Site icon CÔNG TY TNHH SAM LAN – MÀNG SEAL NHÔM TẠI HÀ NỘI

Why Does the Same Sealing Film Deliver Different Sealing Results?

In modern manufacturing and packaging, sealing performance plays a critical role in protecting product quality, extending shelf life, and ensuring safety during storage and transportation. However, in real-world applications, Sam Lan frequently receives feedback from customers such as:

“We use the same sealing film, and it works perfectly in other factories, but on our production line, it doesn’t seal properly or fails to bond completely.”

This often leads businesses to question the quality of the sealing film. In reality, the issue rarely lies in the material itself. Instead, it is usually caused by differences in application conditions and sealing parameters.

This article explains why the same sealing film can produce different sealing results and highlights the key technical factors that must be controlled to achieve stable and reliable sealing performance.

Sealing Performance Depends on More Than Just the Sealing Film

Many assume that choosing the correct sealing film is sufficient. From a technical standpoint, however, the sealing film is only one component of a complete sealing system. The final sealing result depends on the combined effect of several factors, including:

If any of these factors are not properly controlled, the seal may appear acceptable initially but fail to remain airtight—leading to leakage, seal lift-off, or performance degradation during transportation.

1. Flatness of the Bottle Opening – A Commonly Overlooked Factor

An uneven bottle or jar opening is one of the most common causes of poor sealing. During plastic packaging production, typical issues include:

These defects prevent uniform contact between the sealing film and the container opening, resulting in:

Even with high-quality sealing film, sealing performance cannot be guaranteed if the container opening is not flat.

2. Cleanliness of the Sealing Surface – The Silent Enemy of Sealing Performance

Dust, Oil, and Moisture Contamination

Sealing films achieve optimal bonding when the contact surface is clean and dry. In real production environments, however, container openings are often exposed to:

These contaminants significantly reduce the adhesion of the heat-sealing or adhesive layer.

In many cases, the seal appears secure immediately after sealing, but after a few days—or following transportation—it begins to peel off. The root cause is usually inadequate surface preparation.

3. Sealing Pressure and Contact Time – More Is Not Always Better

A common misconception is that increasing pressure or temperature will improve sealing strength. In practice, every sealing film has an optimal operating range, including:

If pressure is too low, bonding will be insufficient. If pressure or temperature is too high, the sealing film may:

As a result, the seal may appear intact but lack long-term stability.

4. Differences Between Sample Testing and Actual Production Conditions

Another major reason for inconsistent sealing results is the gap between testing conditions and real production environments.

For example:

These differences directly affect sealing performance, even when the sealing film remains unchanged.

>>> Read more: 5 Frequent Issues With Induction Sealing Machines & Effective Solutions

Recommendations for Consistent Sealing Performance

Based on extensive practical experience across industries such as food, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and chemicals, Sam Lan recommends a technical, process-driven approach to sealing rather than trial-and-error.

Proper parameter optimization ensures reliable sealing without damaging the sealing film or packaging.

Conclusion

Sam Lan is not just a packaging material supplier—we are a technical partner helping businesses optimize sealing solutions from consultation and sample testing to real-world production implementation.

Contact Sam Lan today for expert guidance on selecting the right sealing film and for professional sealing tests tailored to your production environment.

 

Exit mobile version