[0001] This invention relates to a valve bag having a valve opening in which is fixed a
valve sleeve extending into the interior of the bag. Such a bag is filled with particulate
material through a fill pipe which is passed into the bag through the valve sleeve
thereof, the material being injected into the bag through the fill pipe by means of
a stream of pressure air. After filling of the bag the fill pipe is withdrawn, and
as a result the valve sleeve, when designed as a lip valve, is pressed flat by the
action of the material and the air in the bag, keeping the material trapped in the
bag.
[0002] In conventional prior art designs, compare e.g. Swedish patent specification 227,754,
the valve sleeve is formed of air-impermeable material so that air trap- ed in the
bag can only with difficulty penetrate through the valve sleeve serving as a lip valve
in the filling operation and the subsequent handling of the bag, and this problem
becomes particularly severe when the bag walls are air-impermeable so that all of
the trapped air must escape through the valve sleeve. If the bag has been filled with
pulverulent dust-producing material dust will be taken along by the air escaping through
the valve sleeve so that serious dusting problems arise.
[0003] To remedy the problems associated with air entrapped in the bag and with dust generation
it is already known to form the valve sleeve of porous air- permeable paper or woven
cloth, cf. e.g. German patent specification 867,493. The valve sleeve serving as a
lip valve prevents material escaping from the bag and filters off dust from air that
penetrates from the interior of the bag through the porous valve sleeve wall out of
the bag.
[0004] With the use of such a valve sleeve of porous air-permeable material problems arise
in manufacturing and mounting the valve sleeve in the bag. To ensure a good lip valve
action the valve sleeve material must be thin and very easily flexible.Owing to its
easy flexibility such a valve sleeve material is practically impossible to handle
in a modern bag manufacturing machine, and due to its porosity and thinness such valve
sleeve material lets through adhesive utilized in the manufacture of the sleeve and
the mounting thereof so that the valve sleeve material is glued together at undesired
points. The handling problem could per se be solved by constructing the valve sleeve
in the manner disclosed by Swedish patent specification 221,402 from a supporting
sheet and a porous air-permeable sheet adhered to the supporting sheet along two opposite
edges, but the problem of the material being glued together at undesired points remains
and is rendered more complex with such a construction of the valve sleeve.
[0005] The problems outlined above are solved by the present invention which suggests a
valve bag having a valve opening in which a valve.sleeve projecting into the interior
of the bag is fixed by means of an adhesive layer formed of a mountant and extending
substantially all around the valve sleeve, said valve sleeve consisting of a supporting
sheet and a lip valve sheet of porous air-permeable material, which is adhered to
the supporting sheet along two opposite edge portions, and which is characterised
in that the face of the supporting sheet turned towards the lip valve sheet is formed,
within at least substantially the entire area between the points where the opposite
edge portions of the lip valve sheet are adhered to the supporting sheet, of a material
to which the mountant lacks essential adhesive power.
[0006] Further features of the invention and the advantages gained thereby will appear from
the appended sub-claims.
[0007] The invention will be described in greater detail below with reference to the accompanying
drawings which schematically show two embodiments of the invention. In the drawings:
Fig. 1 is a cross-section of a flat valve sleeve forming strip, the thickness dimensions
of the strip layers having been heavily exaggerated for greater clarity;
Fig. 2 shows the strip according to Fig. 1 after its opposite edge portions have been
folded;
Figs. 3 and 4 in the same way as Figs. 1 and 2 show another embodiment of a valve
sleeve strip;
Figs. 5 and 6 show two stages of the manufacture of a block bottom valve bag; and
Fig. 7 is a section of a bag corner equip- ed with a valve sleeve which is expanded
to approximately cylinder shape to permit its mounting on a fill pipe (not shown).
[0008] Upon application of the present invention a valve sleeve strip is manufactured in
a separate machine and rolled together on itself into a large roll which is then mounted
in a conventional bag manufacturing machine where the strip is divided into valve
sleeve lengths which are mounted in the bags being manufactured in the machine and
fixed by means of a mountant.
[0009] In the embodiment illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2 of the valve sleeve strip it is presupposed
that for adhering together the sheets constituting the strip use is made of a sleeve
forming adhesive which is compatible with or has substantially the same adhering properties
as the mountant employed in the bag manufacturing machine. The valve sleeve strip
illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2 is composed of two main constituents, viz. a relatively
stiff strip-shaped supporting sheet 1 and a thin porous air-permeable strip-shaped
lip valve sheet 2. The two sheets are of approximately the same strip width and are
placed one upon the other, their edge portions being adhered together by two stripes
3 of a sleeve forming adhesive. The supporting sheet 1 suitably consists of a strong,
relatively stiff paper, preferably kraft paper, and the lip valve sheet 2 suitable
consists of a thin porous air-permeable paper or woven or preferably non-woven material.
The sleeve, forming adhesive and the mountant employed in the bag manufacturing machine
can be starch glue of the kind customary in paper bag manufacture. To avoid undesirable
adhering together of parts the surface of the supporting sheet 1 is formed,within
certain areas,of a material to which the sleeve forming adhesive and mountant lack
essential adhesion. This has been attained in that the respective areas of the supporting
sheet 1 have been provided with an extremely thin coating of e.g. wax, when the sleeve
forming adhesive and mountant are a starch glue. Thus, the supporting sheet 1 on its
face turned towards the sheet 2 has such a coating 4 substantially throughout its
area between the stripes of adhesive 3 to prevent the sheets 1 and 2 adhering together
between the stripes 3 when the valve sleeves are mounted in the bags in the bag manufacturing
machine, as will be described in the following. Moreover, the supporting sheet 1 on
its face turned away from the lip valve sheet 2 has such a coating 5 on two surface
portions opposite the stripes 3 to prevent subsequent turns of the valve sleeve roll
adhering together. For in the manufacture of the valve sleeve strip a supporting sheet
strip is drawn from a supply roll to means for applying the coatings 4, 5 and the
adhesive stripes 3, whereupon a lip valve sheet strip is pulled from a supply roll
and pressed against the supporting sheet strip, after which the valve sleeve strip
thus formed is wound onto itself to form a large roll. Adhesive from the stripes 3
can penetrate the lip valve sheet 2 and might occasion adhering together of subsequent
turns of the roll of lip valve sleeve material if the coatings 5 did not exist and
prevented this. Although the coatings 5-in Fig. 1 have been shown as being of the
same width as the stripes 3 of adhesive, it may be suitable to make the coatings 5
somewhat wider to prevent with certainty that adhesive from a stripe 3 can reach through
the porous sheet 2 to a non-treated portion of the supporting sheet 1 in the next
following turn of the valve sleeve roll.
[0010] Though not absolutely necessary, it may be suitable,before or during mounting of
a valve sleeve in a bag,to fold in a manner to be described in the following opposite
edge portions of the supporting sheet 1 inwardly over the face of the supporting sheet
turned away from the lip valve sheet 2,as shown in Fig. 2, to cover the coatings 5
so that the valve sleeve everywhere turns such surfaces outwardly to which the mountant
employed in the bag manufacturing machine can adhere. As the supporting sheet 1 and
the lip valve sheet 2 are of the same width, as shown in the embodiment according
to Figs. 1 and 2, the lip valve sheet and the adhesive stripes 3 will take part in
said folding of the supporting sheet 1, but this does not impair the contemplated
concealment of the coatings 5 since the mountant can adhere both to the sheet 2 and
the adhesive stripes 3. If desired, the supporting sheet 1 may,however,have edge portions
protruding beyond the adhesive stripes 3, which edge portions are folded over the
coatings 5 without the lip valve sheet 2 and the adhesive stripes 3 taking part in
the folding operation.
[0011] Figs. 5 and 6 show how a valve sleeve formed by the valve sleeve strip according
to Figs. 1 and 2 is mounted in a block bottom bag in a bag manufacturing machine.
In the machine a bag sleeve 6 arrives at the mounting position in such a conventional
state that its one end has two inwardly folded corner flaps 7, 8, a forwardly directed
side flap 9 and a side flap 10 which is folded backwardly over the bag sleeve. A stripe
of mountant has been applied to the corner flap 8 within at least one region A. Laterally
of the mounting position in the bag manufacturing machine is a supply roll (not shown)
of valve sleeve strip according to Fig. 1. A length of strip is cut therefrom to form
a valve sleeve 11, and the lateral edges of the sleeve 11 are folded in the manner
illustrated in Fig. 2, after which the valve sleeve 11 is disposed on the corner flap
8 in the manner appearing from Fig. 5 so that the supporting sheet 1 of the valve
sleeve is turned away from the corner flap and a considerable portion of the valve
sleeve 11 protrudes past the corner flap 8 towards the longitudinal centre line of
the bag tube 6. Now the side flap 9 is first folded along the crease line 12 inwardly
over the valve sleeve 11 and the corner flaps 7, 8, whereupon the side flap 10 is
folded along the crease line 13 inwardly over the side flap 9 and adhered thereto
by means of a stripe (not shown) of adhesive. Finally, a cover sheet 14 provided with
mountant is applied over the folded-together side flaps 9, 10, the corner flap 7 and
that portion of the valve sleeve 11 which is not concealed by the side flaps. The
thus finished bag block bottom with a valve sleeve 11 mounted at one corner is shown
in Fig. 6.
[0012] The mountant applied within the region A of the corner flap 8 and the mountant applied
to the cover sheet 14 will form a layer of adhesive extending substantially all around
the valve sleeve 11 and adhering thereto. This adhesive layer can certainly penetrate
through the lip valve sheet 2 of the valve sleeve, but it cannot adhere the sheet
2 to the supporting sheet 1 of the valve sleeve within the area between the adhesive
stripes 3 (Fig. 1) since the coating 4 of the supporting sheet prevents this.
[0013] Fig. 7 shows one corner of a bag manufactured according to Figs. 5 and 6 with the
valve sleeve 11 expanded to approximately cylindrical shape to permit said sleeve
to be passed onto a fill pipe for filling the bag with particulate material. In Fig.
7 there have been shown for greater clarity spaces between, on one hand, the valve
sleeve 11 and, on the other hand, the corner flap 8, the side flap 9 and the cover
sheet 14, but actually such spaces are substantially lacking, and the valve sleeve
is adhered all around its periphery to said parts at least within the region A. The
supporting sheet 1 of the valve sleeve 11 is turned towards the side flaps 9, 11 of
the bag bottom and the lip valve sheet 2 is turned towards the corner flap 8, but
protrudes a considerable distance beyond said corner flap into the interior of the
bag to serve as a lip valve together with the supporting sheet in a manner known per
se.
[0014] Figs. 3 and 4 show an embodiment of a valve sleeve strip which is suited for use
when one wishes to employ as sleeve forming adhesive an adhesive intended for wax
paper and wants to utilize in the bag manufacturing machine a starch glue as mountant.
In Figs. 3 and 4 one face of a supporting sheet 15 is coated in its entirety with
a surface forming plastic layer 16 to which the mountant but not the sleeve forming
adhesive adheres, whereas the other face of the supporting sheet is coated in its
entirety with a surface forming wax layer 17 to which the sleeve forming adhesive
but not the mountant adheres. The thin.porous air-permeable lip valve sheet 18 has
its lateral edges adhered to the surface coating 17 of the supporting sheet by glue
stripes 19 of wax paper glue. In connection with the mounting of valve sleeves in
the bag manufacturing machine opposite edge portions of the supporting sheet 15 are
folded, as will appear from Fig. 4, inwardly over the face of the supporting sheet
which is turned towards the lip valve sheet 18 to cover the glue stripes 19 to which
the mountant does not adhere.
[0015] In a modification of the embodiment according to Figs. 3 and 4 the edge portions
of the lip valve sheet 18 are fixed to the wax layer 17 of the supporting sheet 15
by heat sealing so that glue stripes 19 are not needed. In such a case the plastics
layer 16 on the supporting sheet 15 can also be dispensed with. This modified embodiment,
however, suffers from the drawback that heat sealing is a slow process and results
in unreliable jointing.
1. A valve bag having a valve opening in which a valve sleeve (11) projecting into
the interior of the bag is fixed by means of an adhesive layer formed of mountant
and extending substantially all around the valve sleeve, said valve sleeve consisting
of a supporting sheet (1, 15) and a lip valve sheet (2, 18) of porous air-permeable
material, which is adhered to the supporting sheet along two opposite edge portions,
characterised in that the face of the supporting sheet (1, 15) turned towards the
lip valve sheet (2, 18) is formed, within at least substantially the entire area between
the points where the opposite edge portions of the lip valve sheet are adhered to
the supporting sheet, of a material to which the mountant lacks essential adhesive
power.
2. A valve bag as claimed in claim 1, in which the opposite edge portions of the lip
valve sheet (2) are adhered to the supporting sheet (1) by means of a sleeve forming
adhesive which is compatible with or has substantially the same adhering properties
as the mountant, characterised in that the face of the supporting sheet (1) turned
away from the lip valve sheet (2) has two surface portions (5) located opposite said
edge portions of the lip valve sheet and formed of a material to which the sleeve
forming adhesive lacks essential adhesive power.
3. A valve bag as claimed in claim 2, characterised in that opposite edge portions
of the supporting sheet (1) are folded inwardly over the face of the supporting sheet
turned away from the lip valve sheet (2) to cover said surface portions (5) of the
supporting sheet.
4. A valve bag as claimed in claim 1, characterised in that the face of the supporting
sheet (15) turned towards the lip valve sheet (18) is formed of the material, to which
the mountant lacks adhesive power, also within those surface portions where the opposite
edge portions of the lip valve sheet are adhered to the supporting sheet by heat sealing
or by means of a sleeve forming adhesive which is of a kind other than the mountant
and has power to adhere to said surface forming material of the supporting sheet.
5. A valve bag as claimed in claim 4, characterised in that opposite edge portions
of the supporting sheet (15) are folded inwardly over the face of the supporting sheet
turned towards the lip valve sheet (18) to cover the edge portions of the lip valve
sheet which are glued to the supporting sheet.