pdf 2.5 MB Biaxially Oriented BOPP Barrier Films with thin EVOH
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pdf 2.5 MB Biaxially Oriented BOPP Barrier Films with thin EVOH
Biaxially Oriented BOPP Barrier Films with thin EVOH Layers Brückner Maschinenbau GmbH, Siegsdorf, Germany Dr. J. Breil, R. Lund, Dr. M. Wolf European Metallizers Association, 9th+10th of March, 2006 Overview: Introduction Simultaneous biaxial orientation of different EVOH grades LISIM Principle LISIM Laboratory Line: High flexibility in choice of base materials and machine settings Results and Summary Possible Applications: Research Project „Thin Films“, cost comparisons Path forward and Conclusion © Brückner Introduction: High-Barrier-Materials Worldwide (in 1000 mt/ a) Material 2000 2004 AGR 2008 AGR PVDC Film 151 160 1,5% 164 0,6% Metallized Film 115 152 7,2% 205 7,8% EVOH Film 26 37 9,2% 55 10,4% Glass coated film 10 16 12,5% 34 20,7% PVOH 1 1 0,0% 2 10,7% PAA coated Film <1 1 Na 13 89,9% 60% of film consumption is transparent films, 40% is metallised Only 5.3% of the total EVOH film consumption is oriented films Source: Allied Development Corporation © Brückner Transparent bioriented OTR Barrier Films –Types and Advantages Transparent biaxially oriented barrier films: •Coated bioriented BOPP/ BOPET/ BOPA films: SiOx, AlOx, PVDC, Acrylics, EVOH a.o. •PVDC barrier films, mainly blown film •EVOH barrier films, mainly blown film and double bubble films (Exception e.g. Exxon Mobil Films), coated films Advantages against e.g. metallized or non oriented films: - Microwaveability Product visibility Design potentials Deep drawability Improved mechanical and optical properties Thinner EVOH-layers © Brückner B O B PE A B 5 /7 /3 0 50 /5 0 12 / 12 12 PE E x/ /P io E 0 /5 0 /5 r2 12 ri e E ar /P 12 0 /2 0 C 25 12 /5 20 0 26 /5 D E PV PE H ox /P lu -S T/ PA Si S- Tm x/ VO lo M PE T- O PE O O B B B A -E p T/ op PE B O x/ PE io B /P C 15 0 /5 0 20 /5 12 VD E C /P /P VD PP PA /P O T- T/ -S PE PE PP O O O B B B B O E PE /P T/ m PE PP B O O PE B B WVTR [g/m²] OTR [cm³/cm²xdxbar] Comparison of different Barrier Films 100 OTR WVTR 10 1 0,1 0,01 © Brückner Packaging Requirements for Barrier Films Packaging Good OTR [cm3/ m2 d bar] WVTR [g/ m2 d] Peanuts, snacks 0,7-10 2-8 Baby food 0,1-0,8 0,7-3 Instant coffee 0,2-2 0,7-3 Vacuum coffee 0,2-3 0,8-5 Meat/ MAP 2-20 10-50 10.000-200.000 10-3.000 Fresh Meat b 20-40 2-4 Fresh Meat c 1-3 2-4 Fresh spec. cheese 7-11 300-700 30-4.000 600-3.000 Fruits, vegetables, salad Fresh Bakery Products © Brückner Simultaneous biaxial orientation of different EVOH grades Source: © Brückner Fundamental Issues: Crystallisation behaviour of EVOH Property overlap ●Crystallisation temperature overlaps the optimum orientation temperature range of other polymers Sequential orientation ●Sequentiell orientation of EVOH is difficult due to the orientation crystallisation and formation of microfibril structure Simultaneous orientation ●Simultaneous orientation at low stretching temperatures and/ or high stretching speeds subdues crystallization © Brückner Processes for the production of biaxially oriented films Sequential Stretching MDO - TDO Simultaneous Stretching Pentagraph, Spindle, LISIM Double-Bubble © Brückner LISIM® Principle Linearmotor Simultaneous Stretching technology Clips Linear motors Simultaneous stretched film Cast-film © Brückner Comparison Sequential / Simultaneous Simultaneous Stretching Sequential Stretching TD 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 MD Useful area MDO TDO 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 MD TD Useful area LISIM® Simultaneous stretch. technology © Brückner Comparison of mechanical film properties: Sequential / Simultaneous LISIM® Sequential Stretching ratio (MD x TD) Tensilestrength [N/mm²] Elongation at break [%] E-modulus [N/mm²] 5x9 8x8 10 x 5 MD 140 258 310 TD 290 252 208 MD 200 78 52 TD 55 82 110 MD 2000 3060 4070 TD 3500 3130 2685 © Brückner LISIM® Pilotline © Brückner LISIM® pilot line for simultaneous stretching Film types PET PP PA 1 –150 3 –60 5 –25 Stretching ratio MD 3 –6 6 –10 3 –5 Stretching ratio TD 3 –5 5 –10 3 –5 [m/min] 150 150 50 [kg/h] 250 200 70 Thickness range Speed (max.) Net output Winder (max.) [ µm ] LISIM® stretching oven IRpreheating Chill-roll Extrusion © Brückner Laboratory Stretching Frame Low amounts of material needed Comparison of materials or mixtures Data for upscaling experiments mode: simultan bei 155°C 7,5x7,5; 400%/s 35,00 E27_S 30,00 E32_S Force [N] 25,00 E38_S 20,00 E44_S 15,00 E47_S 10,00 E44_N 5,00 E32_N 0,00 1 2 3 4 5 TD-Stretching Ratio [-] 6 7 8 © Brückner Upscaling Process Production-Line Method Evaluation of Process Window Optimisation of Film Properties Measurement of Stretching Forces Simulation with FEM-Method Pilot-Line Upscaling to production scale Lab-Stretching Unit Advantages Demonstration of the LISIM® - Technology potential Basic R & D for film stretching Development of new film types Development of new components Production of Sample Rolls for Pre-Marketing © Brückner 7-layer BOPP/ EVOH barrier film (Ethylene content 27%) Cross section of the stretched film: Total © Brückner 7-Layer Film with EVOH ( Ethylen-Content 27% ) Comparison Simultaneous/Sequential sequential 5x5 simultaneous 5x5 Improved orientation through suppression of crystallisation behaviour © Brückner 7-Layer Barrier Film Influence of EVOH-ethylene-content on OTR-Values 4,5 OTR 23°C@75%RH [cm³x20µm/m²xdxbar] 4 3,5 Stretching Ratio MDXTD=7x7 Stretching Temperature=160°C Stretching Speed= 400%/s 3 2,5 2 1,5 1 0,5 0 25 30 35 40 45 50 Ethylene content [%] © Brückner Influence of OTR on relative humidity for BOPP based films EVOH-thickness 1,5 µm 30 OTR [cm³/m²xdxbar] 27% SiOx 25 PVDC 20 15 10 5 0 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 Relative Humidity [%] 90 95 100 © Brückner Influence of the temperature on the OTR OTR[cm³x25µm/m²xdxbar] 45 40 EVOH 30% 35 PVDC 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 20 40 60 Temperature [°C] © Brückner Comparision with Customary Barrier Films Commercial 1 Commercial 2 7-Layer PVDC coated PVOH coated (EVOH 27 % PE) [µm] 26 25 29 [] 98 90 91 [%] 1,6 1,1 1,6 Shrink MD (120 °C, 5 min) [%] 3 3 4 Shrink TD (120 °C, 5 min) [%] 2,5 2,5 2 Young‘ s Modulus MD [N/mm²] 2200 2200 2526 Young‘ s Modulus TD [N/mm²] 3500 3500 1807 Tensile Strength MD [N/mm²] 135 135 211 Tensile Strength TD [N/mm²] 275 275 160 [µs] 0,25 0,25 0,15 20 3 1,4 4,2 5 4,5 Thickness Gloss Haze Coefficient of Friction OTR [cm³/m²dbar] (23°C / 75% RH) WVTR [g/m²d] (38°C / 90% RH) © Brückner 7-Layer High Barrier s-BOPP Cost Calculation in €/kg 4 Production Costs 3,5 Material Costs €/kg 3 2,5 2 1,5 1 0,5 Market Price 0,52 3,5 1,48 0 © Brückner Barrier Shrinkfilm Barrier properties: OTR: 3.5 cm³/m² d bar (23°C / 75% r.h.) (before shrinkage) WVTR: 11 g/m²d (38°C / 90% r.h.) 60 BMS-Barriershrink MD Shrink [%] 50 BMS-Barriershrink TD 40 30 20 10 0 80 90 100 110 120 Shrink temperature [°C] 130 140 © Brückner Structure of a density reduced, opaque, barrier BOPP film Simultaneous biaxial orientation Terpolymer Homopolymer, CaCo3 1,1 µm 12,7 µm Adhesive Layer 0,5 µm EVOH 1,4 µm Adhesive Layer 0,5 µm Homopolymer, CaCo3 12,7 µm Terpolymer 1,1 µm Gauge: 30 µm Density: 0,78 g/ cm3 OTR: 1,2 cm3/ m2 d bar 23°C/50% r.h. WVTR: 1,2 g/ m2 d 23°C/0 - 85% r.h. © Brückner Summary of the EVOH biaxial orienting tests: Sequential stretching is possible at higher Ethylene content of 44% Simultaneous stretching possible with all types, even with only 24% ethylene content High stretching speeds and/ or low stretching temperatures suppress crystallization and thus „net structure“, good optics Low OTR values High flexibility due to choice of base material and machine adjustments: ●Shrink barrier films ●Density reduced films © Brückner WVTR [g/ m2 d] (25°C/ 100% r.h.) Barrier values for different film systems BMS(1.5µm) PET metallized PP-O metallized Steel Aluminium Glass OTR [cm3/ m2 d bar] (25°C/ 50% r.h.) Source: Alcan Packaging Homepage © Brückner Comparison of different BOPP barrier film systems Metallized AlOx SiOx EVOH EVOH transp. opaque PVDC OTR + + + ++ ++ + WVTR ++ + ++ o o o Aroma ++ + ++ ++ + ++ UV- ++ - 0 - + 0 ++ - - - + - + + ++ Protection VIS Light Protection Colour Index + Flex-Crack -- -- - + + Retortability -- ++ ++ - - ++ + o - -- + © Brückner Possible Applications: Research Project „ Thin Films“ Project coordination Database Simulation End user Filmproduction simultaneous sequential Metallization SiOx Lamination Print Adhesive Packaging Packaging properties e.g. haptics © Brückner Definition of the targets To demonstrate with selected film systems along the entire added value chain up to the final application, that a 50% reduction in material is possible without significant limitations of the technical functionality © Brückner Motivations for Material Reductions Why should there be a further material reduction in film packaging systems? Cost savings and packaging law: Cost savings for a 50% reduction in thickness: Up to 17% (Calculation IVV). Climbing raw material costs increase the share of the raw material on total production costs and therefore enforce higher yields The German Regulation of Packaging as well as the European packaging directive 2004/12/EG make avoidance and material reduction a priority. Demonstration of conformity with the European packaging directive according to DIN EN 13 427 ff. Reduction of material input at retained functionality is in this norm an explicitly termed criteria. Source: © Brückner Example for substituted film laminates, cost comparison: Possible application: Peanuts BOPET,12µm, Reversed Print Transparent barrier, 27% E Lamination Lamination BOPET, 12µm, metal. Lamination PE-LD, 50µm Actual Standard Thin sealing film, 30 µm Future Potentials Material PET 12µm //BOPETmet 12µm // 7-Layer EVOH 20µm // BOPP PE-LD 50µm 17µm / PE-LLD 13µm Process Sequential LISIM® Gauge 76 µm 51 µm Remark Triplex Compound 2 Lamination steps Duplex Compound 1 Lamination Steps Packaging costs 212 €/ 1000 m2 147 €/ 1000 m2 Packaging cost reduction of ~ 28-32 % possible ! © Brückner Additional cost reduction possibilities: „Integrated production process“: 1-step simultaneous biaxial oriented PP/ EVOH/ PE Terpolymer Homopolymer 1 µm 10,5 µm Adhesive Layer 0,5 µm EVOH 1,5 µm Adhesive Layer 0,5 µm Homopolymer 10,5 µm PE 30 µm Gauge: 55 µm © Brückner Example for substituted film laminates: Possible application: Peanuts BOPET,12µm, Reversed Print Filmtyp without Lamination Lamination BOPET, 12µm, metal. Lamination PE-LD, 50µm Actual Standard Future Potentials Material BOPET 12µm //BOPETmet 12µm // PE-LD 50µm 7-Layer 20 µm / PE-LLD 30µm Process Sequential LISIM® Dicke 76 µm 55 µm Remark Triplex Compound 2 Laminating Steps 1 Step Process Packaging costs 212 €/ 1000 m2 118 €/ 1000 m2 Packaging cost reduction of ~ 40-45 % possible ! © Brückner Path Forward and Conclusion Sample production for converting and packaging trials, discussions with film converters and end users Optimization of properties, e.g. shrink, mechanical properties and tests of further raw materials e. g. UV-Stabilizer or O2-scavengers Replacement of PVOH and/or PVDC coated films (cost 4 Euro kg) Possible application as shrink film (shrink 40% at 120°C@5 min) Replacement of film laminates (PA/ PE, PET/ PE) Penetration in the domain of metallized films (better flex crack resistance, less leakage, opaque films) © Brückner Thank you very much for your attention! © Brückner