Performance Packaging’s Airshield Achieves FDA Approval for Food & Beverage

Versatile additive extends shelf life of packaged foods and drinks for adults and infants.


Performance Packaging of Nevada, a worldwide supplier of flexible packaging, packaging machinery and folding cartons, has received FDA authorization for its Airshield technology for direct food and beverage contact applications. The Airshield process is designed to remove oxygen from rigid and flexible packages such as pouches and packages containing fitments or solid closures. Airshield provides greater efficiencies of oxygen removal and volume levels, saves money, and is self-triggering once package-filling begins, the company said.

In development for three years, Airshield will be available to food and beverage processors and packagers during the first quarter of 2018. Early licensing, now in effect, will provide Airshield customers with certain exclusivities for use of the patent-pending technology.

“Airshield provides oxygen ‘scavenging’ (the removal of oxygen) and an oxygen barrier all in one product,” said Rob Reinders, president of Performance Packaging. “One big benefit is that Airshield remains dormant until the package is filled with product. This is a huge advantage particularly with blow-molded PET bottles. Current scavengers in the PET market activate once the bottle is made, limiting the time processors have to fill the bottles. Combined with a print application on the substrate, this portrays truly active packaging,” he said.

It has also been proven that Airshield continuously scavenges oxygen from products that release their own oxygen into the package., the company said, adding, the continuing release of oxygen over time internally degrades the product in the package. Airshield is an additive which removes the oxygen that is trapped during the filling process and then acts as an enhanced-oxygen barrier to keep the oxygen out of the container to extend the product’s shelf life. The additive is less expensive than most polymers it replaces.

The FDA affirmed that the additives in the oxygen scavenger mix are “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS) and has issued Letters of No Objection regarding the use of Airshield for any food contact packaging containers as well as food packaging for infants specifically under the age of six months. Airshield for infants can be found in flexible pouches of foods through Performance Packaging’s patented offering SipP spouts and caps for pouches.

Airshield’s technical components are constructed to ensure they don't start working until food is placed into the package, the company said, explaining that any oxygen permeating through the pouch encounters tortuosity (a maze-like path for oxygen permeation created by the addition of mineral compounds in the package). The addition of Airshield facilitates oxidation in the presence of moisture, thus giving Airshield its unique capabilities. For more information, visit www.pplv.co.

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