Inspection Technologies Keep Quality High in Packaging Systems
Feb. 24, 2005
No matter how much time, money and imagination you put into formulating and marketing your products, failed packaging can obliterate all your best efforts. Stale, spoiled or contaminated product almost certainly spells disaster. Under-filled packaging, leakers, cracked or dented containers, improperly applied closures and out-of-position or misprinted labels all do their share to erode consumer confidence in your product.Quality control on the packaging line is crucial and should never be underestimated.Protecting the quality and safety of your packaged products is paramount to your marketing and financial success. Adjusting and expanding packaging options to meet consumer expectations are keys to maintaining or building your position in the marketplace.So as food and beverage companies incorporate new packaging concepts, they need to continually re-evaluate how these changes affect quality control procedures and how best to optimize packaging QC results on a consistent, cost-efficient basis.Iron checking for ironMetal detectors have become a front-line defense in packaging quality control. With quantum leaps in sensitivity, they can now detect pieces of ferrous and non-ferrous metal much smaller than previous generations of the machines could. But they still cannot detect all metal. They also are handicapped by product or packaging that includes metal.Typical metal detector applications in the food industry included bakery (everything from bulk ingredients to finished packaged products), dairy products (which get into the issue of wet products), meat and poultry processing (which require washdown products) and snack foods/bulk solids, according to Fortress Technology Inc. (www.fortresstechnology.com), Scarborough, Ontario.For instance, food processors who use bulk bags of ingredients such as flour, sugar or spices and seasonings need assurance that these ingredients are free of metal contaminants. Fortress' Phantom metal detection systems inspect 50-100 lb. bags, finding particles as small as 2 mm. Metal detection systems need to be sited at the end of main production flow, which places them in or just ahead of the packaging department. Conveyor-based detectors must include the following, according to supplier Loma Systems Inc. (www.loma.com), Carol Stream, Ill., for the most efficient performance:
- An automatic rejection system.
- A lockable box to receive the rejected product.
- A full enclosure between the search head and the rejection bin.
- A device to confirm that the contaminated products have been successfully rejected into the bin.
- An automatic belt stop failsafe system, to activate if there is air pressure failure, a detector fault, failure of the reject system or when the reject product collection bin is full.
- Label presence and skew
- Cap presence and position
- Package integrity
- Print presence verification
- Print quality inspection
- Date and lot code verification
- Safety seal presence
- Fill level detection
- 1D and 2D code reading
- Insert presence verification
- Package color and shape sorting
- Bottle counting
Antibody-based inks spell food safety Toxin Guard, a patented package printing technology developed by Toxin Alert Corp. (www.toxinalert.com), Jackson, Miss., provides consumers with a visual indicator to gauge freshness of products with moisture content. The company prints flexible polymer films using inks embedded with antibody-based biochemical sensors that detect mold or mildew in the packaging. The inks employed to print "Best Used By" dates change color if mold or mildew is present. Already being commercialized in Europe for meat and poultry product packaging, the ink technology can be customized with specific antibodies to meet specific product needs -- including seafoods, fruits and vegetables. Research is under way with the University of Southern Mississippi (Hattiesburg) to develop consumer product packaging applications that could detect and signal the presence of pathogens such as E.coli, listeria and salmonella. Seafood processor Port Graham Corp., Port Graham, Alaska, recently won a contract to supply the armed forces with smoked fish products packaged in films incorporating Toxin Guard ink technology. |
Latest from Plant Operations and Engineering
Latest from Plant Operations and Engineering