Abstract

The technology of filling drinks without preservatives (such as fresh juices, iced tea drinks, vitaminized drinks) is carried out using hot filling. Mainly due to the production costs and lower carbon footprint, polyethylene terephthalate bottles, commonly called PET, are increasingly used in this technology. In this paper, the main aim is to describe the statistical analysis methodology of the influence of the temperature of the blow mold in the SBM process and the method of hot filling on the macroscopic and microscopic bottle properties. The macroscopic bottle properties were defined by the thickness profile, pressure resistance, thermal stability, and the coefficients of blowing kinetics. Moreover, the influence of the SBM (stretch blow moulding) process on the microscopic PET material properties (in the bottle) relative to the microscopic preform properties was analyzed. The microscopic properties were defined by the degree of crystallite, density, and relaxation of the amorphous phase of the PET material. For this purpose, response surface experiments were performed for the two analyzed factors (independent variables), i.e., the temperature of the blow mold and the method of hot filling. The sample size was investigated to determine the minimum number of repetitions (number of bottles in the measurement series) required to achieve acceptable measurement uncertainty. The research conducted shows that despite fulfilling the postulate of acceptable measurement uncertainty, in terms of the power of ANOVA (analysis of variance) in DOE (design of experiment) the accepted number of bottles in the measurement series is too small. The tests of the bottle material density, material crystallite, and relaxation of amorphous phase relative to the preform material density, material crystallite, and relaxation of amorphous phase show that the microcavity effects occur during the deformation of the PET material, and that these are associated with the orientation of the microstructure. The blow kinetics study shows that there is a gradient of flow of the bottle material over the thickness of the bottle wall during blowing, and it has been deduced that the air temperature between the blow mold and the wall of the blown bottle has an impact on the kinetics of blowing the bottle.

Highlights

  • PET packaging is the most commonly used packaging for storing carbonated and non-carbonated beverages

  • The tests of the bottle material density, material crystallite, and relaxation of amorphous phase relative to the preform material density, material crystallite, and relaxation of amorphous phase show that the microcavity effects occur during the deformation of the PET material, and that these are associated with the orientation of the microstructure

  • The blow kinetics study shows that there is a gradient of flow of the bottle material over the thickness of the bottle wall during blowing, and it has been deduced that the air temperature between the blow mold and the wall of the blown bottle has an impact on the kinetics of blowing the bottle

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Summary

Introduction

PET packaging is the most commonly used packaging for storing carbonated and non-carbonated beverages. The impact of the SBM process parameters on the quality of manufactured PET bottles in terms of pressure resistance, material distribution on the bottle surface (wall thickness), degree of crystallinity, glass transition temperature, and axial strength was analyzed in [23]. For this purpose, the experiment plan was defined on the basis of a two-factor DOE for the surface temperature of the blow mold (varied from 5 to 50 ◦ C) and the residence time of the bottle in the blow mold (varied from 5 to 20 s). The results were not subjected to any statistical analysis and the size of the test sample was not specified

Purpose of Research and Methodology of Experimental Research
HiTech
(Figures
Method
Preliminary
ANOVA Test Power Calculation
Plan of Experiments and Result
Results for preform material
Part II. Polimery
Full Text
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