Film blowing machine

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A tube of extruded film being blown to expand Film extrusion.jpg
A tube of extruded film being blown to expand

A film blowing machine involves one process used to make plastic film. Extruded tubular processing is most often used with polyethylene films but can be used with other polymers. [1] The film may be laminating film, shrink film, agricultural covering film, bags or film for textiles and clothing, and other packaging materials.

Contents

Technical information

Parts include: screw and barrel, motor, inverter, heaters, die head, winder, and tower. The main motor may have frequency control of motor speed to improve speed regulation and save electricity. The screw and material barrel may be made from a nitrogen-treated chromium-molybdenum-aluminum alloy. [2]

Process

At the beginning of the process, the polymer comes in the form of a pellet. it is heated and melted into a viscous liquid between rotating screws and barrels of the extruder. This allows for the polymer to be fed through a die that shapes it in the form of a tube. This tube is then carefully inflated, so there is no risk of tearing, into a bubble by injecting it with air. The bubble is simultaneously being cooled in its interior, via a cooling system, and on the exterior surface, through the use of an air ring, to solidify the material. A set of collapsing frames or guides are then used to collapse the bubble into two, more defined, layers within closer proximity. Now that the layers are close, a series of nip rollers flatten the layers together to form a two-layered plastic film that is then wound onto a cylindrical roll for packaging purposes. This process may vary depending upon the specifications and models of the machines. [3]

Bubble instabilities

In the case that the bubble formed from air injection is not handled with caution, the bubble may become unstable and deform in a number of different ways.

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References

  1. Song (2000). "DOUBLE BUBBLE TUBULAR FILM EXTRUSION OF POLYBUTYLENE TEREPHTHALATE-POLYETHYLENE TEREPHTHALATE BLENDS" (PDF). Polymer Engineering & Science. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  2. "Double-head Film Blowing Machine Set". www.sh-machinery.com. Archived from the original on 2012-10-07.
  3. Kolarik, Roman (2012). Modeling of Film Blowing Process for Non-Newtonian Fluids by using Variational Principles. Zlín: Tomas Bata University. pp. 8–13.

Books and general references