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Patent Searching and Data


Title:
FILM FOR PACKAGING LIQUID PRODUCTS OR THE LIKE
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2006/063416
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
Film (1) for packaging liquid products or the like, which mainly consists of a first polyolefin layer (2), a jointing layer and a layer of polychlorotrifluoroethylene (PCTFE) (3), characterised in that the PCTFE-layer (3) has a thickness of at least 10 micrometer (um) and whereby the film (1) is obtained by means of co-extrusion.

Inventors:
DECLERCK JOHAN WILLY (BE)
Application Number:
PCT/BE2004/000178
Publication Date:
June 22, 2006
Filing Date:
December 17, 2004
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
TEKNI PLEX EUROP NV (BE)
DECLERCK JOHAN WILLY (BE)
International Classes:
B32B27/08
Foreign References:
US20010008694A12001-07-19
US6306503B12001-10-23
US20030008152A12003-01-09
EP0112406A11984-07-04
Other References:
DATABASE WPI Section Ch Week 198114, Derwent World Patents Index; Class A92, AN 1981-24132D, XP002328386
DATABASE WPI Section Ch Week 198843, Derwent World Patents Index; Class A18, AN 1988-304646, XP002328387
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
Donné E. (Arenbergstraat 13, Antwerpen, BE)
Download PDF:
Claims:
Claims .
1. Film for packaging liquid products or the like, which mainly consists of a first polyolefin layer, a jointing layer and a layer of polychlorotrifluoroethylene (PCTFE), characterised in that the PCTFElayer (3) has a thickness of at least s 10 micrometer (μm) and whereby the film (1) is obtained by means of coextrusion.
2. Film according to any of claims 1, characterised in that the PCTFE layer is made of a homopolymer PCTFE.
3. Film according to any of claims 1 or 2, characterised in that the PCTFElayer has a thickness of at least 20 μm.
4. Film according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that the jointing layer (4) is formed of an epoxy ester.
5. Film according to claim 4, characterized in that the jointing layer (4) is formed of a copolymer of a polyolefin and glycidyl methacrylate.
6. Film according to claim 5, characterised in that the jointing layer (4) is formed of a copolymer of ethylene and glycidyl methacrylate (EGMA) .
7. Film according to claim 4, characterized in that the jointing layer (4) is formed of a terpolymer of a polyolefin, an acrylic ester and an epoxy ester.
8. Film according to claim 7, characterized in that said epoxy ester is glycidyl methacrylate.
9. Film according to claim 7, characterized in that said polyolefin is a polyethylene.
Description:
Film for packaging liquid products or the like.

The present invention concerns a film for packaging liquid products or the like, in particular for packaging pharmaceutical and/or qosmetic products in a liquid, semi- liquid, dissolved, gelatinous, emulsified state or the like.

In the pharmaceutical sector, as well as in the cosmetics industry, the demands for the material out of which the packaging is made are very high as far as transparency is concerned, chemical and biochemical reactivity, absorption power, permeability, etcetera.

These demands are all the higher when a packaging is concerned in which liquids or the like are stored which may contain a large variety of components, such as for example polar components, non-polar components, ions, salts, oils, surface-active components, anti-microbial components, macromolecules and the like.

Although, in the above mentioned sectors, synthetic packagings are already applied for storing solid materials, these packagings do not meet the demands for storing liquid products, due to too much, permeability, too much reactivity, too much absorption power or the like.

Up to now, the pharmaceutical industry uses mainly glass packagings, as glass is a suitable recipient for storing such products, but a glass packaging also has major shortcomings .

Thus, for example, glass ampoules are known in which a dose of a medicine or the like to be injected is stored, whereby the tip of the ampoule can be broken off before use at a narrowing in the neck of the ampoule.

These known glass ampoules are disadvantageous in that they are fragile and have to be packaged with care; moreover, breaking off the tip of the ampoule is not simple, and users can hurt themselves on the glass. It should be noted that, when breaking off the tip of the ampoule, minuscule glass particles may end up in the content of the ampoule, which is at least undesirable.

Another disadvantage of glass ampoules and of glass packagings in general is that they cannot be deformed, as a result of which they are difficult to stack or cannot be stacked at all without losing space.

Another disadvantage of glass packagings not being deformable is that, in many cases, a remainder of liquid will stick on the inside of the glass, as a result of which, when administering a precisely determined dose, a small deviation may occur.

Another disadvantage of the non-deformable character of glass packagings is that it is difficult to let a product flow out of a glass packaging at a constant flow rate, requiring for example extra pump systems for pharmaceutical products which have to be administered at a continuous flow rate.

Further, glass cartridges are known which are applied for storing injectable products. These cartridges are hermetically sealed by means of a rubber cap which is fixed to the glass by means of a lid made of, for example aluminium.

The dose to be injected is hereby administered by means of a piston provided in the cartridge, whereby the content of the cartridge is guided through a small tube provided with a layer of silicone on the inside.

Although these cartridges make it possible to administer a well-dosed amount of medicine or the like, its construction is complex and its production is relatively expensive, especially when the different parts of the cartridge have to be sterilized.

Moreover, the silicone which is applied in the above mentioned tube is non-desirable, as silicone may influence the composition of a medicine or the like stored in the cartridge, with possible pernicious consequences for the patient whom the medicine is being administered to.

In order to remedy several of the above mentioned disadvantages, films are already known which can be used for packaging pharmaceutical or cosmetic products in a liquid state or the like, but these different known films all have specific major disadvantages.

Thus, films made of PVC (polyvinylchloride) are already known whereby components which are hardly or not soluble in water, absorb what are called non-polar components out of the stored product in the PVC, as a result of which the concentration of these non-polar components in the stored product decreases in time, and the products may thus lose their effective character.

Other known films, made for example of PE (polyethylene) , PP (polypropene) , poly-1-butene (PB) or the like, are in turn permeable to certain oils, such as for example paraffin oil, so that, when such a packaging is used for such oils, the packaging will feel greasy for example after a few days, which results in an unacceptable loss of oil; also certain surface-active components, such as dodecane, migrate particularly fast through PE films or the like.

Also other known films, such as films made of acrylonitrile methylacrylate co-polymer cannot be used for storing products with a wide .range of components, as such films appear to be non-resistive to the large reactivity of for example peroxide derivatives, which are applied in cosmetics because of their bleaching properties, and as such films are not sufficiently impermeable to moisture.

Finally, there are also multilayered films.

Thus, films are known with an inner layer made of acrylonitrile - methylacrylate (A/MA/B) , followed by a jointing layer, with which a layer of a co-polymer from PCTFE (polychlorotrifluoroethylene) is bonded.

A disadvantage of these known films is that the A/MA/B discolours during the sterilization by means of radiation, as a result of which the content of a packaging on the basis of such a film -will not be clearly visible when it is finally used, so that a possible precipitation of for example macromolecules cannot be visually detected when administering the stored product.

In another known PCTFE-film, the inner layer consists of ethylene acrylic acid (EAA) , whereby the EAA is disadvantageous in that it is reactive in relation to certain polar and aliphatic components, which components consequently cannot be stored in such a film without their composition being altered after a while.

In another PCTFE-film, a film which is 7.5 μm (micrometer) thick made of PCTFE-copolymer is used which is limited by a jointing layer on the inner side of the packaging, onto which a PE-layer is provided.

The disadvantage of this known film is that tests have proven that the PCTFE-layer of a PCTFE-copolymer lets more water vapour through than a film made of homopolymer PCTFE. Moreover, a PCTFE-polymer layer with a thickness of 7.5 μm lets water vapour through relatively quickly, so that the concentration of certain components of the products which are stored in this packaging may increase as the water evaporates through the packaging.

By the word homopolymer is hereby meant a polymer which is built up of a chain of identical molecules, in this case chlorotrifluoroehtylene, whereby all the molecules, to the exception of the terminal ones, are covalently connected in an identical manner.

The present invention aims a packaging which offers a solution to the above mentioned and other disadvantages.

To this end, the invention concerns a packaging for liquid products or the like, which mainly consists of a first polyolefin layer, a jointing layer and a layer of polychlorotrifluoroethylene (PCTFE), whereby the PCTFE layer has a thickness of at least 10 micrometer (μm) and whereby the film is obtained by means of co-extrusion.

The term co-extrusion hereby includes methods comprising the use of a so called feed block with a standard die, a multimanifold die such as a circular die for producing, for example, a blown bubble type of film or a multimanifold die such as used in forming multilayer flat cast films or flat cast sheets .

One particular advantage of co-extrusion is that the different layers of a multilayer film can be combined in a single process step by combining a molten layer of, in this case, PCTFE with molten layers of, for ' example, ethylene glycidyl methacrylate co-polymer, a thermoplastic polymer such as polyolefin material and optionally other layers into a unitary film structure.

By the term polyolefin are hereby understood polymers which are mainly built up of carbon atoms and hydrogen atoms, such as for example polyethylene, polypropylene, 1-butene, 4-methyl pentane, etc.

The PCTFE-layer is preferably made of homopolymer PCTFE.

The layer of homopolymer PCTFE preferably also has a thickness of at least 50 μm.

An advantage of this film is that, partly thanks to the thickness of the PCTFE-layer and the fact that homopolymer PCTFE is being applied, it is relatively impermeable to products in a liquid state or the like, as well as to gaseous products.

Another advantage is that the film according to the invention is transparent and does not discolour under the influence of .ionizing radiation, which is typically used to sterilize among others packaging materials, which has as a plus that the film, after sterilization by means of radiation, stays optimally transparent, so that the quality of products packaged in the film can always be visually checked.

The jointing layer preferably consists of an epoxy ester, more particularly a co-polymer made of a polyolefin and glycidyl methacrylate, such as for example ethylene glycidyl methacrylate co-polymer (EGMA) , which offers the advantage that this jointing layer is practically not

affected by migrating components of the packaged product, so that the compound of the film layers is not broken.

An advantage of the thus obtained film composition is that the used materials, in the state in which they are in the film, are chemically practically inert and absorb relatively little or no components at all, contrary to other jointing layer materials of, for example, the alkyl ester family.

An advantage linked to this is that, thanks to the inertness of the packaging film according to the invention and the good sealing which can be obtained with this film, the composition of the packaged products will change only little in time, as a result of which the packaged products will have a longer shelf life.

In order to better explain the characteristics of the invention, the following preferred embodiment of a film according to the invention for packaging liguid products or the like, is described as an example only without being limitative in any way, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

figure 1 schematically represents a film according to the invention seen as a section; figure 2 represents a method for manufacturing a film according to the invention.

Figure 1 represents a film 1 according to the invention for packaging liguid products or the like, which mainly

consists of a first layer 2 and a PCTFE-layer 3, in between which is provided a jointing layer 4.

The first layer 2, in particular the layer which is designed as a contact layer for the content of the packaging, consists of a transparent, colourfast and inert synthetic layer, which in this case consists of a polyolefin such as PE, PP and/or PB or copolymers thereof.

The thickness of the first layer 2 may vary between 5 μm and some 1000 μm, with a preferred thickness of some 20 to 50 μm.

The PCTFE-layer 3 preferably consists of homopolymer PCTFE and has a thickness of at least 10 μm and preferably at least 50 μm.

The jointing layer 4 consists, just as the first layer 2, of a transparent and colourfast synthetic material, preferably an epoxy ester, as for example a co-polymer of ethylene and glycidyl methacrylate having a thickness of 3 to 50 μm or, preferably, a thickness of 3 to 10 μm.

Such a film 1 is particularly suitable for packaging pharmaceutical or cosmetic products in a liquid state or the like and which may contain a wide range of components, including for example oils, such as paraffin oil; solutions of macromolecules, such as for example proteins, etc.

As PE, PP and/or PB are preferably used as a first layer 2, which synthetic materials can for example be welded under

the influence of heat, the packaging can be sealed quickly and in a simple manner.

Consequently, the film 1 can be applied as a packaging in the shape of for example little bags or in place of glass ampoules for any of the above mentioned components.

Naturally, it is always possible to coat the film 1 on the outside, in particular on the PCTFE-layer 3, with other layers, for example a rigid synthetic layer to reinforce the film 1, or with other functional coatings.

It is also possible to manufacture symmetric films, whereby a jointing layer 4 and a polyolefin layer 2 are again provided on the outside, on the PCTFE-layer 3, thus creating a film 1 which can be used on either side.

It is also possible to provide an extra functional layer on the inside of the film 1, in particular on the polyolefin layer 2, such as for example a layer made of co- or terpolymers of PE or the like, which make's it possible to better weld the film 1 onto itself or which provides another weld strength to the film 1.

Further, it should be noted that EGMA co-polymer is not the only jointing layer 4 which can be applied; also other substances or combinations of substances can be applied, either or not depending on the purpose for which the film 1 is designed.

Other possible jointing layers consist for example of ethylene - methyl acrylate - glycidyl methacrylate terpolymers; polypropylene - glycidyl methacrylate copolymer or combinations of a polyolefine, an alkyl ester and an epoxy ester terpolymer; and othersincluding two- layered or multilayered jointing layers.

The invention is by no means limited to the above-described embodiment given as an example and represented in the accompanying drawings; on the contrary, such a film for packaging liguid products or the like according to the invention can be made in all sorts of shapes and dimensions and according to different variants while still remaining within the scope of the invention.