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Berry Plastics Liner-less Detergent Cap
Team 7 Tom Pepe Ross Rozansky Dale Heintzelman Cherish Wilford Glenn Catlin Advisor: Dr. Michael Keefe Sponsor Contact: John Tauber
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About Berry Plastics Leading manufacturer of injection molded packaging in the U.S. Currently working on new product development around liner-less closures With the partnership of UD and our sponsor, John Tauber, a new liner-less detergent cap will be designed
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Problem Definition The current cost of polypropylene is rising causing the cap liners to become more and more expensive The cost of the liner is now close to 1/3rd of the total cost to make the cap A new design is needed to eliminate the need for a liner The design should be as effective and inexpensive as possible Liner
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Affected Customers Liquid detergent companies, i.e. Clorox
Retail stores, i.e. Walmart General public Elderly Middle aged Teenagers
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Problem Specifics Wants Low Cost Maximum Seal Time
Aesthetically Pleasing Easy to Grip Easy to Close Simple Design Constraints Liner-less Design Injection Molded One Piece Applied Torque
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Want Weights
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Metrics and Target Values
Gap Size – Area between cap and bottle does not change from current design Cost - < $60 per 1000 caps Appendage Thickness – None Time Until Leak – 1 hr < t < 24hr Reproducibility of Results - > 90% Loss of Fluid – 0 mL Torque Required – τ = 35 in-lbs
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Metric Weights
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Benchmark Concepts Solo Cap XTRA Cap Type of seal Fin seal with bottle
Wedge seal to spout component Fin Wedge
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Benchmark Concepts cont.
All Cap Type of seal Cap lays flat against bottle land; tight tolerance Febreze Cap Wedge seal to bottle spike Wedge
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Benchmark Cap Leak Testing
To determine which concepts work better than others Tested with actual product (detergent) inside Caps tightened to 35 in-lbs Bottles lay flat on their side and checked periodically for leakage Each benchmark tested twice
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Leak Test Results From Benchmark Caps
All- Tied for best -Excellent tolerance XTRA- Tied for best -Strong seal to deformable spout component Febreze- Tied for worst -Flimsy spike design Solo- Tied for worst -Fin offered weak seal with bottle Cap Viscosity (Pa-s) Time until leak (hrs) All 0.18 - XTRA 0.05 Solo 0.12 2 to 3 Febreze < XTRA 3
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Our Concepts Two Vertical Fins
Fray out to touch walls when screwed down Force from cap walls and plastic fin resilience create seal with both bottle and spout Problem- Space between outside fins and cap interior is too thin Mold has a high probability to break over time from stress
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Our Concepts Cont. Flat Contact Proven easy and successful
With proper tolerance cap sits flush on bottle top, creating a tight seal Problem- Tolerance would have to be incredible Top of bottle would have to be consistently manufactured completely flat
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Our Concepts Cont. Internal Wedge
Cap tightens to inside wall of spout while screwing down Allows more surface contact Allows least amount of liquid to directly reach the seal Fluid pushes cap against bottle naturally
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Primary Cap Design Main Metrics Metric #1- Gap Size (26%) Tight fit
Metric #3- Appendage Thickness (18%) No increases in thickness measured from the base. i.e.- injection moldable
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Prototype Testing Same testing procedure as before with water
No seal lasted 1 hr. Notch Wedge
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Change in Problem Scope
The seal may not be achievable if the bottle was manufactured incorrectly Changing a spec on the bottle itself may be a cheaper and simpler solution than designing a new cap Need to show evidence of the bottle being direct cause of failure before changing specs
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Bottle Testing Tests of current bottles and liner-less caps from Berry Plastics 16 different bottles/16 different caps for a total of 256 tests Bottles lay flat on their sides with paper towel underneath to observe leakage
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Bottle Testing cont. Bottles filled with water
for most extreme testing Caps torqued to 35 in-lbs using torque meter Max time limit of 1 hour Results: 48% success rate
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Testing Results Bottles show more consistency
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Bottle Investigation Possible Causes of Failure Bottle land flatness
Wall thickness Distance from start of thread to bottle land
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Correlations More consistent wall thickness promotes a longer seal
Flatter Bottles sealed longer
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Bottle Manufacturer Reaming process impact: Wall thickness Flatness
Land distance to thread
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New Bottle Testing Success rate of 94.4%
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Leak Investigation Fin Gap No Gap
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Recommendations Implement new bottle specs with old cap design
Wall thickness variability- < inches Flatness- < inches End Lip variability- < inches Manufacturer limitations? Create a new cap design Greater wedge angle Same fin from old cap Do both Wedge Fin
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Questions/Concerns Thank You
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