
7 May 2003
Electrically Conductive Pail Moulded in Faradex® Steel Fibre Filled Compound for Hazardous Materials Wins Packaging Award
Based on extensive knowledge gained in developing drums, pails and canisters for various application areas as well as on their injection moulding and tooling expertise, Theodor Fries Gesellschaft m.b.H. & Co. of Sulz, Austria, has developed an innovative 18-litre pail designed especially for hazardous materials. The pail is moulded in a proprietary Faradex® steel fibre filled compound from LNP Engineering Plastics, a world leader in custom-engineered thermoplastic material solutions.
Key application requirements included high impact strength and rigidity in transportation and storage. Above all, however, the pail had to provide reliable surface conductivity for filling and handling easily flammable powders and liquids in explosion-proof environments.
“Conventional explosion-proof packaging solutions using thermoplastic materials are frequently based on carbon black to achieve the required electrical conductivity of the inner and outer surfaces of the containers,” says Thomas Rhomberg, Director of R&D for Fries. “Apart from limiting the colour choice to black, the filler content – between 6% to 8% – presents a high contamination potential. The risk of carbon black migrating into the packaged product prohibits its use for many applications, such as in the dye/paint and food industries.”
In search of a thermoplastic material to overcome these restraints, Fries eventually selected Faradex® MS-1003 from LNP, a 15% steel fibre filled polypropylene compound. Moulded in this material and completed with a steel lid and metal clamping ring, the 18-litre pail meets all explosion-proof classes, as well as all temperature class provisions set out in the European ATEX directive for packaging equipment in hazardous environments. Moreover, the pail is stackable under load (filled), has passed severe mechanical testing, including impact without breakage when dropped from a height of 1.2 meter at 18°C, and showed no leakage when subjected to a pressure of 1.5 bar for 30 minutes.
The Faradex® compound was identified as ideal for this demanding application, as a result of the close co-operation between Fries and LNP. “Beyond ensuring optimum balance between the required conductivity, mechanical properties, processibility and cost, LNP’s quick response and competent support also helped us to minimise time-to-market for this product,” says Kunibert Tiefenthaler, Fries purchasing department, in emphasising another critical reason for the material choice.
Following two years of extensive research and development, the electrically conductive pail was officially introduced to the market at Interpack 2002, and was awarded a Staatspreis für vorbildliche Verpackung (State Award for Exemplary Packaging) by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Commerce, Trade and Labour. In their decision, the expert jury complimented the pail design for combining “a resource saving and cost-efficient transportation packaging with high safety and optimum product protection”, by preventing electrostatic charge and associated explosion hazards. The conductive pail is available in various colours matched to customer specifications. Typical application areas include the packaging of powders and water-based liquids in the pharmaceutical, food and chemical industries.
Faradex® is part of LNP’s line of electrically active compounds, which also includes Stat Kon® and Stat Loy®, each offering excellent protection against static build-up, electrostatic discharge and electromagnetic interference through the use of selected electrically conductive fillers, fibres or polymers. Faradex® compounds are available in various base polymers, including ABS, PP, PC and PC/ABS, and in a wide range of colours, the compounds are customised to provide the desired shielding level in a ready-to-mould material without the need for additional coating or painting.
Reader enquiries
LNP Engineering PlasticsPlasticslaan 1
4600 AC Bergen op Zoom
Netherlands
Banu Kukner
banu.kukner@gepex.ge.com
Tel: +31 164 29 16 05
Fax: +31 164 29 10 66
Netherlands
Notes for editors
Theodor Fries Gesellschaft m.b.H. (www.fries.at) has almost 50 years experience in injection moulding. Core business activities are technical applications for individual market segments, yarn carriers in plastic and paper for the textile industry, thermoplastic packaging with a focus on hazardous goods transportation, and a range of wash, transportation and storage cages for the catering industry. More than 75% of the company’s output is exported in over 40 countries, worldwide.
Headquartered in Exton, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., LNP Engineering Plastics, a GE Plastics company, is a global leader in the custom compounding of engineering thermoplastics. The company operates eleven manufacturing plants throughout the USA, Mexico, Canada Europe, Asia Pacific and South America.
In Europe, LNP Engineering Plastics is based in Raamsdonksveer, The Netherlands, from where it serves customers’ needs throughout the region supported by manufacturing plants at Fosses, France, Thornaby-on-Tees, UK, and Pontirolo, Italy.
LNP is known for innovative, value-added products and ultra-fast development of viable solutions for its customers. The LNP product portfolio includes a wide range of specialty compounds for information technology, automotive, health care, industrial and consumer applications. Details can be found at www.LNP.com
GE Plastics is a leading producer of engineering thermoplastics with major production facilities worldwide. GE Plastics materials, including LEXAN® polycarbonate, are used in a wide variety of applications such as CDs and DVDs, automobile parts, computer housings, cookware, outdoor signage, cell phones, bullet- resistant shielding and building materials. Through its LNP Engineering Plastics business, the company is a worldwide leader in the custom compounding of engineering thermoplastics. GE Plastics is also a global distributor of sheet, film, rod and tube products through GE Polymershapes and GE Structured Products. In 2003 GE Plastics is celebrating 50 years of innovation and the 50th Anniversary of LEXAN polycarbonate, discovered in 1953 by GE chemist Dr. Daniel W. Fox. The company's website is located at www.geplastics.com, and to learn more about LEXAN visit www.gelexan.com.
Faradex®, Stat Kon® and Stat Loy® are registered trademarks of LNP Engineering Plastics Europe BV.
Lexan® is a registered trademark of GE Plastics.
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