Lamination Vs Coating
Lamination Vs Coating
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Disadvantages
Hot Roll Lamination
Ability to apply a wide variety of films
9 Medium speeds
Low capital costs
9 Printing distortions possible during lamination
Low energy consumption
Ability to apply thin skins
Superior graphics
Simple technology
Extrusion Coating
Inexpensive raw material
9 Poor gauge control
Improves structure stability
9 High capital costs
Ability to apply thin skins
9 Little flexibility in coating type
9 High energy consumption
Adhesive Lamination
High speeds
9 High capital costs
Ability to apply a wide variety of films
9 Medium energy consumption
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is consumer demand for package features such as easy open packages, barrier properties, safety, tamper resistance,
product efficacy, cost and manufacturing efficiencies which will directly determine which process will serve these
interests. Fortunately, advances in resin technology, new chemistry options for coatings, and improvements in
surface modification and sealing methods will enable new, high performance structures to better meet these
challenges.
Adhesive Lamination Wet & Dry Processes
The manufacture of film laminates is a continuous process of coating and bonding, with process differentiation
defined by the type of adhesive used and how the adhesive is applied and converted. These processes are classified
as either wet or dry laminating processes and are described in Table 2.
Process
Dry
Processes
Description
Application
Equipment
Gravure application
cylinder
Wet
Processes
Hot Melt
Seal
Coating
Heated rotogravure
cylinder, extruder
Cold Seal
Gravure application
cylinder
Gravure cylinder or
smooth roll
laminated to a second
substrate via nip, followed by
drying with heat/air flow
(one substrate must be porous
to allow evaporation of water
or solvent)
Multiple application
roll configurations
Typical
Adhesives
Polyurethane
dispersions, acrylic,
emulsions, acrylic
solvent, water-based
polyvinyl alcohol,
ethylene vinyl acetate
copolymers, high
solids silicone
solvent
Ethylene vinyl
acetate, modified
polyolefins,
polyesters
Synthetic rubber,
acrylic / natural
rubber
Polyurethane
dispersions, acrylic,
emulsions, waterbased polyvinyl
alcohol, ethylene
vinyl acetate
copolymers,
polyesters, starch,
dextrin, latex, etc.
Polyurethanes (on- or
two-component, with
ester or ketone
solvent, or 100%
solids), polyesters
Wet Lamination
treater
treater
Dry Lamination
treater
treater
Viscosity
(cps)
Coating
Weight
(gm/m2)
Coating
Accuracy
(+/-%)
Coating Speed
(mpm)
Wire Rod
100-1,000
15-1,000
10
100-200
Knife over
Roll
4,000-50,000
25-750
10
100-150
300-50,000
25-250
100-400
15-1500
2-50
100-700
400-500,000
15-750
300-700
400-200,000
20-700
100-300
50,000-125,000
20-500
Coating
Method
Reverse Roll
Gravure
Extrusion Die
Slot Die
Curtain
100-500
Adhesives
Commonly
used
Solution,
emulsion
Solution,
emulsion, 100%
solids
Solution,
emulsion
Solution,
emulsion
Emulsion, hotmelt, 100%
solids
Emulsion, hotmelt, 100%
solids
Emulsion, hotmelt
to initiate immediate tack and bond strength. Adhesive lamination is a preferred method of joining substrates when a
film cannot by effectively processed through a coextrusion process because of equipment limitations, because of the
potential for thermal damage by coextrusion, or when the use of adhesives will benefit the final construction.
Therefore, it is primarily the physical and chemical properties of the substrate which will determine the type of
adhesive and coating method which can be applied (sensitivities to water or solvent carrier, or to thermal drying), or
whether adhesive lamination as a process can indeed be utilized.
Another key process variable is surface preparation along with adhesive selection. To ensure that adhesive will
effectively wet-out and bond to the substrate, the adhesive must have a surface tension that is approximately
10mN/m lower than the surface tension of the substrate being coated. Typical pretreatment processes include corona
and flame discharge, with high-density atmospheric plasma becoming an increasingly integrated surface treatment
technology that is ideally suited for continuous polymer film lamination because of its introduction of chemical
functionality for improved bond performance.
Solventless Lamination
Solventless laminating is the process of metering a low viscosity adhesive onto a multiple application roll
configuration that applies the adhesive to a first substrate, which is then mated to a second substrate via a heated nip.
Single component first generation adhesives were primarily moisture-cured polyurethanes. This adhesive is coated
onto a substrate and atmospheric moisture reacts with excess isocyanate groups to crosslink the adhesive after it
interfaces with the secondary film. Two-part solventless polyurethanes eliminate disadvantages of variations in
ambient air moisture content, such as surface bubbling, variability in cure rate, and cloudiness, although pot life is
limited. There are also high residual monomers and low initial bond strengths with two-part solventless
polyurethanes. Late generation high performance aliphatic isocyanate-based solventless adhesives offer enhanced
processing characteristics at reduced temperatures since the polymeric polyol have viscosities less than about 12,000
mPas at 25 C improve the meter-mix process, through enhanced flow rates, without the addition of heat.
Although a majority of printing today is done with solvent-based inks, environmental concerns have increased the
demand for alternatives to solvent. It has been generally assumed that solventless adhesives cannot be used with
water-based inks. While not every solventless adhesive works on every water-based adhesive, experiments have
demonstrated that water-based inks yield bond strength and appearance that meet or exceed industry requirements
when combined with solventless adhesives. Solventless adhesives are constrained, however, in their use with retort
packaging by the lower coating weights provided by the solventless laminating process, typically in the range of 2.4
g/m2.
Hot Melt Laminating Adhesives
Hot melt adhesives in the laminating process span the base composition range of polyester, polyamide, EVA,
polyethylene, and thermoplastic and reactive urethane. These adhesives are typically applied at ambient temperature
to a substrate and activated using heat. A second web substrate is laminated to the first after the material is activated.
Hot melt adhesives can also be applied directly and therefore more efficiently to the substrate via rotogravure, spray,
or extrusion coating technology. Significant material savings can result by direct application of the hot melt
adhesive, thus eliminating the cost associated with cryogenically created powders or formed films and webs. Also,
ovens used to activate dry adhesives are not required in most cases, saving utilities costs and floor space.
UV/EB Curable Laminating Adhesives
Ultraviolet light (UV) or electron beam (EB) curing laminating adhesives are composed of acrylate / methacrylate
monomers and oligomers. Aliphatic urethane acrylates are commonly used in laminations since they have good
adhesion to most films, do not yellow, and have a very low application viscosity (350-450 cps.). In general, UV/EB
laminating adhesives are directly coated on the surface of a film, nipped and cured at line speeds which can be
adjusted by substituting UV lamps of different intensity. The process is generally based on free radical curing of
acrylates. Cationic curing is also used, but in all cases at least one web must be a clear film when using a UV-based
system. A process exception is the use of UV pressure sensitive laminating adhesives which hmay be used with
opaque substrates, but which require higher adhesive weights compared to UV/EB laminating adhesives.
Disadvantages of these pressure sensitive adhesives includes slower cure time due to lower functionality and oxygen
inhibition, and lower chemical and heat resistance.
Extrusion Coating/Lamination
In extrusion coating and lamination, resin is melted and formed into thin hot film, which is coated onto a conveyed,
flat substrate such as paper, paperboard, metal foil, or plastic film. The coated substrate then passes between a set of
counter-rotating rolls, which press the coating onto the substrate to ensure complete contact and adhesion (Figure 2).
Extrusion laminating applies an extrusion coated layer which is used as an adhesive layer between two or more
substrates. A second layer is applied to the extrusion coating while it is still hot and then pressed together by
pressure rolls. The extrusion coated layer can also serve as a moisture barrier.
Substrates typically coated with polyolefins include paper, paperboard, BOPP, BON, PET and other plastic films,
metal foils, fabrics, metal sheets and foams.
Figure 3. Coextrusion line and the location of ozone and surface treatment stations
Examples of common composite films are the materials for beverage pouchstocks and composites for the medical
packaging industry. For example, the typical beverage pouchstock is a combination paper/PE/foil/PE, and
composites used for medical packaging usually consists of PET/PE/foil/PE. These particular constructions involve
four substrates and three interfaces which can utilize adhesives or primers at the interfaces. Converters can laminate
the four substrates by means of three separate operations, or the layers can be combined together in extrusion
laminations. The polyethylene layer can be composited in the construction by means of a coating extrusion from PE
pellets, or with a lamination of PE film.
A major factor influencing extrusion bonds is the specific adhesion that is created by the capacity of the molten
polymer to conform to, or match, the chemical composition of the substrate. In the examples mentioned above, and
particularly the composite polyester/PE/foil/PE used for the medical packaging industry, the actual construction may
be a polyester / interface / PE/foil/PE. At the polyester-polyethylene interface, a primer, adhesive and/or a surface
modifier are necessary so that the polyester will adhere properly to the PE. Likewise, a pretreatment between the foil
and PE is necessary to form a sufficient bond between those two substrates. It should also be noted that when
chemical primers are used to improve extrudate adhesion, it is typical that a corona treater is required to pretreat film
prior to priming and subsequent extrusion. Application of surface modification techniques to a substrate before an
extrusion coating or extrusion laminating operation requires combinations of corona, flame, ozone and atmospheric
plasma equipment to optimize adhesion (Figure 3 identifies a combination of ozone and other surface treatments). In
some instances a chemical primer or an adhesive layer is used to improve lamination. Previous work which details
the role of primers in extrusion lamination has been outlined by many, including industry professionals such as
David Bentley in his paper on primers.
Extrusion bonding is also positively influenced factors such as melt quality, drawability, low neck-in and low power
consumption. by high drawing rates for the extrudate. Regarding drawability, typically a short drawing time of
between 0.1 to 0.5 seconds will lead to strong molecular orientation. The subsequent chemical structure
requirements of the extrudate for easier processability involve control of rheological behavior, its reactivity in a
molten state, its crystallization behavior, and its mechanical properties of E modulus and yield stress. The use of
ethylene-acrylic ester-maleic anhydride terpolymers (polyvalent adhesives) are used to adhesion for LDPE by
increasing reactivity in the polymer chain, and particularly with surface hydroxyl groups, amine groups, and
atmospheric plasma-induced species. The more difficult the substrate (regarding adhesion) such as untreated films,
OPET, OPP, CPP, OPA and printed surfaces, the higher the con-monomer content within a terpolymer
recommended.3
oPP
PUAdhesive
SiOx
PUAdhesiveLamination
Oxygen Barrier: 7.5 cc/m2/day/bar
oPP
oPP
LDPE
SiOx
Extrusion Lamination
Oxygen Barrier: 15 cc/m2/day/bar
oPP
Figure4.ExampleofPossibleClearHighOxygenBarriersUsingAdhesivevs.ExtrusionLaminatedInorganic
Structures2
The choice of which process to employ is ultimately a complex one, but which may be best decided by the return on
assets invested relative to the core competencies of the converter and the strategic market opportunities which will
enhance this return.
References
[1] Mausar, J., "Manufacturing Pressure Sensitive Adhesive Products: A Coating and Laminating Process",
Adhesives and Sealants Industry, April, 2005.
[2] Naegeli, H.R., Transparent High Barrier Laminates Manufactured By Extrusion Lamination Process, 2007
TAPPI European PLACE Conference Proceedings, May, 2007.
[3] Adhesive Properties of Ethylene-Acrylic Ester-Maleic Anhydride Terpolymers in Extrusion
Coating/Lamination, 2003 TAPPI European PLACE Conference, May, 2003.