A whole new look at micro-perfs for produce packs

A new way of micro-perforating PP film right in the produce packager’s plant is helping this Scottish firm sell more rutabagas in a consumer-friendly, microwavable format.

CONSUMER CONVENIENCE. Knowing that consumers were tired of peeling and cutting rutabagas, Drysdales does the peeling and cutting
CONSUMER CONVENIENCE. Knowing that consumers were tired of peeling and cutting rutabagas, Drysdales does the peeling and cutting

Drysdales of Scotland—a grower of Brussels sprouts, leeks, and rutabagas—has been quietly leading the way in its commercial applications of a new approach to modified atmosphere packaging of fresh-cut produce.

Like all marketers of fresh-cut produce, Drysdales seeks to create packages whose permeability is optimally matched with the respiration rate of the produce in the package. As long as just the right amount of gases is allowed to enter and exit the package, the produce stays fresh under refrigerated conditions for an optimal length of time.

Also like other fresh-cut produce marketers, Drysdales relies on laser micro-perforation of its packaging films to achieve the desired permeability. But Drysdales has pushed the envelope by doing its own micro-perforation in-house. Traditionally it’s done by a film converter. The produce marketers are responsible for knowing the respiration rate of produce to be packaged and communicating that information to the film converter. It’s the converter’s responsibility to micro-perforate the film to the produce marketer’s specification.

There is, however, a fly in the ointment where the above sequence is concerned. The thickness of the film being laser micro-perfed is not perfectly consistent. Minute though the variations might be, they lead to inconsistencies in film permeability because while the laser energy is constant, the thickness of film being perforated by the laser is not. When a section of film entering the laser perforation chamber is thicker than the nominal spec, the perforation that’s made will be smaller than it’s supposed to be, which in turn will lead to a permeability that is suboptimal and, consequently, shelf life that is suboptimal. When the film is thinner than the nominal spec, the laser energy makes a larger perf than it’s supposed to and, once again, permeability and shelf life are thrown off.

A solution to this seemingly inherent inaccuracy came to Drysdales a few years ago in the form of a company called PerfoTec and what it calls Automated OTR Control. It uses an online camera to capture an image of the perforations being made by a film converter. PerfoTec software calculates the amount of oxygen that can permeate those perforations and sends that data to a PLC. If the PLC detects a permeation rate that is too high or too low, it automatically signals the laser to adjust accordingly. The adjustment can be made within a package or two as long as packaging is taking place at conventional speeds.

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