A stand-up pouch or doypack is a type of flexible packaging that is able to stand erect on its bottom for display, storage, and convenience.[1] It has characteristics of plastic bags, water bottles, and retort pouches. The bottom part of a stand-up pouch is gusseted to provide support for display or use.[2]

Stand-up pouch of nuts; bottom structure of pouch
Pouch of cat treats; close-up of top seal, opening notch, and internal reclosable strip

Stand-up pouches are commonly used for food packaging. They can be aseptically filled or filled on normal packaging lines.[3]

History

edit

Early work on stand-up pouches was conducted in France by Leon and Louis Doyen [fr].[4][5] Doyen was president of Thimonnier Company, which trademarked the name "Doypack" (from DOYen PACKaging").

Development of materials, design options, and equipment increased in the 1980s and 1990s. Development of the retort pouch was closely related. It is currently a very widely used package form.

Construction

edit

The flexible pouches are usually constructed of multi-layer materials: various plastic films, paper, foil, etc. Pouches are often printed with high-impact graphics or sometimes have attached labels. The materials must have specialized heat-seal properties to allow conversion into pouches.

The most common pouch has bottom gussets to form a "W" which opens to allow a flat bottom. Side gussets are also sometimes used. Several design options are available.[6]

Inclusion of pour spouts and re-closable zip strips is common.

Equipment

edit

The packaging machinery involved typically forms the pouch from preprinted roll stock. The preformed pouches are shipped to a packager where they are filled and the top is sealed.

The alternative is an integral form-fill-seal machine, whether vertical or horizontal. The equipment forms the pouches, fills the pouches in-line, and seals them. With foods, drinks, or medical products, special sanitizing and wash-down requirements are critical.

The resulting equipment is sometimes complex and expensive. Packagers who do not have the volume to fill a machine to its capacity often use contract packagers.

References

edit
  1. ^ Greely, MJ (22 September 2009), "Standup Flexible Pouches", in Yam, K L (ed.), Encyclopedia of Packaging Technology, Wiley (published 2010), pp. 1155–1159, ISBN 978-0-470-08704-6
  2. ^ Soroka, W (2008). Illustrated Glossary of Packaging Terminology (Second ed.). Institute of Packaging Professionals. p. 170.
  3. ^ Jones, R T (9 September 2009). "From Doy-Pack to S-Pouch". Packaging Digest: 58–63. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  4. ^ US 3935993, Doyen, Leon & Doyen, Louis, "Free-standing container", published 1976-02-03 
  5. ^ US 3502521, Doyen, Leon & Doyen, Louis, "Method of producing plastic containers", published 1970-03-24 
  6. ^ United States Patent Classification B65D75/008, Standing pouches, US Patent Office

Bibliography

edit