handling of packages, and includes a Filling Machine for the production of the packages, followed by one or more defined configurations of downstream Distribution Equipments such as, accumulators, straw applicators, film wrappers, and cardboard packers, connected to the Filling Machine via Conveyors, for the handling of the packages.
A typical example of this type of packages is the parallelepiped-shaped package for liquid or pourable food products known as Tetra Brik Aseptic®, which is made by folding and sealing a laminated web of packaging material.
The packaging material has a multilayer sheet structure substantially comprising one or more stiffening and strengthening base layers typically made of a fibrous material, e.g. paper, or mineral-filled polypropylene material, covered on both sides with a number of heat-seal plastic material layers, e.g. polyethylene film. In the case of aseptic packages for long-storage products, such as UHT milk, the packaging material also comprises a gas- and light-barrier material layer, e.g. aluminium foil or ethyl vinyl alcohol (EVOH) film, which is superimposed on a heat-seal plastic material layer, and is in turn covered with another heat-seal plastic material layer forming the inner face of the package eventually contacting the food product.
Packages of this sort are produced on fully automatic Filling Machines, wherein a continuous vertical tube is formed from the web-fed packaging material; which is sterilized by applying a chemical sterilizing agent such as a hydrogen peroxide solution, which, once sterilization is completed, is removed, e.g. evaporated by heating, from the surfaces of the packaging material; and the sterilized web is maintained in a closed, sterile environment, and is folded and sealed longitudinally to form the vertical tube. The tube is then filled downwards with the sterilized or sterile-processed pourable food product, and is fed along a vertical path to a forming station, where it is gripped along equally spaced cross sections by two pairs of jaws, which act cyclically and successively on the tube, and seal the packaging material of tube to form a continuous strip of pillow packs connected to one another by transverse sealing strips. Pillow packs are separated from one another by cutting the relative sealing strips, and are conveyed to a final folding station where they are folded mechanically into the finished, e.g. substantially parallelepiped-shaped, packages.
Alternatively, the packaging material may be cut into blanks, which are formed into packages on forming spindles, and the packages are filled with food product and sealed. One example of this type of package is the so-called “gable-top” package known as Tetra Rex®.
Previous-generation Packaging Lines generally have a decentralized control, poor or even no configuration flexibility, and different communication channels and automation solutions and hardware, and generally require customization of the line automation software in the Filling Machine and each Distribution Equipment.
Therefore, the automation and control systems for the previous-generation Packaging Lines could not provide the flexibility and functionality features required to satisfy the ever-increasing market demand for food safety and traceability, and for higher production versatility. However, despite their age, many legacy automation and control systems continue to provide valuable functionality that warrants their upgrade, and hence represent a huge capital investment that production management wants to prolong.
In view of that, an ever-increasing need was hence felt for a packaging plant automation evolution, in particular for new generation Packaging Lines featuring integrated solutions such as centralized and robust automation control, increased configuration flexibility, same communication channels and automation solutions and hardware, and no need for customization of the line automation software in the Filling Machines and Distribution Equipments.
New generation Packaging Lines allow new valuable functionalities to be easily implemented, which were hardly implementable or even impossible to be implemented in the last generation Packaging Lines. One of these new valuable functionalities, conceivably one of the most important ones, is package traceability, which allows allegedly or effectively defective packaged consumer products to be timely withdrawn/recalled from the market.
A reliable package traceability would require marking each packaged consumer product and each pack of packaged consumer products with associated unique identifiers each time an operation to be traced is carried out on the packaged consumer products or packs of packaged consumer products, and then logging the marked identifiers in a repository for later querying.
However, this approach is computational resource demanding and hence may prove to be hardly practicable in Packaging Systems with high package production rates.
Therefore, a solution that allows an industrially acceptable trade-off to be achieved between traceability reliability, on the one hand, and computational resource demand on the other hand has been investigated.
The objective of present invention is hence to provide a traceability solution which allows this need to be met.
This objective is achieved by the present invention in that it relates to a Packaging System, as defined in the appended claims.
The following description is provided to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use the invention. Various modifications to the embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, without departing from the scope of the present invention as claimed. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein and defined in the appended claims.
The Packaging System is of the type described in WO 2009/083594, WO 2009/083595, WO 2009/083597 and WO 2009/083598, all in the name of the Applicant and the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference, and includes one or more Packaging Lines, only one of which is shown in
A Packaging Line includes:
The Packaging System further includes:
The Packaging System may be of the Single-Line type, namely including only one Packaging Line, of the Multi-Line type, namely including a plurality of operatively stand-alone Packaging Lines, i.e., Packaging Lines which do not share Distribution Equipments, each provided with an associated Line Controller, or of the Multi-Switch type, namely with a plurality of operatively cooperating Packaging Lines, i.e., Packaging Lines arranged to share one or more Distribution Equipments, so increasing the flexibility and the production variability for the customer. In a Multi-Switch Packaging System, either a single-tier or a two-tier control architecture may be provided. In a single-tier control architecture, only a single, common Line Controller is provided, which is programmed to manage configuration, communication and control of all the Packaging Lines with the aim of optimizing the interaction between the Filling Machines and the Distribution Equipments to improve the Multi-Switch Packaging System performance and product transportation during production, while in a two-tier control architecture, both a slave Line Controller for each Packaging Line and a master Line Controller for the slave Line Controllers are provided.
A Line Controller includes a stand-alone console or cabinet equipped with a Human-Machine Interface made up of a display panel and a keyboard, and a PLC-based control system designed to store and execute modular-architecture software applications or tools configured to cooperate with the local software modules in the Filling Machine and the Distribution Equipments via a standard communication to control and supervise operation of the associated Packaging Line.
The modular-architecture software and the standard interface allow different Packaging Line complexities (different layout and variety of Filling Machines and Distribution Equipments) to be managed without any customization in the software of the single equipment. Compared to the previous generation of Packaging Lines, this allows a standard software in the Filling Machines and Distribution Equipments to be maintained and all the customized parameters to be collected in the Line Controller. The advantage of that is a high level of standardization in the Filling Machines and Distribution Equipments and hence an easy maintenance of them. For the purpose of the present invention, by the expression “software applications” it is intended a defined subclass of computer software that employs the capabilities of a computer directly to a task that the user wishes to perform.
In the end, the Packaging System further includes a Packaging Line Monitoring System designed to cooperate with the Line Controller(s) and, through the Communication Network(s), directly with Filling Machine(s) and Distribution Equipment(s) in the Packaging Line(s), to measure, analyze, and optimize the operational performance of each Packaging Line. In particular, in a Multi-Switch Packaging System with a single-tier control architecture, the Packaging Line Monitoring System is programmed to cooperate with the common Line Controller, while in a Multi-Switch Packaging System with a two-tier control architecture the Packaging Line Monitoring System is programmed to cooperate either with the master Line Controller, or with the slave Line Controllers, or with both the master Line Controller and the slave Line Controllers.
The Packaging Line Monitoring System is a data management system designed to monitor operational performance of the Filling Machine(s) and Distribution Equipments in the Packaging Line(s), and to maximise operational equipment performance based on plant floor data. The Packaging Line Monitoring System also provides powerful and easy-to-use tools to analyze operational equipment performance and process behaviour. Operational performance data are automatically captured and logged at the Packaging Line(s). Local manual input interaction makes data comprehensive. Information distribution to the factory office level allows real-time supervision and historical analysis. The Packaging Line Monitoring System allows optimum results to be achieved through the timely identification of downtime issues. The analysis of the production performance details identifies the critical performing equipment, and charts and reports are the tools to identify highest downtime reasons.
Another one of the main functionalities of the Packaging Line Monitoring System is package traceability and process monitoring. Through a Graphical User Interface, one or more Operator Sheets may be provided which are the electronic replacement of the production paper handwritten documents. Data can be entered on operator demand or automatically requested by the system based on equipment events. Data entry is possible through manual input or using a barcode scanner. Data logged in the Operator Sheet(s) may for example be operator production checks, material used by the Packaging Line(s), such as packaging material, strips, caps, straws, etc., special production events such as production batch ID, production batch start and stop, etc., operator IDs, locally-defined custom events, etc. Based on the data logged at the Filling Machine(s), the Packaging Line Monitoring System carries out a performance analysis and provides Operator Sheet Report(s). This allows monitoring of process parameters and critical control points during production. Process monitoring gives the possibility to execute advanced troubleshooting on machine process variables.
The Packaging Line Monitoring System is also configured to allow package traceability to be time synchronized. In particular, data logging time is synchronized with a central time synchronization system, and the dating unit clock is synchronized locally by the Packaging Line Monitoring System data logging system clock.
Package traceability is obtained by implementing in the Packaging Line Monitoring System a Package Tracing Algorithm described hereinafter with reference to
As a matter of language convenience, in the following description the term “Primary Package” will be used to indicate a Packaged Consumer Product outputted by a Filling Machine, while the term “Secondary Package” will be used to indicate any pack of Packaged Consumer Products, such as individual pallets of Packaged Consumer Products outputted by a Palletizer and/or individual trays of Packaged Consumer Products.
The Package Tracing Algorithm is aimed at allowing Secondary Packages containing Primary Packages which prove to be or are allegedly defective to be timely identified and withdrawn from the market, with a reduced tolerance. When Secondary Packages are Pallet of Primary Packages, this tolerance may be very low, in the order of ±1 Pallet.
In particular, the Package Tracing Algorithm is based on the following assumptions, which allow Primary Packages to be reliably traced as described hereinafter with a reduced computational resource demand:
The Package Tracing Algorithm is inputted with the following data:
The Package Tracing Algorithm includes the following steps described hereinafter.
The first step of the Package Tracing Algorithm is computing, for each Secondary Package produced during a Production Batch, a Primary Package Sequence Number for the first Primary Package in the Secondary Package and a Primary Package Sequence Number for the last Primary Package in the Secondary Package, wherein a Primary Package Sequence Number represents the sequential, time-ascending order number of a Primary Package in the Production Batch, is initialized to 1 at the beginning of any new Production Batch and is increased by one unit each time a Primary Package is produced.
In particular, the Primary Package Sequence Numbers for the first and the last Primary Packages in a Secondary Package are computed using the following formulas:
wherein:
PPSN is a Primary Package Sequence Number;
FP is a Secondary Package Sequence Number, which represents the sequential, time-ascending order number of the Secondary Package in question in the Production Batch, is initialized to 1 at the beginning of any new Production Batch and is increased by one unit each time a Secondary Package is produced;
i is a Secondary Package Sequence Index, which indexes the Secondary Packages in a Production Batch; and
PPISPi is the number of Primary Packages in a Secondary Package with Secondary Package Sequence Index equal to i.
The second step of the Package Tracing Algorithm is computing, for each Secondary Package produced during a Production Batch, a Primary Package Production Time for the first Primary Package in the Secondary Package and a Primary Package Production Time for the last Primary Package in the Secondary Package, based on the corresponding Primary Package Sequence Numbers, wherein a Primary Package Production Time represents the time when a Primary Package is produced from the beginning of the Production Batch.
In particular, Primary Package Production Times for both the first and the last Primary Packages in a Secondary Package are computed based on the following formulas, which relate Primary Package Production Times and Primary Package Sequence Numbers:
wherein:
PPSN is a Primary Package Sequence Number;
PPPT is a Primary Package Production Time;
BST is a Production Batch Start Time; and
FSM(t) represents the development over time of the Production Speed, expressed in number of packages produced per time unit, of the Filling Machine during a Production Batch.
For a Filling Machine with a Production Speed which develops over time as depicted in
where:
ACCNP is the number of Primary Packages produced from the beginning of a Production Batch to the end of a Time Section,
TSSN is a Time Section Sequence Number, which represents a sequential, time-ascending order number of the Time Section in the sequence of Time Sections and is initialized to 1 at the beginning of a Production Batch, and
NPi is the number of Primary Packages produced during Time Section with Time Section Sequence Number equal to i, wherein NPi=S·Di, where S is the Filling Machine Speed, expressed in Primary Packages per second, during the Time Section, and Di is the Time Section Duration, expressed in seconds.
Once the number of Primary Packages produced from the beginning of a Production Batch to the end of a Time Section has been computed, the first Time Section in the sequence of Time Sections that satisfies the following relation is identified:
ACCNP≧PPSN
Based on the Filling Machine Speed in the identified Time Section, the Primary Package Production Times PPPT are computed based using the following formula:
where AT is the start time, expressed in date and time, of the identified Time Section.
The third and last step of the Package Tracing Algorithm is storing in a repository of the Packaging Line Monitoring System, Primary Package Production Times for both the first and the last Primary Packages in the Secondary Packages produced during a Production Batch, along with associated Secondary Package Identifiers.
The repository may be queried at any time to fetch out Identifiers of Secondary Packages, in particular pallets, containing Primary Packages which prove to be or are allegedly defective, based on the Production Times or some other time-related Marking or Batch/Lot Identifiers marked on the Primary Packages.
The above-described Package Tracing Algorithm allows Packaged Consumer Products to be reliably traced with a reduced computational resource demand and tolerance.
The Package Tracing Algorithm may be further improved by taking also into account package waste during a Production Batch, and this could be implemented via an automatic data collection or a manual data entry.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10197228.9 | Dec 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP11/71861 | 12/6/2011 | WO | 00 | 5/21/2013 |