Blown Film
To
manufacture bags, industry uses a process known
as Blown Film Extrusion. This process is used to manufacture
not only garbage bags but also items such as; vapor barrier,
bread bags, grocery bags, or any one of thousands of different
items that you would see packaged for resale.
The plastic is fed in pellet form into the machine hopper
(this machine is known as an Extruder), the plastic is conveyed
forward by a rotating screw inside a heated barrel and softened
by both friction and heat. The softened plastic is then
forced upwards through a circular die in a shape of a hollow
tube.
This is a continuous process where the
tube is expanded with air above the die, and collapsed by
the take-off or nip rollers, the volume of air inside the
bubble, the speed of the nip rollers and the extruders output
rate all play a role in determining the thickness and size
of the film.
The tube or "web" of film is
then continuously rolled up by take-off rollers, or the
web of film may be fed directly into a bag-machine in an
in-line process. The tube is heat-sealed across its width
to form the bottom of the bag and cut across further up
the tube to form the opening.
Cast Film
The extrusion of Cast Films by the flat
die technique is becoming more and more important in view
of its superior performance: throughput of more than 1 ton
per hour against a few hundred kilogram’s per hour
for the circular die technique, and better control of the
distribution of layer thickness in the transverse direction.
As in the case of bi-oriented films, the
technique of multi-layer co-extrusion allows for 3, 5 or
7 layers within complex structures.
The material temperature recommended for
manufacturing is situated between 230 and 280°C when
using a flat die and between 180 and 210°C for a circular
die, with water-cooling of the tubular film ; higher temperatures
must be avoided as they may cause degradation of the additives.
Cast polypropylene films are used for the
packaging of foodstuffs, textiles, the production of stationery,
simulated leather goods, as well as for the manufacture
of complex films by lamination or co-extrusion coating.