Guide to Improving Heat Sealing Stability of Flexible Packaging
Guide to Improving Heat Sealing Stability of Flexible Packaging
Once a flexible packaging project enters mass production, the most common "failure point" for customers is often not printing color, but heat sealing reliability: leaky seals, incomplete seals, bag bursting, whitening/wrinkling of the seal, and significant fluctuations in seal strength after contamination by powder or grease. This article, from an engineering perspective, connects "problem definition → structural selection → heat sealing window → on-site troubleshooting SOP → delivery and acceptance" into a practical method applicable to composite packaging bags and automated packaging roll films.
I. First, clearly define "sealing problems": Leaky seals, incomplete seals, and bag bursting are not the same thing.
It is recommended to group anomalies according to "manifestation + triggering conditions," which will greatly speed up subsequent troubleshooting:
* Leaky seal/slow leak: Leakage occurs after a period of time at room temperature; often related to microchannels, an excessively narrow sealing knife temperature window, sealing contamination, and problems between composite layers.
* Incomplete seal: Appears sealed, but opens easily with a light pull; often related to insufficient sealing temperature, insufficient pressure/time, and improper matching of heat sealing layers.
Bag bursting: Cracks appear at the seal or side seal; commonly caused by insufficient seal strength, insufficient cooling, pressure/impact from contents, and material stiffness and stress concentration.
Whitening/wrinkling/obvious indentations at the seal: Often related to excessively high temperature, excessive pressure, poor parallelism of the sealing blade, and mismatch between the heat-sealing layer formula/thickness.
II. Structure and Materials: If the heat-sealing layer is not selected correctly, stable operation will be difficult regardless of machine adjustments.
The heat-sealing layer is not simply "PE will suffice." In high-contamination sealing applications such as snacks, powders, oils, and seasonings, it is recommended to design the heat-sealing layer as a "functional layer": General-purpose: PE/CPP series are mature and stable, but their contamination resistance and window width depend on the formula and thickness.
Low-temperature heat sealing/wider window: mLLDPE/metallocene systems, ionomers, etc., are easier to produce with "wide windows and contamination resistance." High-speed automated packaging: Emphasis is placed on "window width + cooling and shaping + COF matching," which can be planned in conjunction with roll film projects.
III. Heat-sealing window = temperature × pressure × time × cooling: Missing any one of these can lead to "initial inspection OK, customer failure."
Many projects pass factory sampling but become unstable at the customer's site. The reasons are usually: faster customer equipment, heavier sealing contamination, insufficient cooling, and different ambient temperature and humidity, causing the heat-sealing window to be "squeezed out." It is recommended to solidify the window using the following methods:
1) Establish a heat-sealing window diagram: Don't just report one temperature. Set the dwell time according to the actual production speed and create heat-sealing strength curves under different temperature/pressure combinations.
Use "minimum acceptable strength + safety margin + acceptable appearance" as the window judgment criteria.
For powders/oils, a contamination-resistant heat-sealing test must be performed (simulate contamination before sealing).
2) Cooling and shaping are often overlooked: Sealing ≠ stability. Sufficient strength immediately after sealing does not guarantee stability during subsequent transportation/compression. When cooling and setting are insufficient, the most common phenomenon is that the sealing edge "looks good," but slow leakage or bag bursting occurs after stacking/compression.
IV. On-site Troubleshooting SOP: Locating "Material Issues" or "Equipment/Process Issues" within 10 Minutes
It is recommended to troubleshoot in a fixed order to avoid guesswork:
First, confirm the location of the failure: Is it the side seal, bottom seal, or a section of intermittent leakage? Is it concentrated in a certain blade area?
Make a comparison sample: Seal the same batch of bags on two machines; does the problem follow the machine?
Check the parallelism and surface of the sealing blade: Blade wear, carbon buildup, and aging of Teflon cloth will significantly reduce the window of failure.
Record four parameters: temperature, pressure, time, and cooling (or cooling roller/cold sealing blade status).
Confirm the direction of the heat-sealing layer: In multi-layer structures, incorrect direction will cause "no matter how you adjust it, it won't seal."
Reproduce sealing contamination: Use the same powder/grease to perform a contaminated sealing test and observe how much the strength drops.
Inspect the lamination and curing process: Insufficient curing or delamination between layers can cause microchannels or stress cracking in the sealing area.
Inspect the cut and sealing edge width: Too narrow a sealing edge, burrs from the cutter, and too close together tear points/hanging holes can all lead to bag bursting.
Perform leak/water bath/airtightness spot checks: Make "leakage" a quantifiable indicator rather than a subjective one.
Form a closed loop: Include the final stable parameters in the specifications and acceptance clauses to prevent recurrence.
V. Quick Checklist: Symptoms → High-Probability Causes → Quick Verification → Countermeasures
| Symptoms | High Probability Causes | Quick Verification | Priority Countermeasures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slow Leakage After Room Temperature Placement | Microchannel/Window Too Narrow/Insufficient Cooling | Compare Different Temperature Ranges in the Same Bag; Leakage Spot Check | Enlarge Window (Material/Parameters); Strengthen Cooling; Optimize Sealing Width |
| Seal Opens Easily with Light Pull (Virtual Seal) | Insufficient Temperature or Time; Uneven Pressure Distribution | Does Increasing Temperature/Extending Time Immediately Improve | Correct Sealing Blade Parallelism; Adjust Pressure; Upgrade Heat Sealing Layer |
| Leakage in Powder/Oil Products | Leakage in Powder/Oil Products: Seal Contamination Causes Heat Sealing Layer to Fail to Fuse | Reproduce Contaminated Seals; Compare Strength Reduction Ratio; | Select Anti-Contamination Heat Sealing Layer; Add Powder Removal/Scraping; Increase Window Margin |
| Whitening/Wrinkling of Seals | Excessive Temperature/Pressure/Blade Surface Problems | Does Lowering Temperature or Pressure Significantly Improve | Return to Window Range; Replace Teflon Cloth/Repair Blade |
| Bag Bursts After Transportation Extrusion | Insufficient Strength + Insufficient Cooling + Stress Concentration | Stacking/Extrusion Simulation; Observe Failure Points | Improve Heat Sealing Strength and Sealing Edges; Optimize Rounded Corners/Opening Structure; Improve Stiffness |
VI. Ordering and Acceptance Recommendations: Include "Heat-Sealing Capable of Mass Production" in the specifications to reduce disputes.
It is recommended to include these 8 items in the order information (the more complete, the more reliable):
Product Type: Bag type/roll film, size, sealing method (back seal/three-side seal/four-side seal/zipper, etc.)
Content Characteristics: Powder/oil/granules, whether it easily contaminates the seal
Packaging Method: Nitrogen filling/vacuum/hot filling/sterilization conditions
Equipment Information: Speed range, sealing knife type, cooling method
Heat-Sealing Requirements: Target strength, anti-contamination requirements, acceptable appearance range
Structural Recommendations and Alternatives: Heat-sealing layer material and thickness, window strategy
Acceptance Method: Heat-sealing strength/leakage sampling standards, sampling period
Batch Traceability: Record key process parameters (for easy review)
If you also encounter printing color matching and batch fluctuation issues, you can create a "Process Inspection Checklist" to integrate "equipment + materials + process" into traceability management.
