BARRIER POLYMERS

BARRIER POLYMERS

Many polymers such as polyolefins (polyethylene, polypropylene), poly(vinyl chloride), aliphatic polyamides, poly(ethylene terephthalate), polycarbonate, and others are used as protective barrier films against the mass transport of small molecules of gases, vapors, and liquids (known as diffusates, permeants) in different applications. The barrier properties depend on the polymer characteristics such as solubility, diffusion, permeability, and others, the nature of the fluid, temperature, and other factors.

Barrier polymers are used for many packaging and protective applications. As barriers, they separate a system, such as an article of food or an electronic component, from an environment.

Barrier polymers limit the movement of substances called permeants. The movement can be through the polymer or, in some cases, merely into the polymer. After crossing the barrier polymer, the permeant moves to the polymer surface, desorbs and moves away. Permeant movement is a physical process with both a thermodynamic and a kinetic component.

BARRIER PROPERTIES OF POLYMERS

PERMEABILITY, SOLUBILITY, AND DIFFUSIVITY

The permeability or inverse barrier is an important physical property for many industrial and biomedical applications of polymers. For example, polymers with low permeability, i.e., high barrier properties, are required for food packaging applications to prevent loss of flavor, color and quality and retard spoilage.

Polyethylene (PE)Heat-sealable food contact layer

Moisture barrier

Can be combined with gas/aroma barriers (e.g., PA, EVOH)

Breathable packaging for fresh produce LDPE, HDPE

Carton liners (LLDPE)

Polypropylene (PP)Moisture barrier

To provide mechanical strength

Can be coated with heat seal coatings (PVDC, acrylate)

Can be combined with gas/aroma barriers (e.g., PVDC coatings, PA, EVOH)

Modified atmosphere packaging thermoformed containers for microwavable packaging, hot-filled packaging
Polyamide (PA)Gas/aroma barrier

To provide mechanical strength

Heat resistance

Can be used as outside layer of a heat seal film → film will not stick to the sealing bar surface

Boil-in-bag packaging

Thermoformed packaging

Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET)Gas/aroma barrier

Moisture barrier

To provide mechanical strength

Heat resistance

Plastic bottles for carbonated soft drinks

Meat and cheese packaging

Snack food wrapper

Boil-in-bag

Sterilizable pouches

Ovenware containers

Polystyrene (PS)Gas permeability

Printability

Can be combined with gas/aroma barriers (coextruded or laminated) → commercially available structures: e.g., PS/PVDC/PS, PS/PVDC/PE, PS/EVOH/PE, PS/EVOH/PP

Breathable packaging for fresh produce (e.g., fresh meat packaging) printable outside layers
Ethylene Vinyl Alcohol (EVOH)Oxygen barrier

Needs to be protected from moisture → often sandwiched (coextruded) between PE or PP, in some applications also sandwiched between PET, PA, or PS

Modified atmosphere packaging

Packing of oxygen-sensitive food

Polyvinylidene Chloride (PVDC)Gas/aroma and/or moisture barrier

To protect the surface from scratches and abrasion

Heat-sealable food contact layer

Often copolymers of vinylidene-chloride and ester-type monomers (e.g., ethyl acrylate)

Modified atmosphere packaging applied as coating or coextruded film
Ethylene Vinyl Acetate (EVA)Moisture barrier

Adhesion layer (tie layer) for coextrusion of polar (e,g., PA, PET-G) and non-polar (e.g., PE) or BOPP films

Modified atmosphere packaging applied as coating or coextruded film
Polycarbonate (PC)Polycarbonate (PC)

Mechanical strength

Moisture barrier

Microwavable packaging, hot-filled packaging

Modified atmosphere packaging barriers for fruit juice cartons

Polyvinylchloride (PVC)Gas/aroma barrier

Mechanical strength

Fresh food packaging (e.g., PVC/PE films)

Modified atmosphere packaging (e.g., PVC, EVOH, PE films)

Polyethylene Naphthalate (PEN)Gas/aroma and moisture barrier heat resistanceFor hot refills, rewashing, reuse beverage bottles (e.g., beer)
Glycol modified polyethylene terephthalate (PET-G)Heat-sealable food contact layerUnit dose pharmaceutical

Blister packaging

Ethylene Acrylic Acid (EAA)Extrusion coating tie layer between
aluminum foil and other polymers

Heat-sealable food contact layer

Grease resistance

Chemical resistance

Food packaging applied as tie layer or heat seal layer
IonomerExtrusion coating tie layer between aluminum foil and other polymers

Heat-sealable food contact layer

Heat seal through fat and

contaminants

Superior grease resistance

Superior chemical resistance

Food packaging applied as tie layer or heat seal layer