[0001] The present invention relates to a thermoplastic bag having integral handles and
also to individual bag packs of such bag structures. The type of bag contemplated
herein is particularly adapted for use as a grocery sack capable of carrying loads
of up to about 13.60-15.85 kilograms. The present invention is also directed to methods
and systems for preparing a thermoplastic sack, and, more particularly, to methods
and systems for preparing such a sack having at least a substantially flat rectangular
bottom.
[0002] For years in the United States the means for carrying items purchased in a grocery
store or supermarket has been the paper sack. This sack, as is well known, is made
of kraft paper, which has a high beam strength as compared, for example, with thermoplastic
film. Thus, bags made of this material, when fully extended, are capable of supporting
themselves. When such bags are filled with grocery items, they have the desirable
attribute of being able to stand upright. In addition, kraft paper bags are made so
as to have opposing gusseted sides and a foldable- extensible rectangular bottom.
This type of structure, when fully extended, provides the maximum volumetric efficiency
for a container of this type. The volume of such a sack is represented by a rectangular
bottom projected to the height of the bag.
[0003] . These two attributes are about the only positive aspects of kraft paper grocery
sacks. When folded and collapsed they are bulky and occupy considerably more space
than thin film thermoplastic grocery sacks. Whatever cost advantage paper grocery
sacks enjoyed in the past appears to be disappearing. Paper grocery bags are notorious
for their lack of wet strength in an environment which constantly exposes them to
the deleterious affects of aqueous liquids. This causes the bags to fail and spill
their contents on the supermarket floor, the parking lot blacktop, the purchaser's
automobile, or during transfer from the automobile to the purchaser's home. The time
needed for supermarket employees to fill kraft paper sacks, as opposed to thermoplastic
film grocery sacks, is on average, longer. Such bags produce paper-cuts, which have
become an occupational hazard with kraft paper bags. Kraft paper bags have limited
reuse possibilities and they are not a stable land fill material.
[0004] In the late 1970's and early 1980's, thin film thermoplastic handled grocery sacks
began to make significant inroads into an area totally dominated by the kraft paper
grocery sack.
[0005] U.S. Patent No. 4,165,832 describes to some degree the evolution of handled bags
from the time when handled elements were separately attached to the open mouth portion
of the bag. This patent also discusses the improvement of forming an ungusseted bag
having integral thermoplastic handles as a part thereof. This ungusseted type of bag
is constructed from a pillowcase type blank consisting of two sheets of plastic, e.g.,
from a collapsed tube, sealed at opposite ends. A U-shaped cutout at one end fashions
an opening for the bag and a separate cut or slit opens two loops which constitute
the handles of the bag. A further evolution in this bag structure came about when
the bag was made to have gusseted sides. This permitted the handles to be fashioned
of two layers of film which gave the handles additional strength. In all cases the
bottom of the bag constituted either a heat sealed double layer of film, or in the
case of a gusseted structure, the folds of the gusset were sealed at the bottom between
the front and back sides of the bag. This latter seal can be considered the "trapped
gusset
* seal.
[0006] Since the late 1970's to the present time, the commercial plastic grocery sack has
had a bottom region which has not changed. Figures 1-4 of the present application
illustrate a thermoplastic film grocery sack of the general type manufactured by almost
every thermoplastic grocery sack manufacturer in the United States. This grocery sack
is made by collapsing a thermoplastic-tube, and while in the process of collapsing,
forming therein two side gussets. The gussets are represented in Figure 2 by infolded
regions 16 and 18 on one side and 20 and 22 on the opposite side. After the gusseted
tube has been fully collapsed, it is sealed and severed along lines 26 and 28. Seal
line 28 is the handled and open mouth end portion of the bag after the plastic film
is removed, forming both the bag mouth opening and handles of the bag. Seal line 26
constitutes the closed end of the bag. As will be appreciated, during the sealing
of the bottom region of the bag, four films are heat sealed together at the outboard
region of the bag, i.e., 12, 16, 18 and 14 on the one side and 12, 20, 22 and 14 on
the other side, and in the center region only two films, 12 and 14, are heat sealed
together.
[0007] This bag bottom structure, adopted almost exclusively by the plastic grocery sack
manufacturers, has at least two shortcomings. The first is that whenever there is
a thickness transition involving a heat seal, where a thicker region transitions down
to a thinner region, as in the gusset region of four layers transitioning at a fold
point down to the two layers of the front and rear panels of the sack, a weak spot
is created at the fold point. This becomes a tear initiation point as the bag is loaded
with goods and as the bag tries to expand to accommodate the goods. The bottom of
the gusset being trapped and sealed within the front and rear panels of the bag in
the regions 32 of Figure 1 at both bottom outboard regions of the bag, cannot expand
to accommodate goods in the bottom of the bag as well as it can in the upper midway
region of the bag where the side gussets expand to the maximum. Figure 3 shows a side
view of the bag of Figure 1 in an expanded condition. It will be noted that the lower
region 30 of the bag has less effective volume than the central region 34 of the bag.
As indicated, because the bottom of the gusset on both sides of the bag is trapped
and sealed between the front and rear layers of the bag walls, they cannot expand
to accommodate increasing bag expansion caused by goods being loaded therein. Weight
and hoop stress forces are brought to bear at points 36 on both sides of the bag,
with the result that tears in the bottom seal are initiated at these points. This
asymmetrical load distribution places no load on the bottom seal between 36 and the
bag corner. As the hoop and load forces increase, the tears can progress to permit
products to fall from the bag. Since this type of grocery sack is suspended from its
integral handles, there is no bottom support safeguard to protect items from falling
through the bottom of such a bag.
[0008] The second disadvantageous aspect of such a seal- trapped gusset arrangement is the
fact that the sides of the bag cannot expand to their full width and, thus, full volumetric
efficiency is sacrificed. When examined carefully, for example in a bag as described
measuring 12 inches by 8 inches (4 inch gussets) by 24 inches, including handle length,
a significant percentage-of the bag film (excluding the handles) does not contribute
to bag volume. Over 8% of the bag film is wasted in the bottom of the bag because
of the trapped gussets.
[0009] U.S. Patent No. 31,119,548 describes a thermoplastic bag having a square or rectangular
bottom which avoids the trapped gusset structure. This sack, however, is intended
as a liner for a cardboard ice cream container. Thus, this structure never was intended
to support product load by means of its own integrity. An outer container provided
shape and support for the thermoplastic liner. This liner is not used with handles.
[0010] U.S. Patent No. 3,580,486 describes a thermoplastic film bag which has a rectangular
bottom without a seam or seal, and ungusseted sides which contain three seals when
the bag is expanded. This bag contains a center handle which is only one film layer
thick because of the ungusseted side structure.
[0011] In one embodiment, the present invention is concerned with a bag structure of a thermoplastic
film material comprising front and rear bag walls connected by gusseted side walls
and having an open mouth top portion, said open mouth portion being characterized
by having handles located at opposite end regions thereof, said handles each being
of two films as a result of being integral extensions of said front, rear and gusseted
side walls. The bag has a bottom wall planarly extensible so as to form a rectangle
with at least no substantial excess film outside of the bulk volumetric capacity of
the bottom region of said bag.
[0012] The present invention is also concerned with a bag structure of a thermoplastic film
material comprising front and rear bag walls connected by gusseted side walls and
having an open mouth top portion, said open mouth portion being characterized by having
handles located at opposite end regions thereof, said handles each being of two films
as a result of being integral extensions of said front, rear and gusseted side walls;
said bag having a bottom wall planarly extensible so as to form a rectangle, said
bottom being of integral extensions of said front, rear and gusseted.side walls and
the closure thereof being 4 two-film, gusset-to-wall, heat seals when said bottom
is a square and 4 two-film, gusset-to-wall, heat seals and 1 two-film, front wall-to-back
wall heat seals when said bottom is a rectangle. The present invention also contemplates
forming the same type of bag without handles.
[0013] The present invention is additionally directed to a method and system for preparing
a handled, at least substantially flat, rectangular bottom, thermoplastic film sack
comprising: _
(a) forming a tube of a thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two, oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the tube width
corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the seal
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seams of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealing and severing seam across and through said collapsed
tube along a line which includes the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams;
(e) collecting a plurality of the resulting structures in a stack;
(f) removing from each structure the four folded triangles of film located between
the diagonal sealed seams and the transverse sealing and severing seam to complete
the bottom of the sack; and
(g) forming a pair of handles and sack mouth opening at the opposite end of said sack
bottom. For a pack of such bags a tab member is removably attached to each side of
the bag mouth opening and the tab fastened together.
[0014] The present invention is further directed to a method and system for preparing a
handleless, at least substantially flat, rectangular bottom, thermoplastic film sack
comprising:
(a) forming a tube of thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the tube width
corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the sealed
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seams of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealed seam across said tube along a line which includes
the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams and simultaneously forming a pre-weakened
transverse line closely adjacent and parallel to said transverse sealed seam;
(e) removing the four double film triangular regions bounded by said diagonal seams,
said transverse seams and the side edges of said tube; and
(f) collecting the resulting structures while still interconnected at said pre-weakened
transverse lines.
[0015] Another method according to the present invention involves continuously preparing
a handleless, at least substantially flat, rectangular bottom, thermoplastic film
sack comprising:
(a) forming a tube of thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the tube which
correspond to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the seal
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seams of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealed seam across said tube along a line which includes
the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams and simultaneously severing said
tube along a line parallel to said transverse seal seam;
(e) removing the four double film triangular regions bounded by said diagonal seams,
said transverse sever line and the side edges of said tube.
[0016]
Figure 1 is a front elevation view representing a thermoplastic sack of the prior
art;
Figure 2 is an end view taken along the lines 2-2 of Figure 1;
Figure 3 is a side elevation view of the bag structure of Figure 1 in volume expanded
form;
Figure 4 is a bottom view of the bag of Figure 1 with the bottom of the bag planarly
extended to the exact dimensions of the four sides of the bag;
Figure 5 is a front elevation view of one form of the thermoplastic bag structure
of the present invention;
Figure 6 is a bottom end view of the bag structure of Figure 5;
Figure 7 is a bottom perspective view of the bag structure of Figure 5 in volume expanded
form;
Figure 8 is a side elevation view of the bag structure of Figure 5 in volume expanded
form;
Figure 9 is a plan view, in schematic form, illustrating a system and process sequence
of one form of the present invention; and
Figure 10 is a plan view of another form of the process and system of the present
invention.
[0017] As indicated above, Figures 1, 2, 3 and 4 represent different views of a bag structure
10 of the prior art. This bag has a front panel 12, a back panel 14 and gusseted sides
represented by infolded members 16, 18, 20 and 22. The gusseted members are actually
single side members creased at their longitudinal midpoint. Double film handles 24
are at the bag mouth end of the bag and these handles are sealed at line 28. Handle
loop opening 25 is shown in Figure 3. The bottom of bag 10 is sealed along line 26.
As indicated above, this seal line 26 traps the side gussets at the bottom of the
bag and prevents the bag from expanding fully, as more clearly shown in the region
30 of Figure 3. This manner of sealing the bottom of the bag inadvertently produces
tear initiation points 36 when bag filling forces attempt to expand the side gussets
in the bottom region of the bag.
[0018] Figure 4 is illustrated herein in order to show that when a bag of the prior art,
such as that illustrated in Figures 1, 2 and 3, has the bottom thereof planarly extended
to the full dimensions of its sides and walls, there will seem to be two perfectly
square segments of thermoplastic film externally of the inside of the bag which contributes
nothing to the volumetric capacity of the bag. Moreover, this excess apparently does
not contribute to the strength of the bag. This Figure is best appreciated by envisioning
a cardboard box having the exact front width, gusset-side and rear width dimensions
of the prior art bag illustrated in Figure 1. When such a box is placed into the bag,
so that like sides of the bag and the box correspond, and the box is pushed snugly
to the bottom of the bag, then the bottom of the bag will assume the configuration
shown in Figure 4. Part of front panel 12 of the bag will actually become part of
the bottom of the bag, as will back panel 14. Bottom heat seal seam 26 will extend
all the way across the mid-point region of the bottom of the bag. By placing such
a box within the bag, there will be formed, in the exterior of the bottom of the bag,
two triangular shaped pockets, made up of identical right-angle triangular film members,
13 and 13
1 on one side and 15 and 15' on the other side. The present invention has discovered
that the two triangular pockets can be removed by the elimination of triangles 13
and 13' and 15 and 15', which together constitute two perfectly square-segments of
film which do not materially contribute to the structural integrity or the volumetric
efficiency of the bag. After removal of these segments and forming the appropriate
bottom seals from adjacent film edge regions, the bag then has the bottom configuration
shown in Figure 7. The result is a savings of a considerable percentage of the raw
material employed in the bag and the creation of the first practical flat-bottomed
thermoplastic sack having double film handles as more fully described with reference
to the remaining Figures.
[0019] Figures 5, 6, 7 and 8 illustrate a rectangular bottom bag 40 having double film thickness
handles 42 at the bag mouth end of the bag. These handles are sealed along lines 43.
Each bag has two tabs 44 in registration and each has a pre-weakened tear-off region
46 for removal of each bag 40 from a plurality of superimposed bags connected together
by way of tabs 44 in some suitable fashion. They may be, heat-bonded, stapled, clipped
or held together by any means. Pre-weakened region 46 can be a line of perforations
for bag tear-off or a continuous, somewhat arcuate slit terminating just short of
the mouth of the bag, leaving two small web regions which can be snap-severed to free
a bag from a bag pack. Dotted lines 48 illustrate the extent of infolding of gusset
members 50 and 52, as more clearly shown in Figure 6. When fully extended, these gusset
members become bag sides 50-52 as shown in Figure 8.
[0020] The bottom of bag 40 is constructed of 5 two-film heat seals. There are two heat
seals 54, two heat seals 56 and a central heat seal 58. Heat seal 58 is the result
of beat sealing the front bag panel 60 to rear bag panel 62. Heat seal 54 is formed
by heat sealing front bag panel 60 to gusset panel 50 and heat seal 56 is formed by
heat sealing rear bag panel 62 to gusset panel member 52. As will be appreciated,
the bottom is formed by heat sealing no more than two films at any one point. This
avoids any tear initiation point resulting from sealing a thick region to a thin region.
The unnumbered outer peripheral lines of the bottom of Figure 7 are shown as if a
perfect rectangular object were giving it this form. This would be the ideal utilization
of such a bag and is so shown to illustrate the greater available volume of the subject
bag.
[0021] - A double film handle rectangular bottom bag is a novel structure particularly for
supporting loads up to and greater than about 15.85 kilograms. The above described
structure results in a thermoplastic bag which can be laid flat, as with the prior
art structure, and occupy no more vertical space than the prior art bags. As indicated
above, they can be fashioned into bag packs of any suitable number and hung from the
region of tab 44 in some suitable manner for dispensing the bags one at a time. In
use, product will be placed through the bag mouth opening and as more product is loaded
into the bag, the bottom thereof will attempt to become planarly extended. In so doing,
the maximum volumetric efficiency can be utilized. By "planarly extended" or "planarly
extensible" is meant that the bottom of the bag can, unrestrictedly, be extended to
be perfectly flat and rectangular in shape. For having the capability of forming a
perfectly flat bottom, seal line 54 and 56 should form at least approximately a 45
0 angle with gusset line 48 or an angle of at least approximately 135° with seal line
58 when the bag is in its lay flat condition. Obviously, these angles can deviate
more or less from these limits but the consequence will be a bag bottom which is correspondingly
less planar. This is still within the spirit of the invention. Thus, it is the intention
of the present invention to cover bag bottoms of the bag described type which are
at least generally planar when the bag is extended.
[0022] Bags of the structure described can be formed by employing any suitable thermoplastic
material, such as a polyolefin in all of its forms, and more particularly polyethylene
of any gauge, for example a gauge that ranges from about 0.25-5 mils in thickness.
In employing the term "polyethylene", it is employed generically to include all forms
of polyethylene including, low density polyethylene, linear low density copolymers
of ethylene and another alpha olefin, high density polyethylene, mixtures and blends
of the same, and other monomer counterparts, etc. Thermoplastic coated paper stock
is also contemplated.
[0023] The bags can also be constructed so as to be interconnected head to tail or tail
to tail, etc. by means of pre-weakened film segments. This will permit the formation
of a plurality of bags in a roll or a zig-zag stack for easy dispensing of individual
bags.
[0024] In a modification of the bag structure illustrated in Figures 5, 6, 7 and 8, the
gusset lines 48 can be infolded to a maximum so that they meet at the midline of the
bag. The consequence of this modification, after cutting the corners at an angle of
at least approximately 45° to the midline and then forming the two-film seals, as
indicated above, will be a square bottomed bag. In the instance of a square bottomed
bag, the two-film heat seal, line 58 of Figure 7, for example, is reduced to non-existence.
The two apexes of the heat seals 54 and 56 contact one another and the bottom of the
bag then will have an X shape heat seal with the lines forming the X being at least
approximately equal. Another way of stating it is that the bottom closure of the bag
is formed from 4 two-film heat seals. A suitable bag mouth opening and double film
handle are also fashioned into the bag.
[0025] As indicated in Figure 9, 70 illustrates a system and process sequence for forming
the handled, gusseted, flat bottomed thermoplastic sack of the present invention.
A tube of thermoplastic film 72 is collapsed by being passed through a gusset-forming
means 74.
[0026] The tube collapsing and gusset-forming means 74 can be any device suitable for accomplishing
these two steps substantially simultaneously. A typical gusset-forming device is an
open-ended box shaped arrangement of, for example, sheet metal material, which has
two inwardly extending members which are brought to bear on the collapsing thermoplastic
tube so as to form two oppositely disposed inwardly extending folds or gussets. The
device gradually tapers to cause the gusseted tube to collapse completely. These gussets
are illustrated in the drawing by dotted lines 76. The gusset-forming means 74 can
be prepared in a plurality of different size gusset-forming means so as to permit
flexibility in the dimension of the resulting gusset in-fold. The gusset-forming means
can be such as to impress a gusset in a tube of anywhere from a fraction-of an inch
up to that providing gussets which extend all the way to the midline of a fully collapsed
tube. The gusseted portion of the tube thereafter traverses two Teflon coated plates
78, (or some other suitable non-stick separating surface) each of which extend into
the full reach of the gusset 76. Thereafter, a sealed seam is impressed in each of
the four gusset folds as shown at 80. The Teflon plate prevents one seam from fusing
to the other on each side of the tube. These seams are best formed by heat sealing
members which are Teflon coated resistance wires heated to a temperature which will
permit the two layers of each of the four gusset folds to be heat sealed together
but not severed. These diagonal sealed seams extend over the portions of the tube
width corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube
and the seal pairs of opposite sides are at an angle to one another, preferably at
an angle of at least approximately 90°. The seams of each pair of seams on each side
of the gusseted tube are in registration with one another. In other words, beneath
seam 80, and on the other side of Teflon separator plate 78, there is an indentical
seal 80. As the tube and seals 80 progress through the system, there is subsequently
formed a bottom seal 82 which simultaneously seals and severs the bottom of the gusseted
structure. This is accomplished by means of bottom sealing and severing device 84.
Seal line 82 is a transverse sealing and severing seam which extends across and through
the collapsed tube along a line which includes the inboard ends 86 of each pair of
diagonal seams. Transverse sealing and severing device 84 can be any suitable means
which will bond and sever the collapsed tube along the defined line. This sealing
and severing action will isolate sack blank 88 from the collapsed and gusseted tube.
Sack blank 88 will have a seal 90 across the top thereof and 4 triangular regions
92 will be bounded by seal lines 80, 86 and the side edge of the gusseted structure.
The sack blank structures 88 may be separately or collectively converted into bag
structures by removal of the triangular regions 92 and by the formation of bag mouth
opening 94 which simultaneously forms handle loops 96, each of which are formed of
two layers of film by virtue of the gusseted structure. This will complete the formation
of a handled sack, the bottom of which can be planarly extended so as to have a flat
bottom. By "planarly extended" is meant that the bag is extended in internal volume
to its utmost by expanding the gussets fully, thereby forming a flat bottom, rectangular
in nature, having a length larger than its width.
[0027] In a preferred embodiment of the process and system illustrated in the drawing, a
linear low density polyethylene tubular film 72, of about 1 mil in thickness, is collapsed
and simultaneously gusseted.by passing through gusset-forming means 74. This action
infolds the collapsed tube to yield gussets 76. As the gusseted tube progresses through
the system, seals 80 and 86 are simultaneously formed. This action produces bottom
seal 82 and top seal 90 at the same time. This also isolates sack blank 88. Sack blank
88 can then be removed to a station which can separately remove triangular sections
92 and bag mouth opening 94 and form handles 96 on individual blanks. Alternatively,
the blanks 88 can be stacked in vertical registration and through the means of suitable
cutting die mechanisms, the triangular regions removed and the handle and bag mouth
opening can be formed. A typical bag can have a bag front and rear wall width of about
30.48 centimeters, 10.16 centimeter gusset folds, yielding 20.32 centimeter side walls
and a bag length of about 50.8-63.5 centimeters with or without handles.
[0028] For the formation of bags which do not contain a handle, the process and the system
are as shown in Figure 10. The process and system 70A is different from that of Figure
9 beginning at the point where the bottom of the bag is sealed. Thus, a bottom seal
and perforating mechanism 98 is shown impressing seal seam 100 in the flattened gusseted
tube and, simultaneous therewith, perforation line 102 is formed closely adjacent
and parallel to seal line 100. Seal line 100 does not sever the tube, merely seals
it. Seal line 100 and perforation line 102 are impressed in the gusseted tube at the
same time diagonal seals 80 are impressed into the gussets. Thereafter, by any suitable
die cutting mechanism, the four regions 104 are removed from the structure. This will
yield sack 106 attached by perforation line 102 to a like structure. Thereafter, these
sacks may be rolled upon themselves to form a cylindrical package, collected in a
zig-zag folded stack arrangement or individually separated and folded or stacked.
Either structure will permit a sack to be torn free along the perforation lines to
yield an open mouth bag which when extended fully to the total width of the gusset,
will yield a flat bottomed sack. The sack resulting from the process and system of
Figure 10 will have a rectangular bottom with a length larger than its width.
[0029] In a modification of the process and system shown in Figure 10, open mouth handleless
structures can be formed by forming a severance transversely across the tube at the
same time bottom seal 100 is formed. Thereafter the corners of the sack blank corresponding
to regions 104 can be severed to complete the bag structure.
[0030] Bags of the structures described can be formed with a pair of registered tabs as
integral extensions of the bag mouth as shown at 99 in Figure 9. The bags can be stacked
in registration to contain 50, 100, 150, etc., bags and the tabs 99 fastened together
in some suitable manner. For example, the tabs can be ultrasonically welded together.
A perforation line across the tab will form a convenient tear-off site for individual
bags to be removed from the bag pack.
[0031] In forming the flat bottomed bag, it is preferred that the angle between the diagonal
seal line and the bottom seal be at least approximately 135° when said bag is in its
lay flat condition. It is also preferred that the open mouth portion of the handled
sacks of the present invention have stress relief curves or arcs extending from the
base of the handle to a raised portion of the bag mouth. This will militate against
splitting or tears occurring in the bag mouth during handle extension or when the
bag is being filled with bulky material. The handles and bag mouth opening can have
any configuration.
[0032] In forming the bag structure the pertinent angles need not be precise, e.g., exactly
90°, 45° or 135°. Reasonable processing latitude should permit some deviation from
these guidelines. Likewise, in forming seal seams, the ends thereof can be curved
or angled in order to accommodate or insure good closure at all film interfaces and
joints. Double or plural line seams and seals are also contemplated.
[0033] As disclosed, the bag structure formed by the system and process illustrated in Figures
9 and 10 will yield a sack having a rectangular bottom when planarly extended, which
bottom will have a length longer than its width. In other words, the sack bottom will
not be a square. In order to form a square bottom sack either with or without handles
the process and means merely need be modified so that the gusset folds are both infolded
to the maximum. That is, the collapsed tube will be gusseted to the longitudinal mid-line
of the tube. In this case the center-fold of each gusset will contact the other and
the angle between the thereafter formed diagonal seams will be at least about 90°.
The resulting sack will then have a substantially flat square bottom when planarly
extended.
1. A bag structure of a thermoplastic film material comprising front and rear bag
walls connected by gusseted side walls and having an open mouth top portion, said
open mouth portion being characterized by having handles located at opposite end regions
thereof, said handles each having a two film thickness as a result of being integral
extensions of said front, rear and gusseted side walls; said bag having a bottom wall
planarly extensible so as to form a generally flat rectangle with no excess film outside
of the bulk volumetric capacity of the bottom region of said bag.
2. A bag structure of a thermoplastic film material comprising front and rear bag
walls connected by gusseted side walls and having an open mouth top portion, said
open mouth portion being characterized by having handles located at opposite regions
thereof, said handles having a double film thickness as a result of being integral
extensions of said front, rear and gusseted side walls; said bag having a bottom wall
planarly extensible so as to form a generally flat rectangle, said bottom being integral
extensions of said front, rear and side walls and the closure thereof being 4 two-film
gusset-to-wall heat seals, when said bottom is a square, and 4 two-film gusset-to-wall
heat seals and 1 two-film front wall-to-back wall heat seals when said bottom is a
rectangle having unequal length and width dimensions.
3. The bag structure of claim 2, wherein said handles are loop handles sealed together
at the top thereof.
4. The bag of claim 2, wherein said bag mouth is further characterized by having arcuate
stress relief areas positioned at opposite ends of said mouth and adjacent the lower
portions of said handle and the upper edges of said mouth extending above said arcuate
areas.
5. The bag of claim 2, wherein said bag bottom is planarly extensible to a flat square.
6. The bag of claim 2, wherein said bag bottom is planarly extensible to a flat rectangle
having unequal length and width dimensions.
7. The bag structure of claim 2, having two detachable tabs each as an integral extension
of a separate edge of said mouth.
8. A bag pack comprising a plurality of stacked thermoplastic bag structures of claim
7, said bag structures being bonded together at said detachable tabs.
9. A roll of bags of the structure of claim 2, wherein a plurality of such bags are
interconnected by way of pre-weakened film links or interconnection between each bag
structure and so adapted to permit individual bag severence from said roll.
10. A stack of bags in zig-zag arrangement, said bags being of the structure of claim
2, and wherein a plurality of such bags are interconnected by way of a pre-weakened
film link or interconnection between each bag structure and so adapted to permit individual
bag severence from said stack.
ll. A method of continuously preparing a flat, rectangular-bottom, thermoplastic film
sack comprising:
(a) forming a tube of thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the tube width
corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the seal
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seams of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealed seam across said tube along a line which includes
the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams and simultaneously forming a pre-weakened
transverse line closely adjacent and parallel to said transverse sealed seam;
(e) removing the four double film triangular regions bounded by said diagonal seams,
said transverse seam and the side edges of said tube; and
(f) collecting the resulting structures while still interconnected at said pre-weakened
transverse lines.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein said pre-weakened line is a line of perforations,
or a line of reduced thickness.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein said resulting structures are collected in a roll
or in a zig-zag stack.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein the resulting interconnected structures are individually
separated and folded or stacked.
15. The method of claim 11, wherein said thermoplastic film is of a polyolefin.
16. The method of claim 11, wherein each gusset is equal and the center fold of each
gusset contacts the other and the angle between said diagonal seam is 90° so that
the resulting sack has a flat square bottom when planarly extended.
17. The method of claim 11, wherein each gusset is equal and the center fold of each
gusset is spaced one from the other and the angle between projected diagonal seam
lines is 90° so that the resulting sack has a flat rectangular bottom of unequal dimensions
when planarly extended.
18. A method of preparing an at least substantially flat, rectangular bottom, thermoplastic
film sack comprising:
(a) forming a tube of a thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the tube width
corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the seal
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seam of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealing and severing seam across and through said collapsed
tube along a line which includes the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams,
(e) collecting the resulting structures in a stack;
(f) :removing the four folded triangles of film between the diagonal sealed seams
and the transverse sealing and severing seam to complete the bottom of the sack; and
(g) forming a handle and sack mouth opening at the opposite end of said sack bottom.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein said two pairs of diagonal sealed seams are formed
simultaneously or said two pairs of diagonal sealed seams and said transverse sealing
and severing seam are formed simultaneously on adjacent sack structures.
20. The method of claim 18, wherein each gusset is equal and the center fold of each
gusset contacts the other and the angle between said diagonal seams is at least about
90° so that the resulting sack has a flat square bottom when planarly extended.
21. The method of claim 18, wherein each gusset is equal and the center fold of each
gusset is spaced one from the other and the angle between projected diagonal seam
lines is about 90° so that said sack has a flat bottom of unequal length and width
when planarly extended.
22. A method of continuously preparing a flat, rectangular-bottom, thermoplastic bag
comprising:
(a) forming a tube of thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portion of the tubes width
corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the sealed
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another, and the seams of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealed seam across said tube along a line which includes
the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams and simultaneously severing said
collapsed tube along a line closely adjacent to said transverse sealed seams;
(e) removing the four double film triangular regions bounded by said diagonal seams,
said transverse seams and the side edges of said tube.
23. The method of claim 22, wherein the sealed and severed structures are collected
in a stack and said four double film triangular regions are removed from said stack
simultaneously.
24. The method of claim 22, wherein said rectangular-bottom is a square or has an
unequal length and width dimension.
25. A method of continuously preparing a flat, rectangular-bottom, thermoplastic film
sack comprising:
(a) forming a tube of thermoplastic film;
(b) collapsing said tube while simultaneously forming therein two oppositely disposed,
parallel gussets;
(c) forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the tube width
corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube, the seal
pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seams of each pair
being in registration with one another;
(d) forming a transverse sealed seam across said tube along a line which includes
the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams and simultaneously forming a pre-weakened
transverse line closely adjacent and parallel to said transverse sealed seam;
(e) collecting the resulting structure in a stack so that all of said diagonal seams
are at one end of said stack; and
(f) removing the four double film triangular regions bounded by said diagonal seams,
said transverse seam and the side edges of said tube.
26. The method fo claim 25, wherein said structures are interconnected as stacked
or are separated at said pre-weakened line prior to stacking.
27. The method of claim 25, wherein a second transverse sealed seam is formed across
said tube closely adjacent and parallel to said pre-weakened line and a handle and
sack mouth opening are formed at the opposite end of said sack bottom.
28. A system for continuously preparing a flat, rectangular-bottom, thermoplastic
film sack comprising in combination:
(a) means for forming a tube of thermoplastic film;
(b) means for collapsing said tube including means for simultaneously forming therein
two oppositely disposed, parallel gussets;
(c) means for forming two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over portions of the tube
width corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the tube,
the sealed pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the seams
of each pair being in registration with one another;
(d) means for forming a transverse sealed seam across said tube along a line which
includes the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal seams and means for simultaneously
forming a pre-weakened transverse line closely adjacent and parallel to said transverse
sealed seams;
(e) means for removing four double film triangular regions bounded by said diagonal
seams, said transverse seams and the side edges of said tube; and
(f) means for collecting the resulting structures while still interconnected at said
pre-weakened transverse lines.
29. The system of claim 28, wherein said means for forming said diagonal sealed seams
include non-stick means separating each pair of diagonal sealed seams.
30. The system of claim 28, wherein said means for forming said pre-weakened transverse
line is a perforating means.
31. The system of claim 28, wherein said means for removing said triangular regions
is a cutting means.
32. The system of claim 28, wherein said means for collecting said interconnected
structures is a means for forming said structures into a roll or a means for collecting
said structures in a zig-zag stack.
33. The system of claim 28, wherein means are provided for separating said sack structures
from one another at said pre-weakened line and collecting said separated structures.
34. A system for preparing a flat, rectangular-bottom, thermoplastic film sack comprising
in combination:
(a) means for forming a tube of a thermoplastic film;
(b) means for simultaneously collapsing said tube and forming therein two oppositely
disposed, parallel gussets;
(c) means for preparing two pairs of diagonal sealed seams over the portions of the
tube width corresponding to the gussets along lines diagonal to the length of the
tube, the sealed pairs of opposite sides being at an angle to one another and the
seams of each pair being in registration with one another;
(d) means for forming a transverse sealing and severing seam across and through said
collapsed tube along a line which includes the inboard ends of said pairs of diagonal
seams;
(e) means for collecting the resulting structures in a stack;
(f) means for removing the four folded triangles of film between the diagonal sealed
seams and the transverse sealing and severing seam to complete the bottom of the sack;
and
(g) means for forming a pair of handles and sack mouth opening at the opposite end
of said sack bottom.
35. The system of claim 34, including non-stick means separating the folds of said
gussets during formation of said diagonal seams.
36. The system of claim 34, including means for forming severable tab members on opposite
sides of said sack mouth opening and means for fastening said tabs together to form
a pack of a plurality of sacks.