Flow wrapper film shrinkage diagram — MD and TD thermal relaxation in BOPP and PE heat-seal packaging film

Flow Wrapper Film Shrinkage: An Engineering Explanation

1. The Symptom: Seals That Wrinkle

Every flow wrapper operator knows the frustration: wavy fin seals, wrinkled end seals, bags that look inconsistent coming off the line. The first instinct is to crank up the sealing temperature — but that often makes it worse.

Here's the core thesis: this isn't a machine defect. It's predictable thermal physics at work in your film. Understanding the mechanism is the first step to controlling it.

2. Why Film Shrinks: Polymer Chain Relaxation

Thermoplastic films — BOPP, CPP, PE — are manufactured by stretching. During production, molecular chains are pulled straight and frozen in an oriented state under tension. They're essentially locked in place.

When a flow wrapper's sealing jaws reach 120–180°C, those chains gain enough thermal energy to snap back toward their natural random-coil state. The result is macroscopic shrinkage — the film physically contracts. Engineers call this "frozen-in stress release" or thermal relaxation.

A simple analogy: stretch a rubber band and hold it. Release it and it snaps back. Polymer molecules do exactly the same thing when heat is applied — the difference is that in a packaging film, this happens in milliseconds under a sealing jaw.

3. MD vs TD: Two Directions, Two Shrinkage Behaviors

Machine Direction (MD) runs along the film roll — the direction the film travels through the machine. Transverse Direction (TD) runs across the web, perpendicular to travel.

MD shrinkage is almost always higher than TD because longitudinal draw ratios during film manufacturing are larger (3.5–5× for MD vs 5–6× biaxial for TD in oriented films). The practical consequences are direct:

  • MD shrinkage narrows the seal zone and shortens bag length
  • TD shrinkage creates end-seal wrinkles and distorts the bag profile

This directional asymmetry is precisely why flow wrapper PID control must manage two axes independently, not as a single unified temperature. A machine that treats top and bottom film identically is fighting physics with one hand tied behind its back.

4. The Three Control Variables

Film shrinkage during sealing is governed by three interacting variables — and the worst outcomes come from getting all three wrong simultaneously:

  • Temperature: Every +10°C above the film's glass transition temperature adds roughly 10–20% more shrinkage — until you hit the softening point and the seal fails entirely. There is no single "correct" temperature; it depends on the film's thermal history.
  • Dwell Time: Longer jaw contact means deeper heat penetration and more complete shrinkage. Too short and the seal is weak; too long and you risk burn-through or excessive shrinkage on thin films.
  • Film Tension: High unwind tension pre-stretches the film before it reaches the sealing zone — effectively adding latent shrinkage that triggers the moment heat is applied. This is the most overlooked variable on the production floor.

The worst combination: high tension + high temperature + short dwell. This maximizes shrinkage while minimizing the time for the seal to set, producing the worst wrinkle patterns.

5. Film Material Comparison

Material Shrink Tendency Typical Application
BOPP Low (oriented crystalline structure locks dimensions) Biscuits, candy, instant noodles
CPP Medium-low Bread, pastries
PE (LDPE/LLDPE) Medium-high Frozen food, heavy-duty wrap
Multi-layer (e.g. OPP/CPP) Engineered — outer layer resists shrink, inner layer heat-seals Premium food, modified atmosphere

Choosing film isn't about "more expensive = better." It's about matching the film's shrink profile to your machine's temperature control precision. A high-shrink PE film on a single-thermostat machine is a recipe for inconsistent seals regardless of operator skill.

6. PID Temperature Control: The Real Differentiator

Entry-level flow wrappers use a single thermostat controlling top and bottom sealing at the same temperature. The result: asymmetric shrinkage, curved bags, twisted fin seals — because the top and bottom film experience different thermal histories along the web path.

High-end machines like the KL-450XDSF servo-driven flow wrapper with independent PID zones control each sealing zone independently to ±1°C. This isn't a luxury feature — it's the engineering line between seals that wrinkle and seals that stay flat.

Independent PID loops allow engineers to compensate for the real-world asymmetry: the top film travels a different path, at a different tension, with different ambient exposure than the bottom film. Treating them identically is the root cause of most chronic seal quality problems.

For standard bakery and snack applications where film shrinkage is less severe, the KL-350 bottom film wrapper provides reliable sealing performance with straightforward temperature management suited to BOPP and CPP films.

To understand how machine architecture affects film handling more broadly, see how flow wrappers compare to vertical FFS machines — the film path geometry differs significantly between the two formats, which changes how shrinkage manifests.

For a full overview of available configurations, visit Keypack's horizontal flow wrapper range.

7. FAQ

Is this the same as shrink wrapping?

No. Shrink wrapping uses dedicated shrink film and a heat tunnel to deliberately shrink the entire package around the product. Flow wrapper film shrinkage is an unwanted side effect during heat sealing — something to be controlled and minimized, not exploited.

What shrinkage rate is acceptable?

Industry rule of thumb: ≤2% MD shrinkage at sealing temperature for BOPP, ≤4% for PE. Anything higher usually indicates a process variable out of range — temperature, tension, or dwell time.

How do I tell if it's the film or the machine?

Run the same film on a different machine, or a different film batch on the same machine. If the problem follows the film → material issue. If it follows the machine → temperature calibration or tension adjustment needed. This simple swap test eliminates most diagnostic ambiguity.

Can I fix shrinkage by just lowering the temperature?

Sometimes — but below the film's minimum seal threshold, you trade wrinkles for weak seals. The real fix is tuning temperature, dwell, and tension together as a system, not chasing one variable at a time.


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