MESSUNG SERVO & MOTION CONTROL AUTOMATION FOR VFFS MACHINES
Vertical
Form, Fill and Seal packaging machines (VFFS) are used in the food packaging industry and consumer
products industry for a wide variety of packaging applications. Various
products like salt, tea, sugar, spices, snack foods, wafers, detergent, candies,
milk, sauces are placed into formed pouches and then sealed. The pouch material
is flexible and typically heat-sealable plastic. Paper is also used and sealed
by glue.
The VFFS machine can be
divided into
four functional areas:
1. Mixing, Weighing, Dosing
2. Forming
3. Feeding, Aligning,
Registration
4. Closing, Sealing, Cutting.
Typically,
Fully automatic VFFS machines require
limited operator intervention. The operator need only replenish product by
loading supply hoppers or changing packaging film drums. For machines that are
semi-automatic, operators are required to perform part of the packaging
operation.
VFFS machines can be intermittent or continuous motion. Intermittent motion machines operate on the
principle that vertical bag seals are made when the film is moving and
horizontal seals occur when the film stops. Intermittent motion machines offer
a suitable solution for applications where speed is not absolutely paramount.
Continuous motion machines operate on the principle that
both vertical and horizontal bag seals are made when the film is in motion.
These primarypackaging machines operate at the highest attainable speeds and
require a reciprocating sealing jaw motion format.
There are two major process advantages for a continuous motion
machine over an intermittent type:
• Faster cycles times. On a continuous motion machine the cross
jaw moves with the film and can perform the horizontal sealing application
while the film is still moving. The typical intermittent machine operates at 60
to 80 packs per minute (ppm) maximum, while a continuous machine can operate up
to speeds of 180 ppm. The highest machine speed attainable is determined by the
weighing mechanism.
• Control over the cross jaw along the
vertical plane provides additional bag making possibilities.
Generic VFFS Machine Process
A roll of film is unwound and formed
into a tube over a forming collar. A vertical overlap seal is applied to the
tube by the vertical sealing bars. A bottom seal is created by the horizontal
sealing bars in the cross jaws.
The formed pouch is then filled with
correct amount of product while the film tube is being fed by the film
transport belts. Often a precision scale or an auger ensures that the proper
amount of product is placed in the pouch in a consistent manner.
After the correct length of film tube
has been fed, a top seal of the filled pouch is created by the horizontal
sealing bars, while the filled pouch is cut from the descending film tube by a
knife in the cross jaws.
If the film is pre-printed, a registration sensor is
added to the system to correct the film position in order to maintain the
correct print position relative to the end of the pouch. The bottom seal
creation of the empty pouch, top seal creation of the filled pouch and cutting
of the filled pouch all occur at the same time.
1. Film Unwind
Film unwind is responsible for unwinding film
into the machine, providing operator ease-of-splice (optional), roll change-out
features (optional) and film tension. Many unwind sections are static mandrel
(un-powered) types and use either a pneumatic brake or friction brake to
control unwind action and provide applicable film tension. Although,
occasionally the unwind mandrel will require VFD, Servo or DC gear motor type
control.
In the unwind section often there are roll
change features, such as dual mandrels, roll lifts and vacuum splice bars. A
vacuum splice bar is a horizontal bar with a vacuum manifold built in and a
small horizontal slot (suitable to accommodate a utility knife blade) through
the middle of the bar. The unwind section will also include the film tension
and / or dancer. The dancer can provide a speed feedback (analog or discrete)
to the unwind control circuit, as well as a film accumulator area for bag index
purposes, especially on an intermittent type machine. Additional options
possible for the unwind section are functions like zipper applicators and
breather inserters.
2.
Film Registration
This section includes the film registration sensor and placement
adjustment mechanisms. The film registration is used on film with graphics or
pre-printed information. Printing process variations, film stretch, film
slippage during acceleration and other factors can allow the graphics to drift
away from ideal cosmetic / marketing placement on the finished bag. The
registration mark provides a method to make minor adjustments to the actual end
placement of the seal and cut on a bag. When there is no printing or graphics
on the bag, the process is defined solely on length. Also located in the film
registration section, it is common to have the film alignment / tracking
adjustment mechanisms. These are used to ensure the film stays in the correct
place on the forming tube.
3.
Forming Tube
The forming tube mechanics are often unique
designs for different machines, films and products. However, the general
description is an inverted cone with radius corners. This cone and the correct
diameter tube (shapes can differ from round for special package needs) are
combined to form the flat film into a tubular or tunnel type shape, which ends
up being wrapped around the external surface of the actual forming tube. In
order to provide extra film for the long or "back" seal, the width of
the film will be greater than the circumference of the forming tube. The long
seal is formed by several different heater mechanical configurations that are
typically placed on the front of the forming tube and are eight to twelve
inches in length. Linear film speed and type are factors in determining the
correct minimum length of the long seal. There are two main types of long seal.
The first type of long seal is the static bar, which is a heated
bar with heating element and thermocouple. This bar will be engaged into the
film and forming tube only while the film is in motion with slight timing
delays to prohibit melting of the film when stationary. There can also be two
bars, but placed where they are facing one another in a manner to allow the
long seal flaps to be placed in between the two bars. This method is used
instead of the overlapping method used for single bar configurations. This can
provide stronger seals / seams and the product ambient temperature (i.e.
forming tube temperature) will have less of a factor on the loop control.
The second type of long seal is the dynamic belt, a single-heated
stainless steel belt with two pulleys. A heated plate transfers the heat to the
stainless steel band or belt and is engaged into the film and forming tube
while the film is in motion. Like the static bar type, there can also be dual
dynamic belts / bands. The benefit of dynamic belts is they can move with the
film and also be adjusted to operate faster than the base film speed or even
slower. These are process decisions made based on many product, machine and
material factors.
4.
Film Pull Belt(s)
There are typically two film pull belts—right
side and left side. They are typically vacuum belts, which allows for better
gripping control in dusty, high moisture or cold operating environments. The
belt mechanics are often powered by VFD motors with encoder feedback, servo
axes or perhaps stepper motors. Occasionally there will be only one motor that
is mechanically transferred to the separate belts, but the general practice is
to eliminate the additional special mechanical costs in lieu of the additional,
but more flexible, controls cost. The film pull belts provide the actual force
to pull the film through the machine and are used to maintain good film tension
on the forming plow and tube. Often code is used to monitor position and
velocity error to ensure that slight mechanical differences are not allowing
one side to pull more than the other.
5.
Cross (Sealing) Jaw
The cross jaw is responsible for three major functions—to seal the
top of the previously filled bag, to create the bottom seal for the soon to be
filled bag and to cut or separate the completed bag from the bottom of the new
bag.
The front and back cross jaws operate as a pair. The front and
back jaw will both have a top seal area (horizontally) and a bottom seal area.
Additionally, either the front (typically due to maintenance reasons) or the
back jaw set will have a knife which runs horizontally in the middle of the jaw
face. This knife is recessed and is activated by a pneumatic actuator. The
opposite jaw set will contain the anvil for the knife.
Each jaw will have one or two heating
elements as well as a thermocouple for temperature control. Additionally, the
cross jaw section can have options like product wipers, bag deflators, bag
hanger punch, gusset (single & double) creation mechanics and flat bottom
bag mechanics to name a few. Cross jaws are typically configured mechanically
where the front and back jaws interpose each other and therefore meet in the
vertical centerline of the bag and forming tunnel. However, there are also versions
where either the front or back jaw is stationary and the opposite jaw is
moveable. Servo drive/motor combinations, VFD drives with induction motors and
high power pneumatic cylinder actuators are used to close the jaws and provide
the necessary sealing pressure to provide a suitable bag seal. It is very
common for the jaws to contain built-in springs to allow for some closure error
as well as a default force. Often, position and torque data are monitored for
the cross jaws. This data can easily be used to detect product in the seal or
between the jaws. Anytime there is product in the seal, these two bags should
be discarded due to potential seal / seam leakage.
The previous sections are typical for an intermittent VFFS
machine; however a continuous machine will often contain a section called the
rotary or vertical jaw, depending on the bagger type.
6.
Rotary Jaw
The first type of continuous bagger is the rotary / "D"
jaw. For a rotary type bagger, the horizontal plane motion for the front and
back cross jaws is replaced with a rotary type motion. This is accomplished
with special mechanisms, orbital gearboxes and/or four-bar type linkages. In
general each jaw is attached between two gears. Each jaw end gear is actuated
by a driving gear. Along with some orientation linkages, these jaws will
operate in a “mirrored” fashion so the jaws maintain the same distance to the vertical
plane as they rotate in a top-to-bottom and around fashion. The main benefit of
a continuous type bagger over the intermittent is that since the cross jaw is
now moving along the vertical plane as well as the horizontal plane, the
sealing process can occur without stopping the film completely.
7. Vertical Jaw
The second type of continuous bagger is the
box or square jaw type. This differs from the rotary jaw in that there are now
two mechanical movers for the overall cross jaw - one is the horizontal-only
plane and the other is for the vertical-only plane. Although this adds
increased controls and mechanical costs, it can also provide additional bag
making process options, longer bags with fewer constraints and more control for
product sweeping type functions. Mechanically, the cross jaw mechanics and
motor are contained on a carriage. This carriage is controlled and moved along
the vertical plane via the vertical mechanics and motor.
v Machine Speed
The speed of the VFFS machine is the rate at
which it is able to (1) form the pouch (bag, sachet, etc.); (2) fill it with
product; (3) seal it; (4) cut it; and (5) transfer the package for shipment or
further end-of-line packaging such as a case packer, over wrapper etc. The
speed of the machine is one of the main attributes in many end users’ buying
criteria. Machine builders will design their machines to operate at the highest
speed possible.
v Challenges
1.
How to
design the mechanics of the machine to operate at high speed and maintain the
correct tension of the film feed in order to maintain the quality of the
packaging.
2.
How to
position the film accurately based on eye mark registration.
3.
How to
design the optimum sequence of machine operation.
Refer to the timing diagram below for an example of a Form, Fill
and Seal operation in intermittent duty cycle. This is an example of typical
VFFS machine with an auger screw filling system.
Filler Types:
1.
Auger:
Auger is screw feeder generally driven by Servo Motor. Motor Rotation defines
material loaded in the Pouch. This is suitable for Powder, Grains, Chips.
2.
CUP
Feeder: This is Multi-head feeder. Suitable for high speed
Machines, where the material is ready to be dropped. This is also equipped with
weighing mechanism. It has separate control mechanism which handshakes with
Machine Controller.This mechanism also supports both volumetric & weigh
feeding.
3.
Piston
type Feeding: This is suitable for generally Liquid and
viscous material like sauce, jam. Piston is driven by Servo Motor. Suction
stroke is used for loading the material and Discharge for dispensing it in the
Sachet. It has suction and discharge valves.
v End Users expect VFFS to
be:
1. Productive: Optimize packaging process
to achieve maximum possible machine speed; maximize throughput with highest
quality; high accuracy and shorten recovery time.
2. High performance: Satisfy strict
accuracy requirements at high machine speeds and variable bag lengths.
3. Flexible: Release the burden of
manual adjustment of film registration sensor position by introducing software
adjustment scheme; improve changeover time.
4. Easy to use: In spite of machine
complexity, machines must be easy to maintain and operate.
v Machine Builders expect
VFFS to be:
1. Modular and scalable: Mix and match
VFFS machine functions that are ideally suited for specific customer
applications; customized functions to develop a new machine that is localized
to market demands.
2. Standard: Develop and document
mechanisms common to VFFS machines that can be easily redeployed with minimum
modifications, despite different machine sections/conditions that result in
more complicated sequencing and interlocking, so that machine design and
development time can be reduced.
3. Cost-effective: Machine
integration, mechanical, electrical optimization and wiring start up time costs
are reduced.
v
Our Sigmatek Solution:
1.
S-Dias CPU CP102 with Varan Port, Ethernet
Ports, with modular construction is best fit above application.
2.
Varan Port supports Motion and I/Os.
3.
Lasal Class Engineering Platform.
4.
Safety CPU Enhancement.
v VARAN Bus:
1. HARD REAL-TIME Bus cycle times under 100 µs / Jitter less than 100
ns
2. FLEXIBLE NETWORK TOPOLOGIES Modular machine design with star,
line, tree topologies
3. SIMPLE AND ECONOMIC Protocol completely implemented in the
hardware, use of inexpensive FPGAs for managers and clients
4. OPEN STANDARD The manufacture-independent VARAN Bus User
Organization holds the rights to the open technology
5. AND MUCH MORE Automatic addressing, Direct Access, multi-manager
capable, CanOpenimage
ENGINEERING TOOL - LASAL
- Object-oriented
programming and project design
- Visualisation
- Drive
technology
- Safety
configuration
- Tools for
service, remote maintenance,
updates and data exchange
HOT FACTS
ALL-IN-ONE
- ONE
toolset for all development phases; short time-to-market
OBJECT-ORIENTED
- High
modularity and reusability
GRAPHIC
REPRESENTATION - High clarity
READY-TO-USE
FUNCTION COMPONENTS - Reduce software development up to 70%
MOTION CONTROL
High-performance, flexible & economic
complete solution
for highly dynamic and exact servo applications: drives, motors,
gears, software
All configuration data and parameters
centrally in the control-
initial start-up, service and exchange simplified
Perfect communication connection to the CPU via real-time
Ethernet VARAN bus
HOT FACTS
COMPACT DRIVES - save space in the control cabinet
COMFORTABLE - library with predefined motion templates
FLEXIBLY - control different motors, standard feedback systems
ABOUT MESSUNG SERVO & MOTION CONTROL AUTOMATION
Messung
is Master Distributor – India for Sigmatek, Austria. Together, Messung-Sigmatek
deliver fully integrated, future-oriented servo & motion control solutions
in India, incorporating programmable logic controllers, motion control systems,
drive products, HMIs and SCADA, and much more - to bring flexibility,
consistency and long-term availability for packaging machines.
Messung is the pioneer of the PLC, one of the leading industrial
automation system integrators and PLCautomation companies in India, providing cutting-edge industrial automation
& control solutions. With four decades of experience in the industry and a
history of continuous innovation, global partnerships and pro-active R&D,
Messung is the ideal partner for machine automation & control solutions in
India.
Messung partners with automatic packaging system
builders to create tailored solutions that enhance the performance and value of
their machines. Messung’s automation and controls solutions can help automate
single machines or complete factory lines, ensuring operational accuracy,
repeatability and stability.
Comments
Post a Comment