New line boasts new sterilizing technology

Adelholzener of Germany is leading the charge when it comes to popularizing one-way plastic beverage bottles in a region that has long resisted this package format.

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From a purely political standpoint, the use of one-way PET bottles in Germany is fraught with complications. Envirocrats of all stripes frown on anything other than returnable bottles, either glass or plastic, because they think that’s what’s best for the environment.

But while politicians dawdle, German consumers have made up their own minds. They want one-way PET bottles to be part of the packaging mix. Ernst Fertinger, director for quality, environment, and technology at Franken Brunnen, a leading German beverage marketer in Bavaria, puts it this way:

“Politics usually follows the market, not the other way around. Deposit or no deposit, there will be a market for nonreturnable PET bottles” in Germany.

Helping this market to grow is Adelholzener Alpenquellen GmbH of Siegsdorf, Germany. Nestled at the foot of the Alps, this bottler of mineral water installed a first-of-its kind aseptic filling line for one-way PET bottles last November. Supplied by Krones (Franklin, WI), the line is used to bottle water and fruit juice in three sizes.

“There’s clearly potential in one-way PET bottles,” says technical engineer Volker Marquardt. “We wanted to take advantage of it.”

Adelholzener buys preforms from an outside vendor, but stretch/blow-molding of bottles filled on the new line is all done in-house. Upstream from the filling line sits a Krones 16-station Contiform blow-molding machine.

“We didn’t like the idea of transporting a lot of air,” says Marquardt in explaining the firm’s decision to make its own bottles. “Second, we didn’t want to devote a lot of space to storage of empty bottles. Third, we eliminated the need for an unscrambling machine. And finally, there is less opportunity for bottles to get contaminated if we make our own just before filling.”

366 bpm

Marquardt reports the Contiform system has no problem keeping pace with the downstream filling equipment, which typically runs 0.5-L bottles at 366 bpm.

Using aseptic filling equipment for juice-based drinks is logical enough. Flash pasteurizing kills naturally occurring bacteria in the juice to render it shelf stable, and aseptic packaging ensures that a sterile product goes into a sterile container. But why aseptically fill water? Because, says Marquardt, the best way to ensure that no contamination from the environment offsets the taste of the spring-fed water is to fill sterile containers. This is especially true, says Marquardt, with microbiologically sensitive still water. All product filled on the line is given a 9-mo “best-if-used-by” date. A laser coder from Domino Amjet (Gurnee, IL) puts this date on the label.

Not only does the line run a variety of water and juice drinks, it handles three different bottle sizes: 0.5-, 0.75-, and 1.5-L. According to Marquardt, if the same product remains in production but a bottle size change is called for, it takes about one hour to change the molds on the Contiform. If the product is changed, about four hours are required for purging, cleaning, and sterilizing of the filling machine. The line runs two shifts daily, says Marquardt, and whenever possible, changeovers are scheduled before or after these shifts.

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