Title of Invention

STRUCTURALLY MODIFIABLE FLEXIBLE FILM

Abstract A structurally modifiable flexible film comprising at least one flexible layer associated over at least a part of its area with a stiffening system comprising at least a substance, such as herein described, which is liquid when applied to said flexible layer, but is subsequently thickened by a first transformation process, without the layer losing its features of flexibility and of being wound, and is caused to be stiffened by administration of energy in a second transformation process.
Full Text STRUCTURALLY MODIFIABLE FLEXIBLE FILM
The invention relates to a structurally modifiable flexible film for forming dimensionally and
structurally stable articles, in particular disposable containers.
Disposable containers are known obtained from sheets of strong, generally plastic-coated
paper, which are unwound from reels and subjected to successive bonding, folding and possibly
shaping processes to assume the desired spatial configuration. Their filling with liquid, granular or
powdery products can take place either during the container formation or after it has been completely
formed.
These known disposable containers are advantageous in terms of their stability, stackability,
display on shelves, strength, product protection, ease of preservation, use and facility for reclosure.
They are however rather heavy and costly, and difficult to dispose of as they are not easy to crumple.
Flexible disposable containers are also known, obtained from plastic film, for example polyethylene,
which are essentially free of the drawbacks of rigid containers; in particular they are of low cost, of
smaller bulk and easy disposal, and simple, practical and advantageous to machine-fabricate starting
from reels. However they have practically no dimensional stability and are therefore not easy to
stack, and moreover from the commercial viewpoint present limitations in that they are unsuitable for
display on shelves.
In order to eliminate these drawbacks of the different types of known containers while at the
same time preserving their advantages, and more precisely to form articles, and in particular
disposable containers, which present dimensional stability while at the same time being of low cost
and easy to reduce in bulk after use, a method has been proposed by the same applicant.

This method has proved extremely valid, and in particular has enabled articles and especially
disposable containers to be formed from a flexible film which prior to the formation of the article can
be wound on a reel and can hence occupy a considerably reduced space, to be then stiffened only at
the moment of formation of the article.
The present invention proposes to provide a structurally modifiable film, to be used in
particular in the aforeindicated known method, as an alternative to the flexible film used therein.
Accordingly, the present invention provides a structurally modifiable flexible film comprising
at least one flexible layer associated over at least a part of its area with a stiffening system
comprising at least a substance, such as herein described, which is liquid when applied to said
flexible layer, but is subsequently thickened by a first transformation process, without the layer losing
its features of flexibility and of being wound, and is caused to be stiffened by administration of
energy in a second transformation process.
Some preferred embodiments of the invention are further clarified hereinafter by way of non-
limiting example.
In a first embodiment, the structurally modifiable flexible film is a film 2 formed from several
layers joined together by a traditional process of bonding by rolling or extrusion. One of these layers
is formed from a traditional flexible film, for example of polyethylene, polypropylene, polyester,
aluminium, paper or the like. Another of these layers is formed from a filmable substance able to
undergo two different structural transformations, the first of which (stage A) takes place either
spontaneously or by administration of energy, for example heat, during the film bonding process and
transforms the substance into a state which enables the multi-layer film to be worked, the second
transformation being effected later on command (stage B) by administrating a particular type of
energy. Specifically, the administered energy can be light (with its spectrum for e.g. in the UV range),

ultrasound, electron beam, thermal (with a triggering temperature higher than for
the first stage), etc.
The transformable substance can involve the whole or part of the surface of the
traditional flexible film; in the first case it can be applied by spreading or by
spraying, or can form a film to be bonded to the traditional flexible film; in the
second case the transformable substance can be applied by stamping. In all
cases the multi-layer film 2 is flexible and can be worked, wound onto a reef and
stored, in a similar manner to a traditional flexible film.
The transformable substance can advantageously be a mixture of several
polymers, for example a system formed from photo-crosslinkable unsaturated
polyester resins and one or more thickening agents, or from an unsaturated epoxy
resin and an anhydride, or from unsaturated polyester and diisocyanate, or from a
polyol and a diisocyanate, or from an epoxy resin, a diacrylate and a diisocyanate,
or from a polyurethane adhesive and an acrylic system, or from a vinyl varnish and
an acrylic system or the like, in which in the first stage there is a polymerization
reaction between the two different resins which can lead to the formation of a
polymeric cross-linkage, or polymerization of molecules of the same resin can
occur, or "thickening" can take place by coordination of several molecules about a
coordination centre to hence ensure workability of the film, whereas rn the second
stage final stiffening takes place.
The transformable system is generally provided with components at least one of
which has double bonds; the system could also be provided with an activator
(photoinitiator, thermal activator, catalyst).
After the film 2 has been obtained, at the moment in which it is to be used
for example to obtain a substantially rigid article or a container 4 it is subjected to

energy administration of a type compatible with the nature of the transformable
substance, so that it becomes transformed from flexible to substantially rigid.
The energy administration can take place at any moment and in any form,
depending also on the article to be obtained, For example, if the article to be
obtained consists of cladding for a body having its own form, for example cladding
for a panel, after the flexible multi-layer film has been applied to the panel the
energy must be administered to the entire surface of said panel.
If however the article to be dad consists of a pantographed panel or a
convex body (for example the arm of an armchair), the multi-layerfilm should be of
extendable type in order to adhere perfectly to the body without forming folds or
overlaps, and again the energy must be administered to the entire surface of said
panel.
Finally, if the article to be obtained consists of a container 4, for example
of bag type, which has to be stiffened only at its corners, the transformable
substance can be applied either only to those bands of the multi-layer film which
are to form the container corners, or to the entire surface of the film. In the first
case the energy can be administered to the entire surface of the film, whereas in
the second case it must be applied with masking, i.e. it must involve only those
bands which are to form the container corners.
In a different embodiment the structurally modifiable flexible film is a
single-layer film in the form of a flexible film of at least partly porous material, for
example paper or non-woven fabric, which is impregnated with the transformable
substance. In this manner a composite material is obtained formed from a single
layer in which the impregnant constitutes the matrix and the film the reinforcement
filler; by a first transformation this material is brought into a condition in which it

can be worked and handled, and by the second transformation, implemented on
command, it becomes substantially rigid.
The substances used in this second embodiment are such as to ensure
that the film is not sticky even when in its form preceding final stiffening, and can
be for example urethane acryfates dispersed in water or dissolved in a solvent,
unsaturated polyesters, acrylates with various terminations, or others.
In a variant of this embodiment, the single-layer transformable film can be
bonded to traditional flexible films to form a multi-layer film, in which at feast one
layer has the property of undergoing two different transformations, the second of
which enhances its mechanical properties.
In a third embodiment the substance which stiffens on command also has
extrudability characteristics, and in this manner it can be extruded alone to form
the structurally modifiable flexible film, or can be coextruded with a filmable
polyotefin.
In this fatter case the stiffening substance effects the first transformation
during the extrusion stage, to be transformed into flexible film, whereas the second
transformation, which determines stiffening, is triggered on command following
administration of energy in the form required by the system.
In both the aforesaid cases in which the stiffening substance is of flexible
type, it evidently involves the entire surface of the structurally modifiable film of the
invention, and consequently if the transformation is to involve only defined regions
of the film, energy administration must necessarily take place with masking.
A fourth embodiment of the structurally modifiable flexible film represents
an intermediate solution between the aforegoing. According to this fourth
embodiment, the flexible film is of multi-layer type, i.e. it is formed from several
layers, one of which is a traditional flexible film to which the stiffening substance is

applied, as described relative to the first embodiment, and at least one other layer
of the multi-layer film consists of or contains stiffening material. Hence in this case
the energy administration must take place over more than one layer and will
enable the effect to be emphasised or selective, depending on whether the
substances used are identical or different.
A fifth embodiment of the structurally modifiable flexible film consists of a
traditional flexible film on which there is deposited a cross-linkable polymer which
is in the solid state at ambient temperature and is diluted in a suitable solvent for
its application. In this case the first transformation stage consists of evaporating
the solvent, followed by possible bonding of the flexible film to a second film to
obtain a workable and windable multi-layer film; final stiffening of the multi-layer
film takes place by cross-linking the polymer with or without activator, as a result of
energy administration (for example electron beam, or UV if a photoinitiator is
present).
A sixth embodiment of the structurally modifiable flexible film uses as the
stiffening substance to be applied to a traditional flexible film a mixture of two
radical polymerization polymers, one of which is in the liquid state, other being in
the solid state (physical thickening). In this case the polymer in the solid state, in
particular in the powder state, becomes suspended in the polymer in the liquid
state, the suspension having a consistency such as to enable it to be spread by
traditional methods; the first transformation is thermal and results rn solubilization
of the solid polymer in the liquid polymer, creating a considerable viscosity
increase in the system; the second transformation is the cross-linkage of at least
one of the two polymers, resulting in final stiffening of the plastic film. The
substances which can be used in this case are solid polyester and liquid polyester,
at least one of them unsaturated, solid diacrylate and liquid diacrylate or crossed

systems. This system could present the advantage of very rapid thickening
without being too critical regarding the resin specifications.
A seventh embodiment of the structurally modifiable flexible film consists
of applying to a traditional film a system formed from a two-component
polyurethane adhesive and expandable microbeads. In this case the first
structural transformation stage is the formation of the polyurethane adhesive
followed by adhesion between the matrix, film and microbeads, whereas the
second stage consists of expansion of the microbeads as a result of thermal
energy administration. In its turn the volume increase consequent on the
microbead expansion determines a stiffness increase in those parts of the film in
which the microbeads are present.
In a variant of thrs embodiment the microbeads are incorporated into a
system which cross-links following administration of equal or different types of
energy, or into one of the two-stage stiffening systems already described. In this
case the first transformation is the thickening of the system containing the
microbeads, whereas the transformation for final stiffening comprises expansion of
the microbeads and cross-linkage of the system which contains them, so
improving the final result obtained.
An eighth embodiment of the structurally modifiable flexible film consists of
inserting into a dual-cure organic resin a filler in the form of nanoparticles which
form a "nanocomposite" resulting in increase in the elastic modulus of the resin
and hence of the multi-layer film. In order for the nanoparticles to provide a
significant contribution to the mechanical properties of the film they must be
bonded to the resin, and to obtain a good bond between the filler and matrix the
nanoparticles must be functionalized with organic groups compatible with the resin
used so that chemical bonds form between the particles and the matrix. The

particles used are preferably of inorganic nature and can be of natural origin, such
as montmorillonite, or can originate from chemical synthesis (for example of
alkoxysilanes), or can be formed from a hybrid; they could be coated with a
polymer matrix in order to bond to the compatible part of the resin with which they
form the nanocomposite.
A ninth embodiment of the structurally modifiable flexible film is based on
the use of a hybrid system formed from an inorganic part and an organic part,
possibly reinforced with nanoparticles. In this case there is the synergic effect of
the combination of the organic part, ensuring film flexibility, with the inorganic part,
determining significant increases in the elastic modulus. Finally the presence of
nonoparticles enables a nanocomposite material to be formed which further
increases film stiffness. In this case the nanopartrcles used can be organic-
inorganic hybrids to form bonds with the organic part of the matrix or with the
inorganic part.
Independently of the method by which the structurally modifiable flexible
film is obtained, it can be worked, wound on a reel and stored, and is usable in
current packaging machines.
When all or part of the flexible film is to be stiffened, energy must be
supplied in the form and intensity required by the system, in order to trigger the
final transformation resulting in the stiffening of the scheduled parts of the film.

WE CLAIM :
1. A structurally modifiable flexible film comprising at least one flexible layer associated over at
least a part of its area with a stiffening system comprising at least a substance, such as herein
described, which is liquid when applied to said flexible layer, but is subsequently thickened by a first
transformation process, without the layer losing its features of flexibility and of being wound, and is
caused to be stiffened by administration of energy in a second transformation process.
2. A film as claimed in claim 1, wherein the substance associated with the flexible layer is at
least partially transformable either spontaneously or by administration of energy, for example
thermal.
3. A film as claimed in claim 1, wherein the flexible layer consists of at least one layer of
substance is selected from the group comprising polyethylene, polypropylene, polyester, aluminium,
paper.
4. A film as claimed in claim 1, wherein the transformable substance consists of a mixture of
polymers.
5. A flexible film as claimed in claim 4, wherein the transformable substance consists of a
mixture of unsaturated polyester resins.
6. A film as claimed in claim 5, wherein the transformable substance consists of a mixture of
unsaturated resins with at least one thickening agent.

7. A film as claimed in claim 4, wherein the transformable substance consists of a mixture of
epoxy resin, diacrylates, diisocyanates and photoinitiators.
A structurally modifiable flexible film comprising at least one flexible layer associated over at
least a part of its area with a stiffening system comprising at least a substance, such as herein
described, which is liquid when applied to said flexible layer, but is subsequently thickened by a first
transformation process, without the layer losing its features of flexibility and of being wound, and is
caused to be stiffened by administration of energy in a second transformation process.

Documents:

1470-KOLNP-2003-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

1470-KOLNP-2003-FORM 27-1.1.pdf

1470-KOLNP-2003-FORM 27.pdf

1470-KOLNP-2003-FORM-27-1.pdf

1470-KOLNP-2003-FORM-27.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-abstract.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-claims.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-correspondence.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-description (complete).pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-drawings.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-examination report.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-form 1.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-form 18.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-form 3.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-form 5.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-gpa.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-letter patent.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

1470-kolnp-2003-granted-specification.pdf


Patent Number 222879
Indian Patent Application Number 1470/KOLNP/2003
PG Journal Number 35/2008
Publication Date 29-Aug-2008
Grant Date 27-Aug-2008
Date of Filing 11-Nov-2003
Name of Patentee TRANI GIORGIO
Applicant Address GIUDECCA 671, I-30100, VENEZIA
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 TRANI GIORGIO GIUDECCA 671, I-30100, VENEZIA
PCT International Classification Number C08J 7/04
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP02/05269
PCT International Filing date 2002-05-14
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 VE01A000026 2001-05-18 Italy