R.A Jones, Covington, KY, a manufacturer of food packaging machines, works directly with customers and their material suppliers to make sure new sustainable structures can be run on its equipment. The focus is to ensure that the sustainable packaging materials can maintain the current customer experience, which includes extending product shelf life. R.A Jones and Volpak are sister companies under Coesia.
“The challenges of running new sustainable materials on high-speed machines (up to 2,000 pouches per minute) include the deformation of material from the heat applied by sealing mechanisms,” says Ricky Low, portfolio manager, pouching and aerosol, R.A Jones. Thermal expansion or shrinkage of sustainable (less heat-tolerant) materials pose an array of challenges downstream in the system, such as dosing/filling of product and collating for secondary packaging.
To help its customers solve these challenges, R.A Jones engineers concepts specific to the film and product application, which allow snack and bakery producers to retrofit upgrades to their existing machines. “To address the material deformation, for example, new engineering designs can separate the heat source from the film or alternative heat sources for enhanced heat control,” Low says.
The industry has relied on using tried-and-tested solutions, such as MAP and barrier films, to achieve extended shelf life, according to Andrew Manly, communications director, The Active & Intelligent Packaging Industry Association (AIPIA), Utrecht, the Netherlands. “One bright spot has been the development of smart technologies, such as the Digimarc digital watermark, to identify different plastics that enable easier sorting for recycling. This is applicable to both rigid and flexible packaging used extensively in the baked goods sector.”