US20120034402A1 - Removable Adhesive Label Containing Polymeric Film Layer Having Water Affinity - Google Patents

Removable Adhesive Label Containing Polymeric Film Layer Having Water Affinity Download PDF

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Publication number
US20120034402A1
US20120034402A1 US13/262,460 US201013262460A US2012034402A1 US 20120034402 A1 US20120034402 A1 US 20120034402A1 US 201013262460 A US201013262460 A US 201013262460A US 2012034402 A1 US2012034402 A1 US 2012034402A1
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United States
Prior art keywords
film
label
film layer
layer
container
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US13/262,460
Inventor
Kevin O. Henderson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Avery Dennison Corp
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Avery Dennison Corp
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Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Avery Dennison Corp filed Critical Avery Dennison Corp
Priority to US13/262,460 priority Critical patent/US20120034402A1/en
Publication of US20120034402A1 publication Critical patent/US20120034402A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T156/00Adhesive bonding and miscellaneous chemical manufacture
    • Y10T156/11Methods of delaminating, per se; i.e., separating at bonding face
    • Y10T156/1111Using solvent during delaminating [e.g., water dissolving adhesive at bonding face during delamination, etc.]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49815Disassembling
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/13Hollow or container type article [e.g., tube, vase, etc.]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/13Hollow or container type article [e.g., tube, vase, etc.]
    • Y10T428/1352Polymer or resin containing [i.e., natural or synthetic]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/13Hollow or container type article [e.g., tube, vase, etc.]
    • Y10T428/1352Polymer or resin containing [i.e., natural or synthetic]
    • Y10T428/139Open-ended, self-supporting conduit, cylinder, or tube-type article
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/28Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and having an adhesive outermost layer
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/28Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and having an adhesive outermost layer
    • Y10T428/2839Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and having an adhesive outermost layer with release or antistick coating
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/28Web or sheet containing structurally defined element or component and having an adhesive outermost layer
    • Y10T428/2848Three or more layers

Definitions

  • the present invention involves an adhesive label that contains a polymeric film that has water affinity and a related labeled container.
  • the label is useful in various labeling applications and especially in adhesive labeling applications involving reusable and recyclable containers.
  • Labels are applied to numerous articles of commerce to convey information regarding a manufacturer and a product.
  • Articles of commerce include plastic, paper, metal and glass containers for a multitude of consumer and industrial products such as for example bottled beverage industry products.
  • a particularly demanding labeling application is for reusable and recyclable beverage bottles, especially for the bottled beer industry, where the label requirements generally include high clarity visual aesthetics, abrasion resistance during processing and handling of beverage bottles, resistance to any deleterious effects due to moisture during cold storage or a pasteurization process, and removability of the label from the bottle during a washing process in a warm or hot washing fluid such as for example a 50 to 90° C. aqueous caustic solution where the removed label does not clog the washing process equipment.
  • Labels currently employed for reusable and recyclable beverage bottles include paper labels and stretched, thermally shrinkable polymeric labels. Paper labels lack high clarity visual aesthetics. Stretched, thermally shrinkable polymeric labels upon removal tend to curl up tightly into a needle shape which can clog washing process equipment. Labels meeting the requirements for the reusable and recyclable bottled beverage industry are desirable.
  • An exemplary embodiment of the present invention is a label where the label comprises (a) a film having a first surface and a second surface and comprising a first film layer, and (b) an adhesive layer having a first surface and a second surface and comprising an adhesive where the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of the film, where (c) (i) the first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer where the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C., and a tensile modulus of the film in a machine direction after heating is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air.
  • the first film layer has an absolute areal dimensional change (American Society for Testing and Materials, hereinafter “ASTM” D1204) of at least 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • the first film layer has a water absorption (ASTM D570) of at least 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the film is a monolayered film.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the film is a multilayered film.
  • the first film layer comprises two or more layers where each of the two or more layers comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer where the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 100° C. and a tensile modulus of the film in a machine direction after heating which is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air.
  • each of the two or more layers has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • each of the two or more layers has an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of at least about 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, and each of the two or more layers has a water absorption (ASTM D570) of at least 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • the film comprises a second film layer where the second film layer comprises one layer or two or more layers where the one layer or each of the two or more layers comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer and the one layer or each of the two or more layers has a property selected from the group consisting of a tensile modulus of the film in a machine direction after heating which is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air, a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than about 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, a water absorption (ASTM D570) of less than about 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours, and a combination of the foregoing properties.
  • the label comprises a release liner having a first surface and a second surface wherein the first surface of the release liner is releasably attached to the second surface of the adhesive layer.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is a labeled container that includes the above described label and a container where (i) the label is attached to the container having a horizontal axis where the second surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to an outer surface of the container, (ii) the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container.
  • the label is removable from the container after immersion in a liquid where the temperature of the liquid is at least 50° C. and the label detaches from the container.
  • FIG. 1A is a sectional view of a label containing two layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1B is a sectional view of a label containing three layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1C is a sectional view of a label containing three layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1D is a sectional view of a label containing four layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1E is a sectional view of a label containing four layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 2 is a perspective view of a first film layer of a label showing a machine direction and a transverse direction.
  • FIG. 3 is a sectional view of a label containing a release liner according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a label attached to a cylindrically shaped container according to a preferred embodiment.
  • a label 10 , 20 , 30 , 40 or 50 of the present invention is useful in commercial labeling applications that include labeling of articles of commerce such as for example plastic, paper, metal and glass containers 72 for a multitude of consumer and industrial products.
  • the container can be any shaped container including a bottle, a jug, a jar or a drum.
  • the container is a glass beverage bottle having a cylindrically shaped body that includes a beer bottle.
  • the label, as described hereinbelow, on a labeled container has high clarity visual aesthetics, abrasion resistance during processing and handling of the container, resistance to any deleterious effects due to moisture during cold storage or a pasteurization process, and removability of the label from the container during a washing process in a warm or hot washing fluid that includes a 50 to 100° C. water bath or aqueous caustic solution where the removed label does not clog the washing process equipment.
  • the labels 10 , 20 , 30 , 40 and 50 of the present invention comprise a film that comprises a first film layer 12 .
  • the first film layer has a relatively high loss in tensile modulus when heated in warm or hot air or when immersed in a warm or hot washing fluid compared to the tensile modulus of the first film layer in ambient air.
  • the first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • Ambient air can have a relative humidity ranging from 0 to 100% and typically ranging from 30 to 70%, 40 to 60%, or 45 to 55%.
  • the first film layer 12 has three directions or dimensions to include a machine direction (MD) and a transverse direction (TD) where the machine direction is the direction that the first film layer is advanced during its manufacture and the transverse direction is the direction that is normal or perpendicular to the machine direction and the machine and transverse directions lie in the largest areal plane of the first film layer.
  • the third direction or dimension of the first film layer is its thickness which is perpendicular to the areal plane containing the machine and transverse directions.
  • the first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction of less than 945 MPa (megapascals), less than 900 MPa, less than 830 MPa, less than 715 MPa, or less than 400 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • the first film layer has a relatively high two-dimensional change in area as measured in the machine direction and the transverse direction after immersion in warm or hot water.
  • the first film layer has an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of at least 4%, at least 4.5%, at least 4.9%, or at least 6% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • the absolute areal dimensional change can be a shrinkage which results in a reduction in the area or can be an expansion which results in an increase in area. In embodiments the absolute areal dimensional change is a shrinkage or an expansion.
  • the first film layer has an affinity for water in terms of water absorption which is relatively high. In embodiments the first film layer has a water absorption (ASTM D570) after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours on a weight basis of at least 1.7%, at least 2%, at least 2.1%, at least 2.3%, or at least 3.7%.
  • the first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer.
  • the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C., 40 to 95° C., 45 to 90° C., or 45 to 75° C. The glass transition temperature can be measured using a differential scanning calorimeter.
  • the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of an olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer, an aromatic polyamide, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer, an aromatic polyamide derived from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aromatic diamine, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer of the first film layer includes at least one copolymer of an olefin monomer containing 2 to 12 carbon atoms and a vinyl alcohol monomer.
  • the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer can be prepared by polymerizing at least one olefin monomer and a vinyl acetate monomer using a free radical catalyst to form an olefin-vinyl acetate copolymer which is then hydrolyzed to form the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer.
  • the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer is an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer.
  • the olefin content of the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer on a mole basis ranges from 5% to 90%, 12% to 73%, 20% to 55%, or 25% to 50%.
  • an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 40 to 90° C., 45 to 85° C., 47 to 80° C., or 60 to 80° C.
  • Useful olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymers include for example the ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer EVAL® resins from EVAL Americas of Houston, Tex.
  • the aromatic polyamide of the first film layer includes polymers containing only repeating aromatic groups or containing both repeating aromatic groups and repeating aliphatic groups.
  • Aromatic polyamides that contain only repeating aromatic groups include polyamides that can be prepared by a condensation of at least one aromatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic polyamine.
  • Aromatic polyamides that contain both repeating aromatic groups and repeating aliphatic groups include polyamides that can be prepared by a condensation of at least one aliphatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic polyamine or by a condensation of at least one aromatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aliphatic polyamine or by a condensation involving mixtures of three or four reactants selected from the group consisting of at least one aliphatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aromatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aliphatic polyamine, and at least one aromatic polyamine.
  • the aromatic polyamide includes polyamides that can be prepared from a condensation of at least one aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic diamine, from a condensation of at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aliphatic diamine, from a condensation of at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic diamine, or from a condensation involving mixtures of three or four reactants selected from the group consisting of at least one aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aliphatic diamine, and at least one aromatic diamine.
  • the aromatic polyamide is derived from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aromatic diamine.
  • an aromatic polyamide has a glass transition temperature in the range of 65 to 105° C., 70 to 95° C., or 70 to 90° C.
  • Useful aromatic polyamides include for example the aromatic polyamide MXD6 resins from Mitsubishi Gas Chemical American, Inc. of New York, N.Y. where the aromatic polyamide MXD6 resins are derived from meta-xylylenediamine and adipic acid or an adipic acid halide.
  • the film or a film layer or film layers of the film, to include the first film layer, can contain one or more additives to improve processing during film manufacture and during conversion to a label and to improve label end use performance.
  • the additives include a nucleating agent, an antiblocking agent, a processing aid, a slip agent, an antistatic agent, a pigment, a cavitating agent, an inorganic filler, a heat stabilizer, an antioxidant, a flame retardant, an acid acceptor, a visible and/or ultraviolet light stabilizer, or a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing additives.
  • the additives can be present in the above described thermoplastic polymers as supplied by a vendor or can be introduced into the film or a film layer as an additive concentrate where the additive is present generally in a relatively large amount of 2 to 90% by weight, depending on its use, in the concentrate with a thermoplastic polymer carrier.
  • the additives depending on their use, can be present in the film or a film layer from 0.001% to 90% by weight. Additives for use in the film or a film layer are further described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,821,592 to Rodick and U.S. Pat. No. 7,217,463 to Henderson.
  • the first film layer is monolayered and has only one layer.
  • the first film layer is multilayered and has two or more layers.
  • the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer where the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 100° C., 40 to 95° C., 45 to 90° C., or 45 to 75° C., the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C.
  • ASTM D882 tensile modulus
  • the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of at least 4%, at least 4.5%, at least 4.9%, or at least 6% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has a water absorption (ASTM D570) on a weight basis of at least 1.7%, at least 2%, at least 2.1%, at least 2.3%, or at least 3.7% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • ASTM D570 water absorption
  • the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction of less than 945 MPa, less than 900 MPa, less than 830 MPa, less than 715 MPa, or less than 400 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • the first film layer as described hereinabove, can contain one or more other thermoplastic polymers provided that the first film layer maintains its tensile modulus and dimensional change and water absorption properties as described hereinabove.
  • the labels 20 , 30 , 40 and 50 of the present invention comprise a film that comprises a second film layer 22 .
  • the second film layer compared to the first film layer, after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C., has a higher tensile modulus in a machine direction or a lower absolute areal dimensional change or a lower water absorption or a combination of two or three of the foregoing properties.
  • the second film layer is monolayered and has only one layer.
  • the second film layer is multilayered and has two or more layers.
  • the second film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer or the one layer or each of the two or more layers of the second film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer, and the one layer or each of the two or more layers has a property selected from the group consisting of a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa, at least 830 MPa, or at least 715 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%, less than 4.5%, or less than 4.9% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • a tensile modulus ASTM D882
  • ASTM D1204 absolute areal dimensional change
  • the one layer or each of the two or more layers of the second film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes where the tensile modulus in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • the second film layer compared to the first film layer after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C., has a higher tensile modulus in the machine direction, a lower absolute areal dimensional change, and a lower water absorption.
  • the at least one thermoplastic polymer of the second film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of a polyolefin where the polyolefin includes homopolymers and copolymers of olefins having 2 to 12 carbon atoms, a (meth)acrylate polymer to include for example poly(alkyl acrylate)s and poly(alkyl methacrylate)s, a styrene polymer, a polyester, a halogen-containing polymer, a polycarbonate, an aliphatic polyamide, a polyacrylonitrile, an aromatic polyether to include for example an aromatic polyether containing one or more sulfone groups and/or ketone groups and/or imide groups, an aromatic polyimide, an olefin-vinyl carboxylate copolymer to include for example ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, a cellulosic based polymer, a cyclic olefin homopolymer,
  • the at least one thermoplastic polymer of the second film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of a polyolefin, a (meth)acrylate polymer, a polyester, a polycarbonate, an aliphatic polyamide, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • the polyolefin of the second film layer includes homopolymers and copolymers of olefins having 2 to 12 carbon atoms.
  • the polyolefin includes isotactic polypropylene homopolymers having a density of 0.88 to 0.92 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes and a melting point of 150 to 170° C., and isotactic polypropylene random copolymers having a density of 0.88 to 0.92 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes and a melting point of 125 to 165° C.
  • the isotactic polypropylene random copolymer can contain on a weight basis 0.1 to 20% or 0.1 to 10% of at least one ethylene or C 4 to C 12 olefin comonomer.
  • the polyolefins are generally prepared by a polymerization using a metal based catalyst to include a Ziegler-Natta or metallocene catalyst.
  • Useful polyolefins include for example the isotactic polypropylene homopolymer P4G4K-173X, from Flint Hills Resources of Wichita, Kans., which has a density of 0.9 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 12 g/10 minutes, and the isotactic polypropylene random copolymer P5M4K-070X, from Flint Hills Resources, which has a density of 0.9 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 10 g/10 minutes and a 3.2% by weight ethylene comonomer content.
  • the (meth)acrylate polymer of the second film layer includes homopolymers of an alkyl acrylate or of an alkyl methacrylate, copolymers of two or more alkyl acrylates or of two or more alkyl methacrylates where the two or more alkyl acrylates or alkyl methacrylates differ in the number of carbon atoms in the alkyl group, copolymers of one or more alkyl acrylates and one or more alkyl methacrylates, and mixtures of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • the (meth)acrylate polymer includes homopolymers of an alkyl methacrylate where the alkyl group has 1 to 12 or 1 to 8 or 1 to 4 carbon atoms and the alkyl methacrylate homopolymer has a density of 1.05 to 1.25 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./3.8 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes.
  • the (meth)acrylate polymer contains an impact modifier where the impact modifier is a polymeric elastomer which can be derived from an aromatic monomer to include for example styrene-butadiene rubber impact modifiers.
  • the (meth)acrylate polymers are generally prepared by a catalyzed polymerization such as for example by free radical catalysis.
  • Useful (meth)acrylate polymers include alkyl methacrylate homopolymers such as for example the Altuglas® and Plexiglas® poly(methyl methacrylate) resin series manufactured by Arkema Inc. of Philadelphia, Pa., and the Lucite® poly(methyl methacrylate) resin series manufactured by Lucite International of Parkersburg, W. Va.
  • the polyester of the second film layer includes polymers derived from at least one polycarboxylic acid or derivative thereof, to include ester derivatives, and at least one polyol, or derived from at least one hydroxy-containing carboxylic acid or derivative thereof, to include cyclic lactone derivatives, where the hydroxy-containing carboxylic acid has two or more carbon atoms.
  • the polycarboxylic acid has two or more carbon atoms and two or more carboxylic acid groups.
  • the polycarboxylic acid includes a polycarboxylic acid selected from the group consisting of an aliphatic polycarboxylic acid, an aromatic polycarboxylic acid, and a mixture of two more of any of the foregoing polycarboxylic acids.
  • Aromatic polycarboxylic acids include for example terephthalic acid and 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid.
  • Polyols include alcohols having two or more hydroxy groups to include for example ethylene glycol, 1,3-propanediol, and 1,4-butanediol.
  • an ester monomer formed from a polycarboxylic acid and a polyol is reacted in a polycondensation to form a high molecular weight polyester.
  • the polyester includes an aromatic polycarboxylic acid based polyester.
  • the hydroxy-containing carboxylic acid includes for example lactic acid where its cyclic lactide monomer derivative can undergo a polycondensation using a metal cation catalyst to form a polylactic acid also known as a polylactide.
  • Useful polyesters include for example poly(ethylene 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylate) resins, terephthalic acid based polyesters including poly(1,3-propylene terephthalate) resins, poly(1,4-butylene terephthalate) resins and the poly(ethylene terephthalate) resin Eastapak® 9921 PET, from Eastman Chemical Company of Kingsport, Tenn., which has a density of 1.32 g/cm 3 and a melting point of 243° C., and the polylactic acid PLA Polymer 4042D, from NatureWorks® LLC of Minnetonka, Minn., which has a density of 1.24 g/cm 3 and a melt temperature of 202 to 218° C.
  • the polycarbonate of the second film layer includes polymers that have repeating hydrocarbon based groups linked together by carbonate groups which are also known as carbonyldioxy groups.
  • the polycarbonate has a density of 1.1 to 1.32 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 300° C./1.2 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes.
  • the polycarbonate includes an aromatic polycarbonate, a nonaromatic polycarbonate, or a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polycarbonates.
  • the nonaromatic polycarbonates include polymers which can be prepared by metal catalyzed reaction of an epoxide with carbon dioxide.
  • the aromatic polycarbonates include polymers which can be prepared by reaction of a polyhydroxy-substituted arene, to include for example bisphenol A also known as 4,4′-isopropylidenediphenol, with phosgene or a dialkyl or diaryl carbonate to include for example dimethyl carbonate.
  • Arenes are aromatic unsaturated cyclic hydrocarbons.
  • Useful polycarbonates include for example the polycarbonate Makrolon® 1804, from Bayer Material Science of Baytown, Tex., which has a density of 1.2 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 300° C./1.2 kg of 6.5 g/10 minutes, and the polycarbonate Lupilon® S3000R, from Mitsubishi Chemical and available through Polymer Technology & Services, LLC of Murfreesboro, Tenn., which has a density of 1.2 g/cm 3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 300° C./1.2 kg of 16.5 g/10 minutes and is made from bisphenol A.
  • the aliphatic polyamide of the second film layer includes polymers that only contain repeating aliphatic groups.
  • Aliphatic polyamides include polyamides that can be prepared by a condensation of at least one aliphatic amino acid or acid halide to include for example glycine, by a ring opening polymerization of at least one aliphatic cyclic amide also known as a lactam to include for example a ring opening polymerization of caprolactam to form polycaprolactam or nylon 6, or by a condensation of an aliphatic polyamine monomer and an aliphatic polycarboxylic acid or polycarboxylic acid halide monomer to include for example the condensation of 1,6-hexanediamine and adipic acid or adipic acid chloride to form the polyamide nylon 66.
  • the aliphatic polyamide is derived from a lactam or from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aliphatic diamine.
  • Useful aliphatic polyamides include for example the aliphatic polyamides nylon 6 and nylon 66 Ultramid® resins from BASF Corporation of Florham Park, N.J.
  • the second film layer can contain one or more additives as described hereinabove for the first film layer.
  • the second film layer as described hereinabove, can contain one or more other thermoplastic polymers provided that the second film layer maintains its tensile modulus or dimensional change or water absorption properties or a combination of these properties as described hereinabove.
  • the labels 10 , 20 , 30 , 40 and 50 of the present invention comprise an adhesive layer 14 .
  • the adhesive layer comprises an adhesive where the adhesive includes an adhesive selected from the group consisting of a natural adhesive, a synthetic adhesive, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing adhesives. Synthetic adhesives include pressure sensitive adhesives.
  • the adhesive of the adhesive layer is a pressure sensitive adhesive.
  • a pressure sensitive adhesive is an adhesive that forms a bond between the adhesive and an adherend, to include for example where the adherend is a polymeric film or a container, with the application of pressure.
  • Pressure sensitive adhesives include acrylic-based PSAs, rubber-based PSAs, and silicone-based PSAs.
  • the adhesive of the adhesive layer is an acrylic-based pressure sensitive adhesive.
  • Pressure sensitive adhesives include emulsion or water-based PSAs, solvent-based PSAs, and solid PSAs which are water-free and solvent-free to include for example hot melt pressure sensitive adhesives.
  • the adhesive of the adhesive layer is an emulsion acrylic-based pressure sensitive adhesive.
  • the adhesive of the adhesive layer to include for example a pressure sensitive adhesive, has a property selected from the group consisting of a decrease in adhesion strength at elevated temperatures generally above a room or ambient temperature, a decrease in adhesion strength on contact with an aqueous caustic solution such as for example an aqueous caustic soda solution, and a combination of the two foregoing properties.
  • the adhesive of the adhesive layer is used on a dry weight coating basis at 5 to 40 g/m 2 (grams per square meter), 8 to 35 g/m 2 , or 10 to 30 g/m 2 . Pressuure sensitive adhesives are described in Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Engineering, Vol.
  • the labels 10 , 20 , 30 , 40 and 50 of the present invention can include a release liner 62 .
  • the release liner can be monolayered having only one layer or can be multilayered having two or more layers.
  • the layer or layers of the release liner can include a layer selected from the group consisting of a paper layer to include for example a calendered glassine paper layer, a polymeric layer to include for example a polyolefin-based layer or a poly(ethylene terephthalate)-based layer, and in the case of a multilayered release liner a combination of two or more of any of the foregoing layers.
  • the release liner has a first surface 61 and a second surface 63 and normally includes a release coating on at least the first surface of the release liner.
  • the release coating to include for example an organosiloxane polymer release coating also known as a silicone release coating, allows the release liner to be releasably attached to the adhesive layer of the label so that the release liner can be removed from the adhesive layer of the label during a labeling process leaving the adhesive layer adhesively joined to the film of the label.
  • Multilayered films of the label of the present invention can include one or more tie layers and/or one or more lamination adhesive layers.
  • the labels 40 and 50 can include at least one layer 26 which can be a tie layer or a lamination adhesive layer.
  • a tie layer is located between two layers of the film and generally functions to improve adherence between the two layers of the film.
  • the tie layer can include at least one thermoplastic polymer selected from the group consisting of a polyolefin to include for example ethylene and propylene homopolymers and copolymers, an unsaturated carboxylic acid or anhydride grafted polyolefin to include for example maleic anhydride grafted polypropylenes and maleic anhydride grafted polyethylenes, an alkene-unsaturated carboxylic acid or unsaturated carboxylate ester copolymer to include for example ethylene-alkyl methacrylate copolymers and ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, a metal salt of an alkene-unsaturated carboxylic acid copolymer to include for example ionomers which are sodium or zinc salts of ethylene-methacrylic acid copolymers, a styrene homoplymer or copolymer, a cyclic olef
  • the film of the label of the present invention can include one or more coatings, also known as topcoats, on its first and second surfaces to enhance adhesion of a printing ink or an adhesive to the film or to provide protection including for example from abrasion and/or moisture.
  • the coating can be an ink-receptive or adhesive-receptive material to include for example an acrylic primer or an abrasion or moisture resistant material to include for example a polyolefin or polyester where the coating can be applied in a liquid form and dried or allowed to dry.
  • the film and label of the present invention can be prepared by one or more steps that include steps selected from the group consisting of an extrusion of a single layer, a coextrusion of two or more layers, a lamination of two or more layers, an application of one or more coatings, and a combination of two or more of any of the foregoing steps.
  • the extrusion or coextrusion steps can be done through linear dies or annular dies.
  • the film is monolayered and contains a monolayered first film layer which is formed by an extrusion step.
  • the film is multilayered and contains a multilayered first film layer which is formed by a coextrusion step, by a combination of extrusion and lamination steps, or by a combination of extrusion and coextrusion and lamination steps.
  • the film is multilayered and contains a first film layer and a second film layer where the first film layer can be monolayered or multilayered and the second film layer can be monolayered or multilayered.
  • the second film layer can be formed separately from the first film layer or together with the first film layer by one or more steps as described above for the film, label, and the monolayered and multilayered first film layer.
  • a multilayered film contains a two-layered first film layer where each of the two layers is formed by an extrusion step and then the first film layer is formed by a lamination step.
  • the lamination can be done by bringing layers together usually under pressure with or without heat and with or without a lamination adhesive.
  • Lamination adhesives include for example polyurethane based adhesives and acrylic based adhesives such as acrylic based permanent pressure sensitive adhesives.
  • the lamination is done by bringing layers together at a pressure of 69 to 690 KPa (kilopascals) at an ambient temperature of 23° C. with a lamination adhesive, a polyurethane based adhesive, between the layers.
  • a multilayered film contains a monolayered first film layer and a monolayered second film layer where each layer is formed by an extrusion step and then the multilayered film is formed by a lamination step.
  • a multilayered film is formed by a coextrusion step and contains at least one tie layer.
  • the film is nonoriented or not stretched.
  • the film is oriented or stretched uniaxially in one direction, which can be the machine direction or the transverse direction, or the film is oriented biaxially in two directions which are usually the machine direction and the transverse direction.
  • Orienting or stretching is stretching the film or layers of the film to align the polymer chains of the thermoplastic polymer or polymers, present in the film or layers of the film, in the direction of the stretching. The stretching results in the film or layers of the film having an increase in length and consequently a decrease in thickness.
  • the stretching can be done at any temperature, it is usually done at an elevated temperature near the softening temperature of the polymer or polymers.
  • the stretching generally increases the stiffness or tensile modulus (ASTM D882) of the film or layers of the film in the direction of the stretching.
  • the film or layers of the film can be oriented by stretching them uniaxially or biaxially in a stretch ratio range of 2 to 12, 3 to 10, or 4 to 8 where the stretch ratio is the ratio of the film length after stretching to the film length before stretching.
  • the oriented film or layers of the film are annealed or heat set by heating the tensioned film or layers of the film near the softening temperature of the constituent polymer or polymers.
  • the annealed film or layers of the film have a linear shrinkage (ASTM D1204) at 100° C. in the machine direction and the transverse direction of less than 5%, less than 4.9%, less than 4.8%, or less than 3%.
  • the film is a monolayered film and has only one layer.
  • the film is a multilayered film and has two or more layers.
  • the first film layer is monolayered where the first film layer is nonoriented or is oriented and annealed.
  • the multilayered film contains a multilayered first film layer where the multilayered first film layer has two or more layers where all the layers of the first film layer are nonoriented, all the layers of the first film layer are oriented and annealed, or part of the layers of the first film layer are oriented and annealed where part of the layers of the first film layer includes at least one layer of the first film layer but not all the layers of the first film layer.
  • the multilayered film has a first film layer and a second film layer where both the first film layer and second film layer are monolayered, both the first film layer and second film layer are multilayered, the first film layer is monolayered and the second film layer is multilayered, or the first film layer is multilayered and the second film layer is monolayered.
  • the monolayered or multilayered second film layer can be nonoriented or oriented and annealed as described above for the monolayered and multilayered first film layer.
  • the label has a thickness T which includes the thickness of the first film layer T FFL and the thickness of the adhesive layer T AL , or the thickness of the first film layer T FFL , the thickness of the second film layer T SFL and the thickness of the adhesive layer T AL , or the thickness of the first film layer T FFL , the thickness of the second film layer T SFL , the thickness of the tie layer T TL or the lamination adhesive layer T LAL and the thickness of the adhesive layer T AL .
  • the film has a thickness which is the thickness of the first film layer T FFL , or includes the thickness of the first film layer T FFL and the thickness of the second film layer T SFL , or includes the thickness of the first film layer T FFL , the thickness of the second film layer T SFL and the thickness of the tie layer T TL or the lamination adhesive layer T LAL .
  • the thickness in micrometers of the film and the first film layer T FFL can range from 5 to 254, 6 to 127, or 7 to 63.5.
  • the first film layer, the second film layer, the tie layer and the lamination adhesive layer can each have a thickness, respectively T FFL and T SFL and T TL and T LAL , in micrometers ranging from 1.7 to 85, 2 to 42, or 2.3 to 21.
  • the film can be treated on one surface or both of its surfaces to enhance performance to include abrasion resistance, moisture resistance, and adhesion of an ink or adhesive to a surface or surfaces of the film.
  • Surface treatments include a corona discharge treatment, a flame treatment, a plasma treatment, a topcoat treatment, or combinations of two or more of any of the foregoing treatments.
  • Topcoat treatments include treatment of one or both surfaces of the film with an ink-receptive or adhesive-receptive material such as for example an acrylic primer and/or with a protective varnish. The treatments can be done any time during the manufacture and subsequent processing of the film and label where the time of the treatment generally depends on the performance enhancement.
  • first surface or the second surface of the film is surface treated to enhance adhesion of an ink to the film.
  • second surface of the film is surface treated to enhance adhesion of an adhesive to the film.
  • first surface of the film is surface treated to enhance abrasion resistance and/or moisture resistance of the film.
  • the label includes a film, an adhesive layer, and a release liner.
  • the label of the present invention can be prepared in any manner.
  • a film or one or more layers of a film can be slit into widths suitable for subsequent processing steps and labeling operations.
  • the film can be coated with an adhesive to form an adhesive layer and then the film and adhesive layer can be combined in a lamination step with a release liner, or a release liner can be coated with an adhesive to form an adhesive layer and then the release liner and adhesive layer can be combined in a lamination step with the film.
  • the label containing a film, adhesive layer and release liner can be further processed to include printing steps and/or die-cutting steps.
  • the label, containing a film and adhesive layer and release liner can be printed using any printing means and using any printing ink.
  • Printing means include for example offset lithography, flexographic, digital, thermal, inkjet and laser.
  • Printing inks include for example water-based inks, solvent-based inks and UV-activated inks.
  • a film or a film layer can be printed prior to eventually combining with an adhesive layer or with an adhesive layer and release liner as described above.
  • the film is monolayered or multilayered and has a first outer surface and a second outer surface where the first outer surface of the film has a print layer or the second outer surface of the film has a print layer which can also have an adhesive layer adhesively joined to the print layer.
  • the film is multilayered and has two or more layers where a print layer is located between the layers of the film.
  • the film is multilayered and has a first film layer and a second film layer where either the first film layer or the second film layer is printed and then the first film layer and the second film layer are combined in a lamination step where a print layer is located between the first film layer and second film layer.
  • a label containing a printed or nonprinted film, adhesive layer and release liner is die-cut using any die-cutting means, to include for example a rotary cutting die, where as a result of the die-cutting a die-cut ladder-shaped matrix of the film and adhesive layer is formed that contains a series of individual labels on the release liner which acts as a carrier for the labels.
  • This die-cut series of labels can then be used to label articles in a labeling process where individual labels are successively removed from the release liner and the die-cut ladder-shaped matrix. Processing to include extrusion, coextrusion, orienting, annealing, coating, surface treatments, label construction, printing, die-cutting and labeling of articles is further described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,217,463 to Henderson and U.S. Pat. No. 7,144,542 to Holzer et al.
  • a label in an embodiment includes a film having an upper or first surface and a lower or second surface and comprising a first film layer, and an adhesive layer having an upper or first surface and a lower or second surface where the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of the film.
  • a label 10 includes a film comprising a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 , and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 where the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 .
  • underlie and related term “overlie” when referring to a first layer underlying or overlying a second layer mean that the first layer can partially or fully cover the second layer and that the first layer and second layer can be in direct contact with each other or that one or more intermediate layers, to include for example tie layers or lamination adhesive layers, can be located between the first layer and second layer.
  • a label 20 includes a film comprising a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness T SFL and a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 , and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness T AL where the first surface 11 of the first film layer 12 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 .
  • a label 30 includes a film comprising a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 and a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness T SFL , and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness T AL where the first surface 21 of the second film layer 22 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22 .
  • a label 40 includes a film comprising a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness T SFL and a tie layer or lamination adhesive layer 26 having a first surface 25 and a second surface 27 and a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 , and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness T AL where the first surface 25 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22 and the first surface 11 of the first film layer 12 underlies the second surface 27 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 .
  • a label 50 includes a film comprising a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 and a tie layer or lamination adhesive layer 26 having a first surface 25 and a second surface 27 and a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness T SFL , and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness T AL where the first surface 25 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 and the first surface 21 of the second film layer 22 underlies the second surface 27 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22 .
  • the second film layer has a combination of properties where the layer or layers of the second film layer have a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa, at least 830 MPa, or at least 715 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, and an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%, less than 4.5%, or less than 4.9% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • the second film layer 22 having after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • the combined properties of a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa and an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4% has a thickness T SFL which is greater than the thickness T AL of the adhesive layer 14 and in other embodiments the thickness of the second film layer is at least 5% greater, at least 10% greater, at least 20% greater, at least 30% greater, at least 40% greater, at least 50% greater, or at least 60% greater than the thickness of the adhesive layer.
  • the film or label has high clarity visual aesthetics where the film or label is clear having a TAPPI (Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry) T425 opacity of 12% or less, 10% or less, or 8% or less and a haze (ASTM D1003) of 12% or less, 10% or less, or 8% or less.
  • the film or label is dispensable during a labeling operation where the film or label has an ISO (International Organization for Standardization) 2493 bending resistance in mN (milliNewtons) of at least 14, at least 16, at least 18, or at least 20.
  • a label 10 , 20 , 30 , 40 or 50 includes an adhesive layer 14 having a second surface 17 and a release liner 62 having a first surface 61 and a second surface 63 where the first surface 61 of the release liner 62 , which normally includes a release coating, is releasably attached to the second surface 17 of the adhesive layer 14 .
  • the label of the present invention can comprise a monolayered or multilayered first film layer and a monolayered or multilayered second film layer where the label can include any type of layer construction regarding the ordering of film layers such as for example alternating first film layers and second film layers.
  • the labels of the present invention are removable from a container during an industrial washing process when subjected to a warm or hot washing fluid.
  • the washing fluid includes washing liquids such as for example water or an aqueous caustic solution where the temperature of the washing fluid or washing liquid is usually at least 50° C. and typically can range from 50 to 100° C.
  • Aqueous caustic solutions include for example aqueous caustic soda solutions which can be dilute solutions containing 0.5 to 4% by weight sodium hydroxide.
  • an aqueous caustic solution can have a pH of at least 4, at least 6, at least 7, or at least 8 where pH is defined as—log (logarithm to the base 10) of the hydrogen ion concentration in the solution.
  • a labeled container includes a label, as described throughout the Detailed Description and Drawings and Claims, and a container where (i) the label 10 , 20 , 30 , 40 or 50 is attached to the container 72 having a vertical axis which is parallel to the height of the container and a horizontal axis which is parallel to the circumference of the container where the second surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to an outer surface of the container, (ii) the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container, and (iii) the label is removable from the container after immersion in a washing liquid where the temperature of the washing liquid is at least 50° C., greater than 50° C., greater than 55° C., or greater than 60° C.
  • the term “follows” means that the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer that circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container can be parallel to the horizontal axis or that the machine or transverse direction can form an angle with the horizontal axis of less than 45° (45 degrees), less than 20°, or less than 10°.
  • the container of the above described labeled container can be any shaped container to include a cylindrically shaped container where the vertical axis of the container is parallel to the length of the cylindrically shaped container and the horizontal axis of the container is parallel to the circumference of the cylindrically shaped container.
  • the label of the present invention includes a first film layer which has an affinity for water and a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C.
  • the first film layer of the label when the label is attached to a container and immersed in a warm aqueous washing liquid having a temperature of at least 50° C., undergoes a large decrease in tensile modulus and a large distortion or large increase or decrease in area as measured in the machine and transverse directions which exposes the adhesive layer of the label to the warm aqueous washing liquid.
  • the adhesive of the adhesive layer is generally selected that has a property selected from the group consisting of a decrease in adhesion strength at elevated temperatures generally above a room or ambient temperature, a decrease in adhesion strength on contact with an aqueous caustic solution such as for example an aqueous caustic soda solution, and a combination of the two foregoing properties so that upon exposure of the adhesive to the washing liquid, the label is able to detach from the container.
  • the label of the present invention includes a film comprising a second film layer having a first surface and a second surface and a first film layer having a first surface and a second surface, and an adhesive layer having a first surface and a second surface where the first surface of a layer of the first film layer underlies the second surface of a layer of the second film layer, the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of a layer of the first film layer, and the second film layer, as described hereinabove, has after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C.
  • a label for at least about 3 minutes the combined properties of a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa and an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%.
  • a label as described throughout the Detailed Description and Drawings and Claims, becomes detached and removed from a cylindrical glass container within 3 minutes after immersion of the container and the attached label in a washing liquid where the temperature of the washing liquid is at least 50° C., greater than 50° C., greater than 55° C., or greater than 60° C.
  • Table I lists film examples that were used in subsequent label examples and also provides the source and physical properties of the films.
  • Film Example 5 was a 58.4 micrometer thick aromatic polyamide (PA) monolayered film prepared by extrusion without orientation using an aromatic polyamide MXD6 resin from Mitsubishi Gas Chemical American which was derived from meta-xylylenediamine.
  • Film Example 6 was a 25.4 micrometer thick polycarbonate (PC) monolayered film prepared by extrusion without orientation using Mitsubishi bisphenol A based polycarbonate resin E2000.
  • Film Example 7 was a 50.8 micrometer thick poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) monolayered film prepared by extrusion without orientation using PSR-9 impact modifier containing poly(methyl methacrylate) resin manufactured by Arkema Inc. 2 T g is the glass transition temperature for each of the polymeric resins.
  • ASTM D882 tensile modulus for each film example was measured in the machine direction at ambient room temperature of 23° C. and after immersion of the film in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • 4 Absolute areal dimensional change in the machine and transverse directions was measured for each film example using ASTM D1204 test procedure after immersion of the film in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
  • Film Examples 1-4 had an increase in area while Film Examples 5-7 had a decrease in area.
  • ASTM D570 water absorption was measured for each film example after immersion of the film in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • Table II lists label examples and includes label constructions and results for removability from a container.
  • Label Examples 8-10 were prepared by laminating the corresponding film examples together with a lamination adhesive(LA) then applying the pressure sensitive adhesive to respectively the PC, PMMA and EVOH-44% side of the laminate.
  • Label Examples 1-10 were applied to glass bottles having a circumference of 191 mm. The labels were applied to the bottles with the PSA layer in contact with the outer surface of the bottle where the label width followed the circumference or horizontal axis of the bottle. After the bottles were labeled they were stored for 7 days at an ambient temperature of 20-23° C. to simulate an ambient storage or for 2 days at 60° C. followed by 1 day at an ambient temperatureof 20-23° C.
  • label removability was evaluated by initially immersing the bottles for 1 minute in a 50° C. water bath that simulated a rinsing step and then immersing the rinsed bottles in a water bath at a temperature of about 80° C., that simulated a washing step, and measuring the time in seconds until the label detached from the bottle in a water bath at a temperature of about 80° C. or until180 seconds had elapsed.

Abstract

An adhesive label includes a polymeric first film layer that has an affinity for water. The label is useful in various labeling applications and especially adhesive labeling of reusable and recyclable containers which require removal of the label during a washing process in a warm or hot washing fluid.

Description

    CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION
  • The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/164,689 filed Mar. 30, 2009, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The present invention involves an adhesive label that contains a polymeric film that has water affinity and a related labeled container. The label is useful in various labeling applications and especially in adhesive labeling applications involving reusable and recyclable containers.
  • 2. Description of the Related Art
  • Labels are applied to numerous articles of commerce to convey information regarding a manufacturer and a product. Articles of commerce include plastic, paper, metal and glass containers for a multitude of consumer and industrial products such as for example bottled beverage industry products. A particularly demanding labeling application is for reusable and recyclable beverage bottles, especially for the bottled beer industry, where the label requirements generally include high clarity visual aesthetics, abrasion resistance during processing and handling of beverage bottles, resistance to any deleterious effects due to moisture during cold storage or a pasteurization process, and removability of the label from the bottle during a washing process in a warm or hot washing fluid such as for example a 50 to 90° C. aqueous caustic solution where the removed label does not clog the washing process equipment. The washing process allows the washed bottle to consequently be reused or recycled. The washed bottle offers the flexibility of being refilled and relabeled for any number of beverage products. Labels currently employed for reusable and recyclable beverage bottles include paper labels and stretched, thermally shrinkable polymeric labels. Paper labels lack high clarity visual aesthetics. Stretched, thermally shrinkable polymeric labels upon removal tend to curl up tightly into a needle shape which can clog washing process equipment. Labels meeting the requirements for the reusable and recyclable bottled beverage industry are desirable.
  • BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • An exemplary embodiment of the present invention is a label where the label comprises (a) a film having a first surface and a second surface and comprising a first film layer, and (b) an adhesive layer having a first surface and a second surface and comprising an adhesive where the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of the film, where (c) (i) the first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer where the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C., and a tensile modulus of the film in a machine direction after heating is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air. In a further embodiment, the first film layer has an absolute areal dimensional change (American Society for Testing and Materials, hereinafter “ASTM” D1204) of at least 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes. In another embodiment, the first film layer has a water absorption (ASTM D570) of at least 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the film is a monolayered film.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the film is a multilayered film.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the first film layer comprises two or more layers where each of the two or more layers comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer where the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 100° C. and a tensile modulus of the film in a machine direction after heating which is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air. In a further embodiment, each of the two or more layers has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes where the tensile modulus in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes is less than 40% of the tensile modulus in the machine direction in 23° C. ambient air. In another embodiment, each of the two or more layers has an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of at least about 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, and each of the two or more layers has a water absorption (ASTM D570) of at least 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the film comprises a second film layer where the second film layer comprises one layer or two or more layers where the one layer or each of the two or more layers comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer and the one layer or each of the two or more layers has a property selected from the group consisting of a tensile modulus of the film in a machine direction after heating which is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air, a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than about 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, a water absorption (ASTM D570) of less than about 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours, and a combination of the foregoing properties.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is the above described label where the label comprises a release liner having a first surface and a second surface wherein the first surface of the release liner is releasably attached to the second surface of the adhesive layer.
  • Another exemplary embodiment is a labeled container that includes the above described label and a container where (i) the label is attached to the container having a horizontal axis where the second surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to an outer surface of the container, (ii) the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container. In a further embodiment, the label is removable from the container after immersion in a liquid where the temperature of the liquid is at least 50° C. and the label detaches from the container.
  • Other embodiments of the present invention will become apparent from the following Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying Drawings and the appended Claims, all of which exemplarily illustrate the principles of the present invention, but do not limit the invention.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • The components in the figures of the appended drawings are not to scale. Components appearing in more than one figure have been given the same reference number to show the correspondence.
  • FIG. 1A is a sectional view of a label containing two layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1B is a sectional view of a label containing three layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1C is a sectional view of a label containing three layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1D is a sectional view of a label containing four layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1E is a sectional view of a label containing four layers according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 2 is a perspective view of a first film layer of a label showing a machine direction and a transverse direction.
  • FIG. 3 is a sectional view of a label containing a release liner according to a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a label attached to a cylindrically shaped container according to a preferred embodiment.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • Referring to FIG. 4, a label 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50 of the present invention is useful in commercial labeling applications that include labeling of articles of commerce such as for example plastic, paper, metal and glass containers 72 for a multitude of consumer and industrial products. The container can be any shaped container including a bottle, a jug, a jar or a drum. In an embodiment the container is a glass beverage bottle having a cylindrically shaped body that includes a beer bottle. The label, as described hereinbelow, on a labeled container has high clarity visual aesthetics, abrasion resistance during processing and handling of the container, resistance to any deleterious effects due to moisture during cold storage or a pasteurization process, and removability of the label from the container during a washing process in a warm or hot washing fluid that includes a 50 to 100° C. water bath or aqueous caustic solution where the removed label does not clog the washing process equipment.
  • First Film Layer
  • Referring to FIGS. 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D and 1E the labels 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 of the present invention comprise a film that comprises a first film layer 12. The first film layer has a relatively high loss in tensile modulus when heated in warm or hot air or when immersed in a warm or hot washing fluid compared to the tensile modulus of the first film layer in ambient air. In embodiments the first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes where the tensile modulus in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes is less than 40%, less than 35%, less than 30%, or less than 20% of the tensile modulus in the machine direction in 23° C. ambient air. Ambient air can have a relative humidity ranging from 0 to 100% and typically ranging from 30 to 70%, 40 to 60%, or 45 to 55%. Referring to FIG. 2, the first film layer 12 has three directions or dimensions to include a machine direction (MD) and a transverse direction (TD) where the machine direction is the direction that the first film layer is advanced during its manufacture and the transverse direction is the direction that is normal or perpendicular to the machine direction and the machine and transverse directions lie in the largest areal plane of the first film layer. The third direction or dimension of the first film layer is its thickness which is perpendicular to the areal plane containing the machine and transverse directions. In other embodiments the first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction of less than 945 MPa (megapascals), less than 900 MPa, less than 830 MPa, less than 715 MPa, or less than 400 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes. The first film layer has a relatively high two-dimensional change in area as measured in the machine direction and the transverse direction after immersion in warm or hot water. In embodiments the first film layer has an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of at least 4%, at least 4.5%, at least 4.9%, or at least 6% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes. The absolute areal dimensional change can be a shrinkage which results in a reduction in the area or can be an expansion which results in an increase in area. In embodiments the absolute areal dimensional change is a shrinkage or an expansion. The first film layer has an affinity for water in terms of water absorption which is relatively high. In embodiments the first film layer has a water absorption (ASTM D570) after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours on a weight basis of at least 1.7%, at least 2%, at least 2.1%, at least 2.3%, or at least 3.7%.
  • The first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer. In embodiments the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C., 40 to 95° C., 45 to 90° C., or 45 to 75° C. The glass transition temperature can be measured using a differential scanning calorimeter. In embodiments the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of an olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer, an aromatic polyamide, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers. A mixture of two or more of any of some foregoing polymers can include a mixture of two or more of the same polymer type such as for example two or more aromatic polyamides, or a mixture of one or more of each of two or more different polymer types such as for example one or more aromatic polyamides and one or more olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymers. In other embodiments the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer, an aromatic polyamide derived from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aromatic diamine, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • The olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer of the first film layer includes at least one copolymer of an olefin monomer containing 2 to 12 carbon atoms and a vinyl alcohol monomer. The olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer can be prepared by polymerizing at least one olefin monomer and a vinyl acetate monomer using a free radical catalyst to form an olefin-vinyl acetate copolymer which is then hydrolyzed to form the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer. In an embodiment the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer is an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer. In embodiments the olefin content of the olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer on a mole basis ranges from 5% to 90%, 12% to 73%, 20% to 55%, or 25% to 50%. In embodiments an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 40 to 90° C., 45 to 85° C., 47 to 80° C., or 60 to 80° C. Useful olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymers include for example the ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer EVAL® resins from EVAL Americas of Houston, Tex.
  • The aromatic polyamide of the first film layer includes polymers containing only repeating aromatic groups or containing both repeating aromatic groups and repeating aliphatic groups. Aromatic polyamides that contain only repeating aromatic groups include polyamides that can be prepared by a condensation of at least one aromatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic polyamine. Aromatic polyamides that contain both repeating aromatic groups and repeating aliphatic groups include polyamides that can be prepared by a condensation of at least one aliphatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic polyamine or by a condensation of at least one aromatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aliphatic polyamine or by a condensation involving mixtures of three or four reactants selected from the group consisting of at least one aliphatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aromatic polycarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aliphatic polyamine, and at least one aromatic polyamine. In embodiments the aromatic polyamide includes polyamides that can be prepared from a condensation of at least one aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic diamine, from a condensation of at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aliphatic diamine, from a condensation of at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and at least one aromatic diamine, or from a condensation involving mixtures of three or four reactants selected from the group consisting of at least one aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aromatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide, at least one aliphatic diamine, and at least one aromatic diamine. In an embodiment the aromatic polyamide is derived from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aromatic diamine. In embodiments an aromatic polyamide has a glass transition temperature in the range of 65 to 105° C., 70 to 95° C., or 70 to 90° C. Useful aromatic polyamides include for example the aromatic polyamide MXD6 resins from Mitsubishi Gas Chemical American, Inc. of New York, N.Y. where the aromatic polyamide MXD6 resins are derived from meta-xylylenediamine and adipic acid or an adipic acid halide.
  • The film or a film layer or film layers of the film, to include the first film layer, can contain one or more additives to improve processing during film manufacture and during conversion to a label and to improve label end use performance. The additives include a nucleating agent, an antiblocking agent, a processing aid, a slip agent, an antistatic agent, a pigment, a cavitating agent, an inorganic filler, a heat stabilizer, an antioxidant, a flame retardant, an acid acceptor, a visible and/or ultraviolet light stabilizer, or a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing additives. The additives can be present in the above described thermoplastic polymers as supplied by a vendor or can be introduced into the film or a film layer as an additive concentrate where the additive is present generally in a relatively large amount of 2 to 90% by weight, depending on its use, in the concentrate with a thermoplastic polymer carrier. The additives, depending on their use, can be present in the film or a film layer from 0.001% to 90% by weight. Additives for use in the film or a film layer are further described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,821,592 to Rodick and U.S. Pat. No. 7,217,463 to Henderson.
  • In an embodiment the first film layer is monolayered and has only one layer. In another embodiment the first film layer is multilayered and has two or more layers. In embodiments the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer where the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 100° C., 40 to 95° C., 45 to 90° C., or 45 to 75° C., the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes where the tensile modulus in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes is less than 40%, less than 35%, less than 30%, or less than 20% of the tensile modulus in the machine direction in 23° C. ambient air, the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of at least 4%, at least 4.5%, at least 4.9%, or at least 6% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, and the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has a water absorption (ASTM D570) on a weight basis of at least 1.7%, at least 2%, at least 2.1%, at least 2.3%, or at least 3.7% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours. In other embodiments the one layer of the monolayered first film layer or each of the two or more layers of the multilayered first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction of less than 945 MPa, less than 900 MPa, less than 830 MPa, less than 715 MPa, or less than 400 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes. In an embodiment the first film layer, as described hereinabove, can contain one or more other thermoplastic polymers provided that the first film layer maintains its tensile modulus and dimensional change and water absorption properties as described hereinabove.
  • Second Film Layer
  • Referring to FIGS. 1B, 1C, 1D and 1E the labels 20, 30, 40 and 50 of the present invention comprise a film that comprises a second film layer 22. The second film layer compared to the first film layer, after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C., has a higher tensile modulus in a machine direction or a lower absolute areal dimensional change or a lower water absorption or a combination of two or three of the foregoing properties. In an embodiment the second film layer is monolayered and has only one layer. In another embodiment the second film layer is multilayered and has two or more layers. In embodiments the second film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer or the one layer or each of the two or more layers of the second film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer, and the one layer or each of the two or more layers has a property selected from the group consisting of a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa, at least 830 MPa, or at least 715 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%, less than 4.5%, or less than 4.9% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, a water absorption (ASTM D570) on a weight basis of less than 1.7%, less than 2%, or less than 2.3% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours, and a combination of two or three of the foregoing properties. In embodiments the one layer or each of the two or more layers of the second film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction in 23° C. ambient air and a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes where the tensile modulus in the machine direction after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes is greater than 60%, greater than 55%, greater than 50%, greater than 45%, greater than 40%, greater than 35%, greater than 30%, or greater than 20% of the tensile modulus in the machine direction in 23° C. ambient air. In an embodiment the second film layer compared to the first film layer, after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C., has a higher tensile modulus in the machine direction, a lower absolute areal dimensional change, and a lower water absorption.
  • The at least one thermoplastic polymer of the second film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of a polyolefin where the polyolefin includes homopolymers and copolymers of olefins having 2 to 12 carbon atoms, a (meth)acrylate polymer to include for example poly(alkyl acrylate)s and poly(alkyl methacrylate)s, a styrene polymer, a polyester, a halogen-containing polymer, a polycarbonate, an aliphatic polyamide, a polyacrylonitrile, an aromatic polyether to include for example an aromatic polyether containing one or more sulfone groups and/or ketone groups and/or imide groups, an aromatic polyimide, an olefin-vinyl carboxylate copolymer to include for example ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, a cellulosic based polymer, a cyclic olefin homopolymer, a cyclic olefin copolymer, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers. In embodiments the at least one thermoplastic polymer of the second film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of a polyolefin, a (meth)acrylate polymer, a polyester, a polycarbonate, an aliphatic polyamide, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • The polyolefin of the second film layer includes homopolymers and copolymers of olefins having 2 to 12 carbon atoms. The polyolefin includes isotactic polypropylene homopolymers having a density of 0.88 to 0.92 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes and a melting point of 150 to 170° C., and isotactic polypropylene random copolymers having a density of 0.88 to 0.92 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes and a melting point of 125 to 165° C. where the isotactic polypropylene random copolymer can contain on a weight basis 0.1 to 20% or 0.1 to 10% of at least one ethylene or C4 to C12 olefin comonomer. The polyolefins are generally prepared by a polymerization using a metal based catalyst to include a Ziegler-Natta or metallocene catalyst. Useful polyolefins include for example the isotactic polypropylene homopolymer P4G4K-173X, from Flint Hills Resources of Wichita, Kans., which has a density of 0.9 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 12 g/10 minutes, and the isotactic polypropylene random copolymer P5M4K-070X, from Flint Hills Resources, which has a density of 0.9 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./2.16 kg of 10 g/10 minutes and a 3.2% by weight ethylene comonomer content.
  • The (meth)acrylate polymer of the second film layer includes homopolymers of an alkyl acrylate or of an alkyl methacrylate, copolymers of two or more alkyl acrylates or of two or more alkyl methacrylates where the two or more alkyl acrylates or alkyl methacrylates differ in the number of carbon atoms in the alkyl group, copolymers of one or more alkyl acrylates and one or more alkyl methacrylates, and mixtures of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers. In an embodiment the (meth)acrylate polymer includes homopolymers of an alkyl methacrylate where the alkyl group has 1 to 12 or 1 to 8 or 1 to 4 carbon atoms and the alkyl methacrylate homopolymer has a density of 1.05 to 1.25 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 230° C./3.8 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes. In an embodiment the (meth)acrylate polymer contains an impact modifier where the impact modifier is a polymeric elastomer which can be derived from an aromatic monomer to include for example styrene-butadiene rubber impact modifiers. The (meth)acrylate polymers are generally prepared by a catalyzed polymerization such as for example by free radical catalysis. Useful (meth)acrylate polymers include alkyl methacrylate homopolymers such as for example the Altuglas® and Plexiglas® poly(methyl methacrylate) resin series manufactured by Arkema Inc. of Philadelphia, Pa., and the Lucite® poly(methyl methacrylate) resin series manufactured by Lucite International of Parkersburg, W. Va.
  • The polyester of the second film layer includes polymers derived from at least one polycarboxylic acid or derivative thereof, to include ester derivatives, and at least one polyol, or derived from at least one hydroxy-containing carboxylic acid or derivative thereof, to include cyclic lactone derivatives, where the hydroxy-containing carboxylic acid has two or more carbon atoms. The polycarboxylic acid has two or more carbon atoms and two or more carboxylic acid groups. In embodiments the polycarboxylic acid includes a polycarboxylic acid selected from the group consisting of an aliphatic polycarboxylic acid, an aromatic polycarboxylic acid, and a mixture of two more of any of the foregoing polycarboxylic acids. Aromatic polycarboxylic acids include for example terephthalic acid and 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylic acid. Polyols include alcohols having two or more hydroxy groups to include for example ethylene glycol, 1,3-propanediol, and 1,4-butanediol. Generally an ester monomer formed from a polycarboxylic acid and a polyol is reacted in a polycondensation to form a high molecular weight polyester. In an embodiment the polyester includes an aromatic polycarboxylic acid based polyester. The hydroxy-containing carboxylic acid includes for example lactic acid where its cyclic lactide monomer derivative can undergo a polycondensation using a metal cation catalyst to form a polylactic acid also known as a polylactide. Useful polyesters include for example poly(ethylene 2,6-naphthalenedicarboxylate) resins, terephthalic acid based polyesters including poly(1,3-propylene terephthalate) resins, poly(1,4-butylene terephthalate) resins and the poly(ethylene terephthalate) resin Eastapak® 9921 PET, from Eastman Chemical Company of Kingsport, Tenn., which has a density of 1.32 g/cm3 and a melting point of 243° C., and the polylactic acid PLA Polymer 4042D, from NatureWorks® LLC of Minnetonka, Minn., which has a density of 1.24 g/cm3 and a melt temperature of 202 to 218° C.
  • The polycarbonate of the second film layer includes polymers that have repeating hydrocarbon based groups linked together by carbonate groups which are also known as carbonyldioxy groups. In an embodiment the polycarbonate has a density of 1.1 to 1.32 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 300° C./1.2 kg of 0.5 to 40 g/10 minutes. In embodiments the polycarbonate includes an aromatic polycarbonate, a nonaromatic polycarbonate, or a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polycarbonates. The nonaromatic polycarbonates include polymers which can be prepared by metal catalyzed reaction of an epoxide with carbon dioxide. The aromatic polycarbonates include polymers which can be prepared by reaction of a polyhydroxy-substituted arene, to include for example bisphenol A also known as 4,4′-isopropylidenediphenol, with phosgene or a dialkyl or diaryl carbonate to include for example dimethyl carbonate. Arenes are aromatic unsaturated cyclic hydrocarbons. Useful polycarbonates include for example the polycarbonate Makrolon® 1804, from Bayer Material Science of Baytown, Tex., which has a density of 1.2 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 300° C./1.2 kg of 6.5 g/10 minutes, and the polycarbonate Lupilon® S3000R, from Mitsubishi Chemical and available through Polymer Technology & Services, LLC of Murfreesboro, Tenn., which has a density of 1.2 g/cm3 and a melt flow rate (ASTM D1238) at 300° C./1.2 kg of 16.5 g/10 minutes and is made from bisphenol A.
  • The aliphatic polyamide of the second film layer includes polymers that only contain repeating aliphatic groups. Aliphatic polyamides include polyamides that can be prepared by a condensation of at least one aliphatic amino acid or acid halide to include for example glycine, by a ring opening polymerization of at least one aliphatic cyclic amide also known as a lactam to include for example a ring opening polymerization of caprolactam to form polycaprolactam or nylon 6, or by a condensation of an aliphatic polyamine monomer and an aliphatic polycarboxylic acid or polycarboxylic acid halide monomer to include for example the condensation of 1,6-hexanediamine and adipic acid or adipic acid chloride to form the polyamide nylon 66. In embodiments the aliphatic polyamide is derived from a lactam or from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aliphatic diamine. Useful aliphatic polyamides include for example the aliphatic polyamides nylon 6 and nylon 66 Ultramid® resins from BASF Corporation of Florham Park, N.J.
  • The second film layer, including the one layer or each of the two or more layers of the second film layer, can contain one or more additives as described hereinabove for the first film layer. In an embodiment the second film layer, as described hereinabove, can contain one or more other thermoplastic polymers provided that the second film layer maintains its tensile modulus or dimensional change or water absorption properties or a combination of these properties as described hereinabove.
  • Adhesive Layer
  • Referring to FIGS. 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D and 1E the labels 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 of the present invention comprise an adhesive layer 14. The adhesive layer comprises an adhesive where the adhesive includes an adhesive selected from the group consisting of a natural adhesive, a synthetic adhesive, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing adhesives. Synthetic adhesives include pressure sensitive adhesives. In an embodiment the adhesive of the adhesive layer is a pressure sensitive adhesive. A pressure sensitive adhesive is an adhesive that forms a bond between the adhesive and an adherend, to include for example where the adherend is a polymeric film or a container, with the application of pressure. Pressure sensitive adhesives (PSAs) include acrylic-based PSAs, rubber-based PSAs, and silicone-based PSAs. In an embodiment the adhesive of the adhesive layer is an acrylic-based pressure sensitive adhesive. Pressure sensitive adhesives include emulsion or water-based PSAs, solvent-based PSAs, and solid PSAs which are water-free and solvent-free to include for example hot melt pressure sensitive adhesives. In an embodiment the adhesive of the adhesive layer is an emulsion acrylic-based pressure sensitive adhesive. In several embodiments the adhesive of the adhesive layer, to include for example a pressure sensitive adhesive, has a property selected from the group consisting of a decrease in adhesion strength at elevated temperatures generally above a room or ambient temperature, a decrease in adhesion strength on contact with an aqueous caustic solution such as for example an aqueous caustic soda solution, and a combination of the two foregoing properties. In other embodiments the adhesive of the adhesive layer is used on a dry weight coating basis at 5 to 40 g/m2 (grams per square meter), 8 to 35 g/m2, or 10 to 30 g/m2. Pressuure sensitive adhesives are described in Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Engineering, Vol. 13, Wiley-Interscience Publishers, New York, 1988 and in Polymer Science and Technology, Vol. 1, Interscience Publishers, New York, 1964. Useful adhesives are available from H. B. Fuller Company of Saint Paul, Minn. and Henkel Corporation of Gulph Mills, Pa.
  • Release Liner/Other Components
  • Referring to FIG. 3 the labels 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 of the present invention can include a release liner 62. The release liner can be monolayered having only one layer or can be multilayered having two or more layers. The layer or layers of the release liner can include a layer selected from the group consisting of a paper layer to include for example a calendered glassine paper layer, a polymeric layer to include for example a polyolefin-based layer or a poly(ethylene terephthalate)-based layer, and in the case of a multilayered release liner a combination of two or more of any of the foregoing layers. The release liner has a first surface 61 and a second surface 63 and normally includes a release coating on at least the first surface of the release liner. The release coating, to include for example an organosiloxane polymer release coating also known as a silicone release coating, allows the release liner to be releasably attached to the adhesive layer of the label so that the release liner can be removed from the adhesive layer of the label during a labeling process leaving the adhesive layer adhesively joined to the film of the label.
  • Multilayered films of the label of the present invention can include one or more tie layers and/or one or more lamination adhesive layers. Referring to FIGS. 1D and 1E the labels 40 and 50 can include at least one layer 26 which can be a tie layer or a lamination adhesive layer. When present in the label a tie layer is located between two layers of the film and generally functions to improve adherence between the two layers of the film. Depending on the compositions of the two layers of the film which the tie layer is located between, the tie layer can include at least one thermoplastic polymer selected from the group consisting of a polyolefin to include for example ethylene and propylene homopolymers and copolymers, an unsaturated carboxylic acid or anhydride grafted polyolefin to include for example maleic anhydride grafted polypropylenes and maleic anhydride grafted polyethylenes, an alkene-unsaturated carboxylic acid or unsaturated carboxylate ester copolymer to include for example ethylene-alkyl methacrylate copolymers and ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers, a metal salt of an alkene-unsaturated carboxylic acid copolymer to include for example ionomers which are sodium or zinc salts of ethylene-methacrylic acid copolymers, a styrene homoplymer or copolymer, a cyclic olefin homopolymer or copolymer, a halogen-containing polymer, a polyurethane, a polycarbonate, a polyacrylonitrile, a polyamide, an aromatic polyether, an aromatic polyimide, an aromatic polyamide-imide, a (meth)acrylate polymer, a polyester to include for example poly(ethylene terephthalate)s, a hydrocarbon resin to include for example hydrogenated polyterpene resins, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
  • The film of the label of the present invention can include one or more coatings, also known as topcoats, on its first and second surfaces to enhance adhesion of a printing ink or an adhesive to the film or to provide protection including for example from abrasion and/or moisture. The coating can be an ink-receptive or adhesive-receptive material to include for example an acrylic primer or an abrasion or moisture resistant material to include for example a polyolefin or polyester where the coating can be applied in a liquid form and dried or allowed to dry.
  • Label Processing
  • The film and label of the present invention can be prepared by one or more steps that include steps selected from the group consisting of an extrusion of a single layer, a coextrusion of two or more layers, a lamination of two or more layers, an application of one or more coatings, and a combination of two or more of any of the foregoing steps. The extrusion or coextrusion steps can be done through linear dies or annular dies. In an embodiment the film is monolayered and contains a monolayered first film layer which is formed by an extrusion step. In embodiments the film is multilayered and contains a multilayered first film layer which is formed by a coextrusion step, by a combination of extrusion and lamination steps, or by a combination of extrusion and coextrusion and lamination steps. In other embodiments the film is multilayered and contains a first film layer and a second film layer where the first film layer can be monolayered or multilayered and the second film layer can be monolayered or multilayered. The second film layer can be formed separately from the first film layer or together with the first film layer by one or more steps as described above for the film, label, and the monolayered and multilayered first film layer. In an embodiment a multilayered film contains a two-layered first film layer where each of the two layers is formed by an extrusion step and then the first film layer is formed by a lamination step. The lamination can be done by bringing layers together usually under pressure with or without heat and with or without a lamination adhesive. Lamination adhesives include for example polyurethane based adhesives and acrylic based adhesives such as acrylic based permanent pressure sensitive adhesives. In an embodiment the lamination is done by bringing layers together at a pressure of 69 to 690 KPa (kilopascals) at an ambient temperature of 23° C. with a lamination adhesive, a polyurethane based adhesive, between the layers. In an embodiment a multilayered film contains a monolayered first film layer and a monolayered second film layer where each layer is formed by an extrusion step and then the multilayered film is formed by a lamination step. In an embodiment a multilayered film is formed by a coextrusion step and contains at least one tie layer.
  • In an embodiment the film is nonoriented or not stretched. In other embodiments the film is oriented or stretched uniaxially in one direction, which can be the machine direction or the transverse direction, or the film is oriented biaxially in two directions which are usually the machine direction and the transverse direction. Orienting or stretching is stretching the film or layers of the film to align the polymer chains of the thermoplastic polymer or polymers, present in the film or layers of the film, in the direction of the stretching. The stretching results in the film or layers of the film having an increase in length and consequently a decrease in thickness. Although the stretching can be done at any temperature, it is usually done at an elevated temperature near the softening temperature of the polymer or polymers. The stretching generally increases the stiffness or tensile modulus (ASTM D882) of the film or layers of the film in the direction of the stretching. In embodiments the film or layers of the film can be oriented by stretching them uniaxially or biaxially in a stretch ratio range of 2 to 12, 3 to 10, or 4 to 8 where the stretch ratio is the ratio of the film length after stretching to the film length before stretching. In order to provide dimensional stability to an oriented film or layers of the film so they do not shrink or distort appreciably especially when exposed to elevated temperatures, the oriented film or layers of the film are annealed or heat set by heating the tensioned film or layers of the film near the softening temperature of the constituent polymer or polymers. In embodiments the annealed film or layers of the film have a linear shrinkage (ASTM D1204) at 100° C. in the machine direction and the transverse direction of less than 5%, less than 4.9%, less than 4.8%, or less than 3%. In an embodiment the film is a monolayered film and has only one layer. In an embodiment the film is a multilayered film and has two or more layers. In embodiments the first film layer is monolayered where the first film layer is nonoriented or is oriented and annealed. In embodiments the multilayered film contains a multilayered first film layer where the multilayered first film layer has two or more layers where all the layers of the first film layer are nonoriented, all the layers of the first film layer are oriented and annealed, or part of the layers of the first film layer are oriented and annealed where part of the layers of the first film layer includes at least one layer of the first film layer but not all the layers of the first film layer. In embodiments the multilayered film has a first film layer and a second film layer where both the first film layer and second film layer are monolayered, both the first film layer and second film layer are multilayered, the first film layer is monolayered and the second film layer is multilayered, or the first film layer is multilayered and the second film layer is monolayered. The monolayered or multilayered second film layer can be nonoriented or oriented and annealed as described above for the monolayered and multilayered first film layer. In an embodiment, referring to FIGS. 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D and 1E the label has a thickness T which includes the thickness of the first film layer TFFL and the thickness of the adhesive layer TAL, or the thickness of the first film layer TFFL, the thickness of the second film layer TSFL and the thickness of the adhesive layer TAL, or the thickness of the first film layer TFFL, the thickness of the second film layer TSFL, the thickness of the tie layer TTL or the lamination adhesive layer TLAL and the thickness of the adhesive layer TAL. The film has a thickness which is the thickness of the first film layer TFFL, or includes the thickness of the first film layer TFFL and the thickness of the second film layer TSFL, or includes the thickness of the first film layer TFFL, the thickness of the second film layer TSFL and the thickness of the tie layer TTL or the lamination adhesive layer TLAL. In embodiments the thickness in micrometers of the film and the first film layer TFFL can range from 5 to 254, 6 to 127, or 7 to 63.5. In embodiments the first film layer, the second film layer, the tie layer and the lamination adhesive layer can each have a thickness, respectively TFFL and TSFL and TTL and TLAL, in micrometers ranging from 1.7 to 85, 2 to 42, or 2.3 to 21.
  • The film can be treated on one surface or both of its surfaces to enhance performance to include abrasion resistance, moisture resistance, and adhesion of an ink or adhesive to a surface or surfaces of the film. Surface treatments include a corona discharge treatment, a flame treatment, a plasma treatment, a topcoat treatment, or combinations of two or more of any of the foregoing treatments. Topcoat treatments include treatment of one or both surfaces of the film with an ink-receptive or adhesive-receptive material such as for example an acrylic primer and/or with a protective varnish. The treatments can be done any time during the manufacture and subsequent processing of the film and label where the time of the treatment generally depends on the performance enhancement. For example a treatment to enhance ink reception would precede a printing step while a topcoating for abrasion resistance might follow a printing step. In an embodiment the first surface or the second surface of the film is surface treated to enhance adhesion of an ink to the film. In an embodiment the second surface of the film is surface treated to enhance adhesion of an adhesive to the film. In an embodiment the first surface of the film is surface treated to enhance abrasion resistance and/or moisture resistance of the film.
  • In several embodiments the label includes a film, an adhesive layer, and a release liner. The label of the present invention can be prepared in any manner. In an embodiment a film or one or more layers of a film can be slit into widths suitable for subsequent processing steps and labeling operations. In embodiments the film can be coated with an adhesive to form an adhesive layer and then the film and adhesive layer can be combined in a lamination step with a release liner, or a release liner can be coated with an adhesive to form an adhesive layer and then the release liner and adhesive layer can be combined in a lamination step with the film. The label containing a film, adhesive layer and release liner can be further processed to include printing steps and/or die-cutting steps. In an embodiment the label, containing a film and adhesive layer and release liner, can be printed using any printing means and using any printing ink. Printing means include for example offset lithography, flexographic, digital, thermal, inkjet and laser. Printing inks include for example water-based inks, solvent-based inks and UV-activated inks. Alternatively in another embodiment a film or a film layer can be printed prior to eventually combining with an adhesive layer or with an adhesive layer and release liner as described above. In embodiments the film is monolayered or multilayered and has a first outer surface and a second outer surface where the first outer surface of the film has a print layer or the second outer surface of the film has a print layer which can also have an adhesive layer adhesively joined to the print layer. In an embodiment the film is multilayered and has two or more layers where a print layer is located between the layers of the film. In an embodiment the film is multilayered and has a first film layer and a second film layer where either the first film layer or the second film layer is printed and then the first film layer and the second film layer are combined in a lamination step where a print layer is located between the first film layer and second film layer. In an embodiment a label containing a printed or nonprinted film, adhesive layer and release liner is die-cut using any die-cutting means, to include for example a rotary cutting die, where as a result of the die-cutting a die-cut ladder-shaped matrix of the film and adhesive layer is formed that contains a series of individual labels on the release liner which acts as a carrier for the labels. This die-cut series of labels can then be used to label articles in a labeling process where individual labels are successively removed from the release liner and the die-cut ladder-shaped matrix. Processing to include extrusion, coextrusion, orienting, annealing, coating, surface treatments, label construction, printing, die-cutting and labeling of articles is further described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,217,463 to Henderson and U.S. Pat. No. 7,144,542 to Holzer et al.
  • Label Construction
  • In an embodiment a label includes a film having an upper or first surface and a lower or second surface and comprising a first film layer, and an adhesive layer having an upper or first surface and a lower or second surface where the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of the film. In an embodiment a label 10 includes a film comprising a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13, and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 where the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12. The term “underlie” and related term “overlie” when referring to a first layer underlying or overlying a second layer mean that the first layer can partially or fully cover the second layer and that the first layer and second layer can be in direct contact with each other or that one or more intermediate layers, to include for example tie layers or lamination adhesive layers, can be located between the first layer and second layer. In an embodiment a label 20 includes a film comprising a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness TSFL and a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13, and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness TAL where the first surface 11 of the first film layer 12 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12. In an embodiment a label 30 includes a film comprising a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 and a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness TSFL, and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness TAL where the first surface 21 of the second film layer 22 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22. In an embodiment a label 40 includes a film comprising a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness TSFL and a tie layer or lamination adhesive layer 26 having a first surface 25 and a second surface 27 and a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13, and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness TAL where the first surface 25 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22 and the first surface 11 of the first film layer 12 underlies the second surface 27 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12. In an embodiment a label 50 includes a film comprising a first film layer 12 having a first surface 11 and a second surface 13 and a tie layer or lamination adhesive layer 26 having a first surface 25 and a second surface 27 and a second film layer 22 having a first surface 21 and a second surface 23 and a thickness TSFL, and an adhesive layer 14 having a first surface 15 and a second surface 17 and a thickness TAL where the first surface 25 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 underlies the second surface 13 of the first film layer 12 and the first surface 21 of the second film layer 22 underlies the second surface 27 of the tie or lamination adhesive layer 26 and the first surface 15 of the adhesive layer 14 underlies the second surface 23 of the second film layer 22. In an embodiment the second film layer, as described hereinabove, has a combination of properties where the layer or layers of the second film layer have a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa, at least 830 MPa, or at least 715 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes, and an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%, less than 4.5%, or less than 4.9% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes. In an embodiment the second film layer 22, having after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes the combined properties of a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa and an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%, has a thickness TSFL which is greater than the thickness TAL of the adhesive layer 14 and in other embodiments the thickness of the second film layer is at least 5% greater, at least 10% greater, at least 20% greater, at least 30% greater, at least 40% greater, at least 50% greater, or at least 60% greater than the thickness of the adhesive layer. In embodiments the film or label has high clarity visual aesthetics where the film or label is clear having a TAPPI (Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry) T425 opacity of 12% or less, 10% or less, or 8% or less and a haze (ASTM D1003) of 12% or less, 10% or less, or 8% or less. In embodiments the film or label is dispensable during a labeling operation where the film or label has an ISO (International Organization for Standardization) 2493 bending resistance in mN (milliNewtons) of at least 14, at least 16, at least 18, or at least 20. In embodiments a label 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50 includes an adhesive layer 14 having a second surface 17 and a release liner 62 having a first surface 61 and a second surface 63 where the first surface 61 of the release liner 62, which normally includes a release coating, is releasably attached to the second surface 17 of the adhesive layer 14. The label of the present invention can comprise a monolayered or multilayered first film layer and a monolayered or multilayered second film layer where the label can include any type of layer construction regarding the ordering of film layers such as for example alternating first film layers and second film layers.
  • Label Removability
  • The labels of the present invention are removable from a container during an industrial washing process when subjected to a warm or hot washing fluid. The washing fluid includes washing liquids such as for example water or an aqueous caustic solution where the temperature of the washing fluid or washing liquid is usually at least 50° C. and typically can range from 50 to 100° C. Aqueous caustic solutions include for example aqueous caustic soda solutions which can be dilute solutions containing 0.5 to 4% by weight sodium hydroxide. In embodiments an aqueous caustic solution can have a pH of at least 4, at least 6, at least 7, or at least 8 where pH is defined as—log (logarithm to the base 10) of the hydrogen ion concentration in the solution. The containers include those described hereinabove such as for example plastic and glass containers which can be used in the beverage industry and are reusable and/or recyclable. In an embodiment the container is a glass beer bottle which is reusable and/or recyclable. In an embodiment a labeled container includes a label, as described throughout the Detailed Description and Drawings and Claims, and a container where (i) the label 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50 is attached to the container 72 having a vertical axis which is parallel to the height of the container and a horizontal axis which is parallel to the circumference of the container where the second surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to an outer surface of the container, (ii) the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container, and (iii) the label is removable from the container after immersion in a washing liquid where the temperature of the washing liquid is at least 50° C., greater than 50° C., greater than 55° C., or greater than 60° C. and the label detaches from the container. In embodiments the term “follows” means that the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer that circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container can be parallel to the horizontal axis or that the machine or transverse direction can form an angle with the horizontal axis of less than 45° (45 degrees), less than 20°, or less than 10°. In embodiments the container of the above described labeled container can be any shaped container to include a cylindrically shaped container where the vertical axis of the container is parallel to the length of the cylindrically shaped container and the horizontal axis of the container is parallel to the circumference of the cylindrically shaped container. The label of the present invention includes a first film layer which has an affinity for water and a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C. The first film layer of the label, when the label is attached to a container and immersed in a warm aqueous washing liquid having a temperature of at least 50° C., undergoes a large decrease in tensile modulus and a large distortion or large increase or decrease in area as measured in the machine and transverse directions which exposes the adhesive layer of the label to the warm aqueous washing liquid. The adhesive of the adhesive layer is generally selected that has a property selected from the group consisting of a decrease in adhesion strength at elevated temperatures generally above a room or ambient temperature, a decrease in adhesion strength on contact with an aqueous caustic solution such as for example an aqueous caustic soda solution, and a combination of the two foregoing properties so that upon exposure of the adhesive to the washing liquid, the label is able to detach from the container. In an embodiment the label of the present invention includes a film comprising a second film layer having a first surface and a second surface and a first film layer having a first surface and a second surface, and an adhesive layer having a first surface and a second surface where the first surface of a layer of the first film layer underlies the second surface of a layer of the second film layer, the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of a layer of the first film layer, and the second film layer, as described hereinabove, has after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes the combined properties of a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa and an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than 4%. In embodiments a label, as described throughout the Detailed Description and Drawings and Claims, becomes detached and removed from a cylindrical glass container within 3 minutes after immersion of the container and the attached label in a washing liquid where the temperature of the washing liquid is at least 50° C., greater than 50° C., greater than 55° C., or greater than 60° C.
  • Film and Label Examples
  • The following nonlimiting film examples and label examples further describe and illustrate the present invention.
  • Table I lists film examples that were used in subsequent label examples and also provides the source and physical properties of the films.
  • TABLE 1
    Modulus3, Areal Di- Water
    Film MPa mensional Absorp-
    Ex. Resin Tg 2, Am- 80° C. Change, tion, Wt.
    No. Identity1 ° C. bient Wet %4 %5
    1 EVOH-32% 69 2900 110 8.7 14.4
    2 EVOH-38% 62 2810 190 7.3 8.7
    3 EVOH-44% 55 2290 140 6.9 7.8
    4 EVOH-48% 49 1890 210 8.3 4.7
    5 PA 75 2660 600 5.4 2.6
    6 PC 145 1980 1810 0.4 0.8
    7 PMMA 98 1680 1290 1.4
    1Film Examples 1, 2, 3 and 4 were 50 micrometer thick ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer (EVOH) monolayered films prepared by extrusion without orientation using ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer EVAL ® resins from EVAL Americas which had an ethylene content on a mole basis of respectively 32%, 38%, 44%, and 48%.
    Film Example 5 was a 58.4 micrometer thick aromatic polyamide (PA) monolayered film prepared by extrusion without orientation using an aromatic polyamide MXD6 resin from Mitsubishi Gas Chemical American which was derived from meta-xylylenediamine.
    Film Example 6 was a 25.4 micrometer thick polycarbonate (PC) monolayered film prepared by extrusion without orientation using Mitsubishi bisphenol A based polycarbonate resin E2000.
    Film Example 7 was a 50.8 micrometer thick poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) monolayered film prepared by extrusion without orientation using PSR-9 impact modifier containing poly(methyl methacrylate) resin manufactured by Arkema Inc.
    2Tg is the glass transition temperature for each of the polymeric resins.
    3ASTM D882 tensile modulus for each film example was measured in the machine direction at ambient room temperature of 23° C. and after immersion of the film in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
    4Absolute areal dimensional change in the machine and transverse directions was measured for each film example using ASTM D1204 test procedure after immersion of the film in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes. Film Examples 1-4 had an increase in area while Film Examples 5-7 had a decrease in area.
    5ASTM D570 water absorption was measured for each film example after immersion of the film in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours.
  • Table II lists label examples and includes label constructions and results for removability from a container.
  • TABLE II
    Removability,
    Label Label Seconds2
    Example No. Construction1 Ambient Heated
    1 EVOH-32%/PSA >180 44
    2 EVOH-38%/PSA 50 87
    3 EVOH-44%/PSA >180 >180
    4 EVOH-48%/PSA 88 144
    5 PA/PSA 13 41
    6 PC/PSA 85 103
    7 PMMA/PSA 25 >180
    8 PA/LA/PC/PSA 46 58
    9 PA/LA/PMMA/PSA 21 43
    10 PC/LA/EVOH-44%/PSA 168 65
    1Label Examples 1-10 of Table II were prepared from the corresponding Film Examples 1-7 of Table I. Each label example was 76.2 mm (millimeters) high and 50.8 mm wide where the label width was the machine direction of the film or film layers. Each label example was coated with a pressure sensitive adhesive (PSA) at 15 grams per square meter on a dry weight basis. Label Examples 8-10 were prepared by laminating the corresponding film examples together with a lamination adhesive(LA) then applying the pressure sensitive adhesive to respectively the PC, PMMA and EVOH-44% side of the laminate.
    2Label Examples 1-10 were applied to glass bottles having a circumference of 191 mm. The labels were applied to the bottles with the PSA layer in contact with the outer surface of the bottle where the label width followed the circumference or horizontal axis of the bottle. After the bottles were labeled they were stored for 7 days at an ambient temperature of 20-23° C. to simulate an ambient storage or for 2 days at 60° C. followed by 1 day at an ambient temperatureof 20-23° C. to simulate a heated storage. After ambient or heated storage, label removability was evaluated by initially immersing the bottles for 1 minute in a 50° C. water bath that simulated a rinsing step and then immersing the rinsed bottles in a water bath at a temperature of about 80° C., that simulated a washing step, and measuring the time in seconds until the label detached from the bottle in a water bath at a temperature of about 80° C. or until180 seconds had elapsed.
  • Each of the documents referred to in the Detailed Description is incorporated herein by reference. All numerical quantities in this application used in the Summary of the Invention, Detailed Description and appended Claims are understood to be modified by the word “about” except in the examples or where explicitly indicated otherwise. All range and ratio limits in the Summary of the Invention, Detailed Description and appended Claims are understood to be combinable.
  • While the invention has been presented in the Detailed Description and appended Claims, it is understood that various modifications of this invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading this application. Therefore these various modifications, that fall within the scope of the appended Claims and/or Detailed Description, are considered to be a part of this invention.

Claims (20)

1. A label, comprising:
(a) a film having a first surface and a second surface and comprising a first film layer; and
(b) an adhesive layer having a first surface and a second surface and comprising an adhesive wherein the first surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to the second surface of the film;
(c) wherein the first film layer comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer wherein the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C., and a tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction, which after heating, is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air.
2. The label of claim 1 wherein the tensile modulus of the film after heating in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes is less than about 40% of the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air.
3. The label of claim 1 wherein the first film layer has a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in the machine direction of less than 945 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes.
4. The label of claim 1 wherein the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of an olefin-vinyl alcohol copolymer, an aromatic polyamide, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
5. The label of claim 1 wherein the thermoplastic polymer of the first film layer comprises a polymer selected from the group consisting of an ethylene-vinyl alcohol copolymer, an aromatic polyamide derived from an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid or acid halide and an aromatic diamine, and a mixture of two or more of any of the foregoing polymers.
6. The label of claim 1 wherein first film layer is nonoriented.
7. The label of claim 1 wherein the first film layer is oriented by stretching the first film layer uniaxially or biaxially and then annealing the uniaxially or biaxially stretched first film layer.
8. The label of claim 1 wherein the film is a monolayered film.
9. The label of claim 1 wherein the film is a multilayered film.
10. The label of claim 1 wherein the first film layer comprises two or more layers wherein each of the two or more layers comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer wherein the thermoplastic polymer has a glass transition temperature in the range of 35 to 105° C., and a tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction, which after heating, is less than the tensile modulus of the film in the machine direction in ambient air.
11. The label of claim 1 wherein the film comprises a second film layer wherein the second film layer comprises one layer or two or more layers wherein the one layer or each of the two or more layers comprises at least one thermoplastic polymer and the one layer or each of the two or more layers has a property selected from the group of at least one of: a) a tensile modulus (ASTM D882) in a machine direction of at least 945 MPa after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes; b) an absolute areal dimensional change (ASTM D1204) of less than about 4% after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 3 minutes; or c) a water absorption (ASTM D570) of less than about 1.7% by weight after immersion in water at a temperature of about 80° C. for at least about 2 hours, or a combination of the foregoing properties.
12. The label of claim 11 wherein the second film layer has a first surface and a second surface, the first film layer has a first surface and a second surface, and the first surface of the first film layer underlies the second surface of the second film layer, and the first surface of the adhesive layer underlies the second surface of the first film layer.
13. The label of claim 11 wherein the first film layer has a first surface and a second surface, the second film layer has a first surface and a second surface, and the first surface of the second film layer underlies the second surface of the first film layer, and the first surface of the adhesive layer underlies the second surface of the second film layer.
14. The label of claim 1 wherein the adhesive of the adhesive layer is a pressure sensitive adhesive.
15. The label of claim 1 wherein the label further comprises a release liner having a first surface and a second surface wherein the first surface of the release liner is releasably attached to the second surface of the adhesive layer.
16. The label of claim 1 wherein the film is clear.
17. A labeled container, comprising:
the label of claim 1; and
a container having a horizontal axis, wherein the label is attached to the container, wherein the second surface of the adhesive layer is adhesively joined to an outer surface of the container, and the machine direction or the transverse direction of the first film layer circumferentially follows the horizontal axis of the container.
18. The labeled container of claim 17 wherein the container is a cylindrically shaped container wherein the horizontal axis of the container is parallel to the circumference of the cylindrically shaped container.
19. A method of removing a label from a container comprising:
(i) providing a labeled container of claim 17; and
(ii) removing the label from the container by immersing the container with the attached label in a liquid wherein the temperature of the liquid is at least about 50° C. and the label detaches from the container.
20. The method of claim 19 wherein the liquid is water or a caustic aqueous solution.
US13/262,460 2009-03-30 2010-03-30 Removable Adhesive Label Containing Polymeric Film Layer Having Water Affinity Abandoned US20120034402A1 (en)

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US9334425B2 (en) 2009-03-30 2016-05-10 Avery Dennison Corporation Removable adhesive label containing high tensile modulus polymeric film layer
US9387652B2 (en) 2005-01-10 2016-07-12 Avery Dennison Corporation Removable curl labels
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