Tuesday 21 July 2015

Vacuum Sealing Bags

Vacuum sealing is the best way to boost the shelf life of anything that's consumable, and items that aren’t as well. It also reduces the food waste that’s there improving the storage, so it’s attractive to consumers and the business too. 

The bags Matter 

Your first thing you need to do with vacuum sealing, is that you need the right bags. The correct bag that you use is super important. Oxygen barrier bags are those that have the molecules kept inside this type of packaging.  They also can have the inside of these modified in order to utilize the atmosphere on the outside of this container. The oxygen is then removed, and it won’t come out once there’s been a seal created.

Poly bags or normal plastic does not work, since this does have a higher transmission rate of oxygen to get to the seal once it’s completed.  Some vacuum sealers that are used at home might use co-extruded or textured bags. The process usually involves two or even more types of materials. The poly and nylon combination is used with this too, creating a major barrier of oxygen, allowing this to hold when it’s stored. 



This also blends to lower transmittal types of rates rather than the poly and the nylon types. Any of the foil that’s co-extruded with this has a lower transmission rate of oxygen, offering a more premium kind of storage. Some barrier bags might be used when you’re packaging some coffee, and that foil lining is then used to create an oxygen barrier. 

Inserting your Bag 

Before you put the bag into this, you’ll want to leave a couple inches of extra near the top, in order to remove the air, and to seal this too. Some vacuum sealers come in to help with this and are used by different markets. There are some home vacuum sealers that you can buy too, and they’re considered edge sealers. 

When you open the lid, there’s a liquid that’s seen there. you can insert this into there, by opening the bag within the middle of where this is, offering a vacuum that’s full, in order to drain any contents that are there, during the process of air removal as well. 

Sometimes, you can get nozzle sealers too, and when the vacuum starts, the nozzle takes out the air from this. You can keep the bag from stopping the suction through pulling on each side in a tight manner to ensure that there is full removal of the air.  Once the seal is fully activated, it’s held in place when it’s sealed, and then cooled down.



There are also chamber vacuum kinds of sealers, where the bag is placed there. These chambers typically have more than one specific side open on each end of the bag. 

Once the lid gets closed up, the machine starts up, and then, the vacuum forms within your chamber, getting rid of the air from the bag itself. 

Removal and Seal 

Once this is placed into your sealer, the air gets removed. Some require the users to close or clamp on this before it gets removed, with the time fully determined by the way the bag size is, and the compressor size is as well.



Larger bags for barriers take a bit longer to fully remove them. For those who are using them in the home, it can take up to 10 minutes. Then, once the seal is made, you then close it, in order to keep anything external out.  You can use a home sealer to make this fully sealed.


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