Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5205503 Polymer Testing 2017 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Permeability of gases in polymers depends strongly upon the polymer structure, the gas type, as well as the conditions of temperature and film thickness. The in-use temperature and thickness of the polymer membrane can play the most important role on preservation and prolongation of food shelf-life. In this work the gas transmission parameters of six Bi-axially Oriented Polypropylene (BOPP) films were investigated as a function of temperature, gas type and thickness. O2, CO2, N2, N2O, C2H4, Air (79%N2/21%O2) and Modified Atmosphere (MA) of 79%N2O/21%O2 were used as test gas. In order to understand the kinetic of the process, by the activation energy determination, samples were tested at a different temperature, from 10 °C to 40 °C. Gas Transmission Rate (GTR), solubility (S) and diffusion (D) relationship was investigated. The gas/thickness/temperature correlation was reflected in the obtained perm-selectivity ratios and a good linear correlation was found only at 23 °C. Deviations recorded were attributed to temperature fluctuations. Gas transmission process follows the Arrhenius model while the solubility/diffusion process shows consistent deviation, correlated to the temperature and the thickness of the film. By Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) a different crystallinity percentage was recorded, whose influence was evidenced only in the sorption/diffusion processes. The melting temperature remained unchanged. FT-IR Spectroscopy was also carried out to confirm the morphology.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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