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Higher IQ packaging

From thwarting would-be counterfeiters to adding value through functionality, smart packaging keeps getting more intelligent.

Mortein brand electrostatically charged spray works without batteries to home in on flies.
Mortein brand electrostatically charged spray works without batteries to home in on flies.

What do talking pizza boxes, self-heating coffee packs, and electrostatically charged cosmetics have in common? All are examples of smart packaging, which is defined by industry expert Peter Harrop as “something that is more than simply using the package for its ages-old function of displaying a product, instructing you about it, and protecting it.”

As chairman of IDTechEx (Identification Technical Exchange), Harrop has been following smart packaging for the past six years and helped organize the first conference on the topic two years ago as well as last month’s conference in Orlando, FL. He says the term “smart packaging” has only come into popular use the past two years.

Harrop says that packaging is smart to the extent that it interacts with humans using mechanical, chemical, and electronic techniques. He calls this the “human interface,” and he believes there is tremendous pressure for an improved package/human interface via novel technologies. This need is perhaps greatest in the pharma category, but it extends across all consumer packaged goods.

The need is great in pharma largely due to the growing number of older consumers in society. Their physical limitations put them in a position where they sometimes need help in complying with a drug regimen. “Smart packaging will deliver the drug at the right time, or it will talk to a patient in a louder and louder voice to tell him to take the right amount,” says Harrop. “In other words, it will generally do what humans have done in the past.”

Rex the talking pill bottle from MediVox Rx is a good example (see www.packworld.com/go/c124). Another is Cerepak, which is an electronically-enhanced smart blister pack that aids patient compliance in clinical tests (see www.packworld.com/go/c125).

Pill bottles aren’t the only packages interfacing with humans these days. How about pizza boxes? Last fall, pizza boxes from Mangia Media spoke up for the first time. Mangia Media president Eric Cohen says that when the corrugated box is opened, a light-activated 1’’x2’’ pressure-sensitive voice chip delivers a 12- to 15-second message. Affixed to the lid’s underside near the hinge, the devices cost $2 each, paid for by Turner Broadcasting Service to promote its football programming. Thousands of the talking TBS boxes were delivered in 18 select markets nationwide.

“While this may seem a frivolous sort of smart packaging, it’s a sign of the times,” observes Harrop. “Besides, some things debut as a bit of a lark, then find more serious applications later on.”

Brand enhancement

Harrop sees enormous potential for smart packaging in brand enhancement. What better way to separate one’s product from the pack? A good example, he says, are “widgets,” the pressurized capsules in beer cans that release nitrogen-induced microbubbles when the can is opened. The bubbles create a head of foam to mimic freshly poured draft brew. “The device is heavily patented, so supermarkets can’t easily ‘rip it off,’” Harrop notes. “It has done wonders for sales of Diageo’s Guinness Irish Stout, among other brews. A widget has even been used in children’s sodas.”

Another type of brand enhancement is for self-heating or self-chilling containers. The most recent example of the former is OnTech Delaware’s new self-heating single-serve coffee container (see photo p.68).

Harrop says self-heating containers have already met with some success, mainly because the basic technology is relatively simple. He adds that there are larger challenges in self-cooling containers, which are akin to small, pressurized refrigerators. But if a few technology hurdles can be overcome, says Harrop, self-chilling containers will be a huge market.

While examples are rare, we did uncover the self-cooling 5-L keg that Kirin Brewery of Japan tested in mid-2003 and was planning to introduce in 2004. It employs a double-walled, low-pressure design. When released, water contained within the low-pressure outer chamber begins to evaporate, thus providing the chilling effect. The keg takes 90 minutes for the beer—contained within the inner chamber—to be chilled down to a frosty 45ºF and will hold this temperature for up to 12 hours.

“The technical challenge for both self-heating and self-chilling containers is that on very hot or very cold days, they don’t necessarily heat or chill to the right temperature,” Harrop says.

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