Loading…

Effect of gamma irradiation on the oxygen barrier properties in ethyl‐vinyl acetate/ethylene‐vinyl alcohol/ethyl‐vinyl acetate multilayer film

The potential changes of single‐use plastic materials (EVA/EVOH/EVA multilayer film in this study) used in biopharmaceutical and food‐packaging industries are investigated after several gamma irradiation doses: 30, 50, 115, and 270 kGy, and for nonsterilized samples (0 kGy) from a point of view of m...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of applied polymer science 2020-11, Vol.137 (44), p.n/a
Main Authors: Dorey, Samuel, Gaston, Fanny, Girard‐Perier, Nina, Dupuy, Nathalie, Marque, Sylvain R.A., Delaunay, Lucie
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The potential changes of single‐use plastic materials (EVA/EVOH/EVA multilayer film in this study) used in biopharmaceutical and food‐packaging industries are investigated after several gamma irradiation doses: 30, 50, 115, and 270 kGy, and for nonsterilized samples (0 kGy) from a point of view of mechanical properties, thermal properties and permeability properties. Tensile tests, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), oxygen transmission rate (OTR) and water vapor transmission rate (WVTR) are performed on the multilayer film. For irradiation doses below 50 kGy, thermal and water vapor barrier properties are not altered. For higher doses (50 to 270 kGy), mechanical, thermal and water vapor barrier properties are slightly altered whereas oxygen barrier property decreases from 13 to 27 cm3.m−2.day−1. This slight change is shown not to happen due to chain entanglement or chain mobility loss in the amorphous phase of the different polymers. It rather comes from a change of the chemical environment of the EVOH layer.
ISSN:0021-8995
1097-4628
DOI:10.1002/app.49361