Plastic-coated paper
Plastic-coated paper is a coated or laminated composite material made of paper or paperboard with a plastic layer or treatment on a surface. This type of coated paper is most used in the food and drink packaging industry.
Function[]
The plastic is used to improve functions such as water resistance, tear strength, abrasion resistance, ability to be heat sealed, etc.
Some papers are laminated by heat or adhesive to a plastic film to provide barrier properties in use. Other papers are coated with a melted plastic layer: curtain coating is one common method.
Printed papers commonly have a top coat of a protective polymer to seal the print, provide scuff resistance, and sometimes gloss. Some coatings are processed by UV curing for stability.
Components[]
Most plastic coatings in the packaging industry are polyethylene (LDPE) and to a much lesser degree PET. Liquid packaging board cartons typically contain 74% paper, 22% plastic and 4% aluminum. Frozen food cartons are usually made up of an 80% paper and 20% plastic combination.[1]
Applications[]
The most notable applications for plastic-coated paper are single use (disposable food packaging):[2]
- Liquid packaging board for milk and juice folding cartons
- hot and cold paper drinking cups
- paper plates
- frozen food containers
- plastic-lined paper bags
- take-out containers
- waterproof paper (also multi-use)
- heat sealable paper
- barrier packaging
End of life and environmental issues[]
Plastic coatings or layers usually make paper recycling more difficult. Some plastic laminations can be separated from the paper during the recycling process, allowing filtering out the film.[3][4] If the coated paper is shredded prior to recycling, the degree of separation depends on the particular process. Some plastic coatings are water dispersible to aid recycling and repulping. Special recycling processes are available to help separate plastics.[5][6][7] Some plastic coated papers are incinerated for heat or landfilled rather than recycled.
Most plastic coated papers are not suited to composting.[8] but do variously end up in compost bins, sometimes even legally so. In this case, the remains of the non-biodegradable plastics components form part of the global microplastics waste problem.[9]
See also[]
- Paper pallet
- Folding boxboard
- Food can
- Lamination paper
- Plastic wrap
- Plastic bottle
- Disposable
- Wood-plastic composite
References[]
- ^ "Recycling Mystery: Milk and Juice Cartons". earth911.com.
- ^ https://ecocycle.org/files/pdfs/microplastics_in_compost_presentation.pdf[bare URL PDF]
- ^ Jensen, Timothy (April 1999). "Packaging Tapes:To Recycle of Not". Adhesives and Sealants Council. Archived from the original on 2007-11-09. Retrieved 2007-11-06.
- ^ Gruenewald, L. E.; Sheehan, R. L. (1997). "Consider box closures when considering recycling". J. Applied Manufacturing Systems. St Thomas Technology Press. 9 (1): 27–29. ISSN 0899-0956.
- ^ 5084135 A US US 5084135 A, /Brooks, Joe, "Recycling plastic coated paper product waste", published Jan 28, 1992
- ^ 5,277,758 US US 5,277,758, Brooks, J G, "Method for recycling plastic coated paper product waste and polymeric film JG Brooks, BD Goforth, CL Goforth… - US Patent 5,277,758, 1994", published Jan 11, 1994
- ^ 5865947 A US US 5865947 A, Markham, L D, "Method for recycling mixed wastepaper including plastic-containing paper and ink printed paper", published Feb 2, 1999
- ^ R. McKinney: Technology of Paper Recycling, 1995, p. 351. ISBN 9780751400175
- ^ "Should Plastic-Coated Paper Products be Allowed in Materials Collected for Composting ?" (PDF). Eco-Cycle, Inc. and Woods End Laboratories, Inc.
External links[]
- "Hidden Plastic". myplasticfreelife.com. November 2, 2007.
- "Coated & Laminated Paper Manufacturing in the US: Market Research Report". ibisworld.com.
- Composite materials
- Packaging materials
- Coated paper
- Plastics and the environment
- Environmental impact of products