Biopolymer coating for compostable paperboard packaging
10655277 ยท 2020-05-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Rahul BHARDWAJ (Glen Allen, VA, US)
- Chitai C. Yang (Mechanicsville, VA, US)
- Chester E. Alkiewicz (Glen Allen, VA, US)
Cpc classification
D21H19/56
TEXTILES; PAPER
B65D65/466
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2264/104
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D65/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
D21H27/18
TEXTILES; PAPER
B32B27/308
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2250/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29B7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
D21H19/62
TEXTILES; PAPER
D21H19/56
TEXTILES; PAPER
B65D65/46
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
D21H27/18
TEXTILES; PAPER
Abstract
A coating for paperboard includes polylactic acid and an inorganic material. The inorganic material may be talc. The presence of the talc has a beneficial effect on extrusion processing behavior including lower melt temperature, lower head pressure, and lower motor load. Additionally, the presence of talc reduces edge weave and neck-in during extrusion coating processes.
Claims
1. A paperboard structure comprising: a paperboard substrate having a first surface and an opposed second surface; and a heat sealable biopolymer coating applied by extrusion or co-extrusion to at least one of the first and second surfaces; wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating comprises an inorganic melt curtain stabilizer, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating optionally further comprises an adhesion-promoting polymer, and wherein the thickness of the heat sealable biopolymer coating is from 0.00025 to 0.005 inches.
2. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the melt curtain stabilizer comprises at least one of calcium carbonate, talc, mica, diatomaceous earth, silica, clay, kaolin, wollastonite, pumice, zeolite, and ceramic spheres.
3. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating comprises a biodegradable polymer.
4. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating comprises a biodegradable polyester.
5. The paperboard structure of claim 4, wherein the biodegradable polyester comprises polylactic acid.
6. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer comprises the adhesion-promoting polymer, and wherein the adhesion-promoting polymer comprises at least one of aliphatic-aromatic copolyester polybutylene succinate, polyhydroxyalkanoate, aliphatic-polyester, aliphatic-aromatic polyester, acrylic polymer, elastomer, and plasticizer.
7. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating is one of a monolayer blend and a co-extruded multilayer blend.
8. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the melt curtain stabilizer is from 1% to 25% by weight of the heat sealable biopolymer coating.
9. The paperboard structure of claim 8, wherein the melt curtain stabilizer is from 2% to 18% by weight of the heat sealable biopolymer coating.
10. The paperboard structure of claim 9, wherein the melt curtain stabilizer is from 4% to 12% by weight of the heat sealable biopolymer coating.
11. The paperboard structure of claim 1, having a polymer to paper heat seal with at least 10% fiber tear when sealed with a heat seal bar temperature of 325 F. under a 60 psi seal pressure at a 1.5 sec dwell time.
12. The paperboard structure of claim 1, having a polymer to paper heat seal with at least 40% fiber tear when sealed with a heat seal bar temperature of 350 F. under 60 psi seal pressure at a 1.5 sec dwell time.
13. The paperboard structure of claim 1, having a polymer to paper heat seal with at least 70% fiber tear when sealed with a heat seal bar temperature of 375 F. under 60 psi seal pressure at a 1.5 sec dwell time.
14. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the paperboard structure meets the requirements of ASTM D6868-11 Standard Specification for compostability.
15. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the thickness of the heat sealable biopolymer coating is from 0.00033 to 0.0025 inches.
16. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the thickness of the heat sealable biopolymer coating is from 0.0005 to 0.0015 inches.
17. The paperboard structure of claim 1, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating comprises both the inorganic melt curtain stabilizer and the adhesion-promoting polymer.
18. A paperboard structure comprising: a paperboard substrate having a first surface and an opposed second surface; and a heat sealable biopolymer coating applied by extrusion or co-extrusion to at least one of the first and second surfaces; wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating is comprised of polylactic acid, an adhesion-promoting polymer, and an inorganic melt curtain stabilizer, wherein the inorganic melt curtain stabilizer is from 2% to 12% by weight of the heat sealable biopolymer coating, and wherein the thickness of the heat sealable biopolymer coating is from 0.00025 to 0.005 inches.
19. The paperboard structure of claim 18, wherein the inorganic melt curtain stabilizer comprises at least one of calcium carbonate, talc, mica, diatomaceous earth, silica, clay, kaolin, wollastonite, pumice, zeolite, and ceramic spheres.
20. The paperboard structure of claim 18, wherein the heat sealable biopolymer coating is one of a monolayer blend and a co-extruded multilayer blend.
21. The paperboard structure of claim 18, wherein the adhesion-promoting polymer comprises at least one of aliphatic-aromatic copolyester, polybutylene succinate, polyhydroxyalkanoate, aliphatic-polyester, aliphatic-aromatic polyester, acrylic polymer, elastomer, and plasticizer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Exemplary embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(10) Detailed descriptions of specific embodiments of the packaging material are disclosed herein. It will be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely examples of the way in which certain aspects of the invention can be implemented and do not represent an exhaustive list of all of the ways the invention may be embodied. As used herein, the word exemplary is used expansively to refer to embodiments that serve as illustrations, specimens, models, or patterns. Indeed, it will be understood that the packaging materials described herein may be embodied in various and alternative forms. Any specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the invention.
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(12) The thicknesses shown in
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(15) It is often desired to have a paperboard that is compostable. The inventive paperboard here may be compostable. The ASTM D6868-11 Standard Specification for compostability of paper or paperboard requires any non-biodegradable organic constituent to be <1% of the dry weight of the finished product, and the total portion of organic constituents that are not biodegradable cannot exceed 5% of the total weight.
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(17) Coating 124 is not meant to be limited to PLA, but may include other biopolymers, biodegradable polymers, and compostable polymers. Coating 124 may be up to 98% bio-based polymer. Whether a polymer is bio-based can be determined by the ASTM D6866 Test Method that measures bio-based carbon content by the Carbon-14 dating technique.
(18) The coating 124 may be applied, for example by extrusion coating onto paperboard 110. Coating 124 may also be referred to herein as Coating G2. Coating 124 may be applied, for example by extrusion coating onto paperboard 110 on one or both sides. Good results were obtained with 70% polylactic acid (PLA), 15% adhesion promoter, and 15% of the PLA-talc master batch (MB). Thus with the master batch containing 40% talc, the coating 124 may contain about 6% talc. Good results were also obtained with 65% polylactic acid (PLA), 10% adhesion promoter, and 25% of the PLA-talc master batch (about 10% talc in the coating).
(19) The coating may also be applied as a co-extrusion coating. For example,
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(22) The curtain 350 as it leaves the extruder die 362 may have an initial width w1 but may neck down to a lesser width w2 as it is applied to the substrate 110. The neck-down calculated as a percentage is equal to 100%*(w1w2)/w1.
(23) Another processing defect that sometimes occurs and causes waste material is edge weave, where the edges of the curtain of polymer 350 waver sideways. This wavering of the curtain is exhibited by wavy edges of the coated portion 305 on the paperboard 110. With non-uniform coverage at the edges, more of the sides of the substrate need to be trimmed as waste. In
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(28) At a heat seal bar temperature of 325 F, there is no fiber tear with the modified PLA coating, while 10% fiber tear is exhibited with the PLA/adhesion promoter/talc coating. At heat seal bar temperatures of 350 F and higher, the fiber tear area is more than 40% for the PLA/adhesion promoter/talc coating.
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(30) Table 1 compares processing characteristics of the 100% PLA (structure 100) with a modified PLA (structure 102; PLA G1) and the blend of PLA/adhesion promoter/talc (structure 104; PLA G2). The PLA G2 with talc and adhesion promoter has improved processing conditions insofar as the melt temperature, extruder head pressure, and motor load are all reduced compared with either unmodified PLA or modified PLA. Relative to unmodified PLA, the PLA G2 neck-in and peel force are also improved. The PLA G2 neck-in and peel force are not quite as good as for modified PLA; however as seen above the PLA G2 structure has significantly better fiber-tear performance than the modified PLA.
(31) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Processing properties PLA with Modified adhesion Properties measured 100% PLA promoter and at 150 fpm line speed PLA (PLA G1) talc (PLA G2) Extruder Melt Temperature 461 F. 482 F. 451 F. Extruder Head Pressure 1650 psi 2600 psi 1340 psi Extruder Motor Load 57% 69% 52% Average Coat width, inches 14.5 0.31 16.0 0.02 15.0 0.22 Neck-in Percent (20 die) 27.5% 19.8% 25.0% Adhesion to board, 0.54 0.09 1.09 0.1 0.92 0.2 maximum peel force lbf lbf lbf Adhesion to board, 0.32 0.03 0.79 0.08 0.63 0.15 average peel force lbf/inch lbf/inch lbf/inch