1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the use of coextruded sealing ribs on zipper flanges to enhance the quality of the sealing between the flanges and the walls of a reclosable package. The present invention further relates to placing grip strips on the opposite side of the flanges from the ribs in order to improve the quality of the sealing even further.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Most currently manufactured flexible packaging is constructed from films including polypropylene. However, the application or sealing of reclosable zippers to polypropylene has been problematic at best. In general, polypropylene is minimally compatible with the polyethylene-based sealant materials that are typically found on a reclosable zipper. The resulting bond strengths between the polyethylene flange and the polypropylene film are typically not as strong as can be expected in polyethylene laminate packaging, and the temperatures required to form these weak bonds are very near to the temperatures which induce distortions in the film.
While forming zippers from polypropylene can result in stronger bonding between the zipper flanges and the film, these zippers are typically stiff and less flexible than polyethylene zippers, and therefore not as desirable.
Moreover, in thick film, gusseted, transverse direction package constructions, the zipper is prone to inner flange sealing due to the small sealing window of this zipper film combination. Similarly, when the slider zipper is notched, zipper transport can be problematic as the notches create sections of zipper that are more prone to deformation due to drag or tension transients.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to improve the bonding between polyethylene zipper components, such as flanges, and polypropylene web or film in the field of reclosable packages.
It is therefore a further object of the present invention to improve the stiffness of zippers, particularly notched zippers, in order to improve the reliability of the transport of these zippers.
These and other objects are attained by providing a flanged zipper with coextruded ribs on the sealing surfaces of the flanges. The ribs can be a continuous extrusion with the same material in a thin layer extruded in the space between the ribs, or the ribs can be discrete and separate from each other on the zipper flange. The ribs act as points of pressure concentration that enhance the sealing characteristics of the zipper flange to the film or substrate. Additionally, the addition of extruded grip strips on the zipper flange directly opposite the ribs further enhances the pressure concentration.
This configuration improves the heat transfer to the sealing surface of the zipper flange, improves the stiffness of the zipper flanges and improves the temperature difference between the onset of sealing initiation and the onset of inner flange sealing.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description and from the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Referring now to the drawings in detail wherein like numerals refer to like elements throughout the several views, one sees that
While flanged slider zippers are disclosed, this invention is likewise applicable to other styles of zippers, such as press-to-close or webless.
The exterior surfaces of first and second flanges 20, 22 include ribs 30. Ribs 30 are typically coextruded in the formation of first and second flanges 20, 22 and are formed parallel to each other through the length of flanged zipper 10. The interior surfaces of first and second flanges 20, 22 include grip strips 32, preferably positioned immediately opposite the ribs 30, and likewise formed parallel to each other through the length of zipper 10.
As shown in
Ribs 30 may be formed of any of many different cross sections, including, but not limited to triangles, squares, rectangles and trapezoids.
In
This enhanced sealing due to ribs 30 is particularly beneficial with difficult substrates, such as when the package walls 12, 14 are made from polypropylene.
Improved sealing qualities are also achieved when ribs 30 are made from the same material as the flanges 20, 22 as shown in
The size and spacing of the ribs 30 on zipper 10 has an optimum range of flange coverage in the area that the seal bar touches. Typically, the ribs should cover between fifteen and fifty percent of the flange area that will be under the heat sealing operation. In this way, the effect of pressure over this area is multiplied by the fraction of the surface area covered by the ribs. Typically, if the surface area covered by ribs is less than fifteen percent of the flange area under the sealing operation, there is not enough sealant to create a satisfactory bond to the film. Conversely, typically, if the ribs cover over fifty percent of the flange area under the sealing operation includes ribs, then the effect of pressure concentration is reduced.
The lowering of the seal initiation temperature described above effectively improves the temperature differential between the point that the slider zipper is adhered to the film substrate and the point where the inside surfaces of the zipper flanges will seal to themselves, due to the amount of heat required to attach the zipper to the package walls. The creation of a larger temperature differential on a slider zipper is especially important in transverse bag or package applications with thick films, metallized films, gusseted constructions, and combinations thereof.
Moreover, grip strips 32 opposite ribs 30 on flanges 20, 22 improve the resistance to inner flange sealing as heat transfer is minimized when the grip strips 32 of opposing flanges 12, 14 come into contact with each other. This can be further enhanced by coextruding grip strip 32 with a melting point which is higher than that of the base flange resin.
Additionally, ribs 30 increase the stiffness or modulus of the flanges 20, 22 of flanged zipper 10, aiding in the transport of the flanged zipper 10 during manufacture.
Thus the several aforementioned objects and advantages are most effectively attained. Although preferred embodiments of the invention have been disclosed and described in detail herein, it should be understood that this invention is in no sense limited thereby and its scope is to be determined by that of the appended claims.
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