AU647410B2 - Activated earth polyethylene film - Google Patents

Activated earth polyethylene film

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Publication number
AU647410B2
AU647410B2 AU62994/90A AU6299490A AU647410B2 AU 647410 B2 AU647410 B2 AU 647410B2 AU 62994/90 A AU62994/90 A AU 62994/90A AU 6299490 A AU6299490 A AU 6299490A AU 647410 B2 AU647410 B2 AU 647410B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
film
produce
activated earth
polyethylene
microns
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU62994/90A
Other versions
AU6299490A (en
AU647410C (en
Inventor
Mark Anthony Cammiss
Gaetano Russo
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
GAETONO RUSSO
Original Assignee
GAETONO RUSSO
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by GAETONO RUSSO filed Critical GAETONO RUSSO
Priority to AU62994/90A priority Critical patent/AU647410C/en
Priority claimed from AU62994/90A external-priority patent/AU647410C/en
Priority claimed from PCT/AU1990/000400 external-priority patent/WO1991003516A1/en
Publication of AU6299490A publication Critical patent/AU6299490A/en
Priority to AU53997/94A priority patent/AU649602B3/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU647410B2 publication Critical patent/AU647410B2/en
Publication of AU647410C publication Critical patent/AU647410C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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  • Materials For Medical Uses (AREA)
  • Artificial Filaments (AREA)

Description

ACTIVATED EARTH POLYETHYLENE FILM
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a plastic film packaging material that contains a uniform dispersion of porous powder. The film can be used to preserve fruits, vegetables and cut flowers by controlling the concentrations of oxygen, carbon dioxide, ethylene and humidity surrounding the produce.
PRIOR ART
It is well known that all fruits, vegetables and cut flowers age and deteriorate after harvesting. This deterioration occurs via several mechanisms and the most important of these are dehydration where moisture is lost from the produce, internal biological changes where starches are converted into sugars, attack by bacteria and attack by fungi .
Various methods are used to reduce the rate of deterioration. The main one is cooling the produce to as low a temperature as possible without causing chilling injury. This reduces the rate at which bacteria and fungi multiply and reduces the metabolic rate of the produce. Cooling generally involves the use of refrigeration in one form or another which tends to dehydrate the produce unless additional humidification equipment is installed with the refrigeration. This is generally not done and is quite difficult to do on domestic refrigerators.
An improvement on cooling the produce is to cool the produce and modify the atmosphere surrounding it. This technique is commonly called Controlled Atmosphere storage when applied to bulk storage of produce and is widely practiced .in the storage of apples. Typically, the oxygen concentration surrounding the produce is reduced from 21% to between 0.5% and 2% and the carbon dioxide concentration is increased from 0.03% to 1 to 10%. When applied to the wrapping of produce with a film, the technique is called Modified Atmosphere packaging.
Compared with cooling alone, CA storage and MA packaging usually improve the storage life of produce because firstly, the modified atmosphere slows down the rate of respiration via chemical signals and secondly, the modified atmosphere reduces the rate of bacteria and fungi growth.
Many films and bags have been developed to improve the storage life of produce. The simplest of these is a plain polyethylene (PE) bag which is cheap to manufacture and does not contaminate the produce. Plain PE films and bags have low gas permeabilities and suffer from excess condensation of water inside the bag which promotes decay by bacteria and fungal attack. The produce stored within a polyethylene bag is alive and respires by consuming oxygen and giving off carbon dioxide.
A major problem with storing produce in a plain PE bag is the fact that oxygen within the bag can go below 0.5% and the produce can go into anaerobic decay. Alternatively, the carbon dioxide concentration can increase to levels that injure the produce well before the oxygen concentration gets to dangerously low levels. Plain polyethylene bags are not permeable enough for the long term storage of most produce.
Some films overcome this permeability problem by having small holes punched into the film. This is generally satisfactory for humidity control but is unsatisfactory to maintain a CA or MA environment around the produce because the permeability is too high.
Microporous films have been developed which provide a good permeability characteristic, but these films are opaque and do not permit visual inspection of the produce without opening he bag and detrimentally disturbing the modified atmosphere .
Chigami et al, US Pat. 4,840,823 disclose that the addition of a naturally porous silica CRISBAL in polyethylene improves the storage life of fruits and vegetables. The CRISBAL is hydrophillic and absorbs water, ethylene, carbon dioxide and other gases. A favourable atmosphere is provided around the produce by gas absorption into the CRISBAL rather than by modifications to the polyethylene permeability. The main problem with this film is that to ensure reasonable film clarity, processability into bags and tear strength, only 3 wt% to 5 wt% of CRISBAL is added to polyethylene vs up to 50 wt% detailed in the patent. With such a low concentration of CRISBAL in the film, there is insufficient CRISBAL to absorb all of the water, carbon dioxide and other gases given off by most produce stored within the bag.
Tsuji et al, US Pat. 4,939,030 disclose a laminated film construction comprising a microporous film plus water absorbing layer to control humidity and a synthetic resin (PE) film layer to control oxygen and carbon dioxide. The problems associated with this laminated film are the high costs of construction and the poor clarity which does not allow visual inspection of the produce without opening the bag and destroying the beneficial CA environment.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to the preservation of a range of produce including fruits, vegetables and cut flowers by the use of a specially engineered Activated Earth Plastic Fil (AEP Film). This film may be wrapped around the produce or may be made into bags if desired for convenient packaging of the produce. - A -
The plastic film can be made from a range of plastics including polyethylene, polypropylene or PVC. Polyethylene is considered to be the best plastic to use because it has superior gas permeability characteristics, strength and film characteristics and does not suffer the food contamination problems that PVC does with vinyl chloride monomer. For example, compared with the plastics listed above, polyethylene has low permeability to water vapour and high permeability to gases like carbon dioxide (CO2), sulphur dioxide (SO2), oxygen (O2) and ethylene. These characteristics allow polyethylene to maintain a high humidity environment around the produce with low water loss whilst permitting a rapid exchange of gases via the Activated Earth in the film.
The Activated Earth must be highly porous and have the ability to chemically and/or physically promote the passage of the various gaseous molecular species formed by or used by fresh produce in such a manner as to ensure oxygen is not totally depleted from the produce atmosphere and that carbon dioxide does not increase to dangerous levels.
This invention combines the properties of polyethylene film with such an Activated Earth to make an AEP Film which interacts with the natural respiration of the produce wrapped within the film to develop and maintain a controlled atmosphere around the produce.
This invention differs from the current practice of packing with a modified atmosphere (i.e. adding various gases to the package) in that the produce is wrapped in AEP film and the properties of AEP film develop and then maintain a modified atmosphere around the produce as it respires. The development and maintenance of a modified atmosphere results in longer storage life of the produce.
The presence of Activated Earth alters the relative gas permeabilities of oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, water and ethylene compared with plain polyethylene film o -
resulting in a better and continually adjusted modified atmosphere for longer produce storage life.
The mechanism by which the gas permeability are altered is through the physical characteristics of the Activated Earth and its interaction with the plastic. The plastic layer around the Activated Earth particles provides a primary control to permeability of the various gases. The molecular conduits or passages within the Activated Earth selectively control the passage of the various gases from the inside of the film next to the produce to the outside atmosphere.
The pores within the Activated Earth allow two-way flow and, in controlling the various gases at rates specific to their molecular structure and attendant properties, allow the build up of carbon dioxide around the fresh produce to levels that affect the respiration rate, slowing it down and reducing metabolic rate and therefore ageing. • At the same time it allows oxygen to flow back from outside of the produce package at the rate that it is used up inside of the package at the reduced metabolic rate. This mechanism ensures the maintenance of an atmosphere around the produce which ensures that the produce stays alive and does not progress to a state leading to anaerobic decay through lack of oxygen.
Anaerobic decay occurs in normal PE films. The conventional answer to this has been to perforate conventional films and therefore allow oxygen free passage to the produce. The holes thus produced are so large, on the molecular scale, that they do not allow carbon dioxide to be retained. They therefore fail to provide the controlled atmosphere required to control the metabolic rate of the produce and therefore retain youth and freshness.
AEP film reacts to the demands of the produce it is protecting because it operates at the molecular level. Compared with the standard films in use today, AEP Film doubles the storage life of some fruits, vegetables and flowers. Use of AEP Film will reduce the spoilage of these produce during storage, transport and in the home.
The dramatic increase in produce preservation resulting from AEP Film is achieved by mixing a small quantity of Activated Earth with the appropriate polyethylene plastic resin to give a uniform dispersion of Activated Earth particles within the film. The quantity of Activated Earth can be in the range 1% to 10% by weight of the film but most preferably in the range of 3% to 6%.
The AEP Film can be made from Low Density Polyethylene (LDPE), Linear Low Density Polyethylene (LLDPE) or High Density Polyethylene (HDPE) with additives as required for improved processability of the film. The film thickness can be in the range of 10 microns to 150 microns but more preferably in the range of 25 microns to 50 microns.
The Activated Earth particle size should be uniform and range up to 75 micron, but a preference is that greater than 50% should lie in the range of 15 to 50 micron with a maximum size no greater than the thickness of the polyethylene film.
A typical composition of Activated Earth is as follows: Silicon Dioxide Aluminium Oxide Iron Oxide Sodium Oxide Potassium Oxide Titanium Dioxide Trace Quantities of
Pore Diameter (Angstroms) Specific Surface (m2/gm) Specific Gravity EXAMPLES
BANANAS Bananas which had been gassed with ethylene to start them ripening were placed in a bag of AEP film and stored at 15.5°C. A control quantity was stored alongside but without the protection of AEP film. The AEP film delayed the onset of ripening by four days.
BROCCOLI Broccoli were stored for 6 weeks at
1°C in AEP bags. Two controls were also stored, one packed in normal polyethylene bags and the other without any protection. The broccoli stored in the AEP bag outlasted the controls by 4 weeks and 5 weeks respectively.
CAULIFLOWER Cauliflower were stored at 15°C in AEP film with controls stored alongside in conventional polyethylene film. After 14 days those stored in AEP film were still fresh and with no off odours, whereas the controls were unsaleable with offensive odours indicating anaerobic decay.
LETTUCE Lettuce were stored at 25°C in AEP bags and after 1 week they were still fresh and saleable, whereas the controls were totally unsaleable.
CARNATIONS Carnations were stored at 3°C to 6°C in AEP bags over a period of 21 days. These were then compared with fresh carnations for their life in a vase. The AEP stored carnations had an equivalent post storage life to the fresh controls.
ROSES Roses have been stored at the bud stage at 3°C to 6°C in AEP bags for periods up to 14 days. Following this period the buds have opened normally.

Claims (3)

THE CLAIMS DEFINING THE INVENTION ARE AS FOLLOWS:
1. A plastic film which develops and maintains a controlled atmosphere environment around produce such as fruits, vegetables and cut flowers so as to significantly increase produce storage life with the film being made from polyethylene at a thickness in the range 10 to 150 microns but more preferably in the range 25 to 50 microns with the film impregnated with Activated Earth particles with diameters ranging up to 75 microns, at a preferable concentration of 3% to 6% by weight of film, which absorb the deleterious gases surrounding the produce.
2. A plastic film as set forth in Claim 1 which has sufficient clarity to allow visual inspection of the produce to determine its freshness whilst wrapped in the bag.
3. A plastic film as set forth in Claim 1 that contains an Activated Earth consisting of a porous aluminium silicate capable of increasing the permeability of a given thickness of PE film to levels that allow fresh produce to interact with the film so as to regulate and control the atmosphere surrounding it.
AU62994/90A 1989-09-06 1990-09-06 Activated earth polyethylene film Ceased AU647410C (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU62994/90A AU647410C (en) 1989-09-06 1990-09-06 Activated earth polyethylene film
AU53997/94A AU649602B3 (en) 1989-09-06 1994-01-25 Activated earth polyethylene film

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AUPJ6167 1989-09-06
AUPJ616789 1989-09-06
AU62994/90A AU647410C (en) 1989-09-06 1990-09-06 Activated earth polyethylene film
PCT/AU1990/000400 WO1991003516A1 (en) 1989-09-06 1990-09-06 Activated earth polyethylene film

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU53997/94A Division AU649602B3 (en) 1989-09-06 1994-01-25 Activated earth polyethylene film

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU6299490A AU6299490A (en) 1991-04-08
AU647410B2 true AU647410B2 (en) 1994-03-24
AU647410C AU647410C (en) 1994-09-22

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2007016748A1 (en) 2005-08-11 2007-02-15 Lynden William Trickey Improvements in or relating to containers and permeable films
WO2011041479A1 (en) 2009-09-30 2011-04-07 Cellresin Technologies, Llc Packaging material such as film, fiber, woven and nonwoven fabric with adsorbancy

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4840823A (en) * 1986-02-19 1989-06-20 Kabushiki Kaisha Frontier Plastic film packaging material

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4840823A (en) * 1986-02-19 1989-06-20 Kabushiki Kaisha Frontier Plastic film packaging material

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2007016748A1 (en) 2005-08-11 2007-02-15 Lynden William Trickey Improvements in or relating to containers and permeable films
WO2011041479A1 (en) 2009-09-30 2011-04-07 Cellresin Technologies, Llc Packaging material such as film, fiber, woven and nonwoven fabric with adsorbancy

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU6299490A (en) 1991-04-08

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