KHS
To increase stability, the shoulder design of Factor 101 has been modified, and the bottle body reinforced with functional webbing

KHS has set a new benchmark by engineering one of the world’s lightest PET bottles for still beverages to date. Under the working title of Factor 101, in close cooperation with Canadian-based injection molding technology equipment and services provider Husky Technologies, a container has been produced that uses just 5.89 grams of material to hold 591 milliliters of product. This is equivalent to the 20-ounce size common in the United States. 

At drinktec 2017, KHS presented its Factor 100 concept as a feasibility study that featured a PET bottle weighing approximately five grams with a capacity of 500 milliliters. A number of optimizations have now been made for further development, as KHS packaging designer Fabian Osterhold in  Hamburg explains. 

“With such extreme lightweighting, what’s known as the top load is especially important. This value tells us how sturdy the bottle is from a vertical perspective. It determines whether the container can be  stacked or not and survive transportation undamaged.” 

Extremely robust lightweight

To increase stability, the shoulder design of Factor 101 has been modified, and the bottle body reinforced with functional webbing. Moreover, Osterhold and his colleagues have developed a base with a pop-in effect. Here, the base pops inwards to a certain degree when a top load is applied, increasing the internal pressure and therefore the stability of the bottle.

Two hundred newtons is a common top load threshold in the industry; at 220  newtons, the Factor 101 exceeds this. In order to achieve this high value for a PET bottle used for still beverages, adapting just the container shape wasn’t enough. “The preform design also needed to be developed further,”  emphasizes Osterhold. This is why KHS joined forces with the specialists at  Husky. The company has a wealth of expertise as the world’s leading equipment supplier of PET preform injection molding systems and services and has been in cooperation with KHS for many years.  

Challenging coordination

Technically speaking, the stretching factors from blank to bottle and the resulting preform dimensions were especially important here. The relation of length to wall thickness is particularly relevant to injection molding. In this context, KHS addressed the specifications and feasibility of the stretch blow molder and bottle design, while Husky made the necessary modifications to the preform. 

“The focus here was on the exact profiling of the preform made possible by KHS technology,” Osterhold ascertains. “Focus lamps in the heater on our InnoPET Blomax Series V, for example, make for extremely precise temperature profiling directly under the bottle neck ring. This ensures that no material stays unstretched. In turn, this considerably reduces the  amount of plastic used.”

30% less material 

Compared to the standard lightweight PET container holding 500 milliliters of  still water that usually weighs seven grams on the US market, the joint  KHS/Husky product requires 30% less material. It can also be manufactured  entirely from rPET. 

However, bottle geometry is just one factor. “Line compatibility in the high capacity range of up to 90,000 bottles per hour was a key challenge,” says  Osterhold. “The main issues here were conveying, labeling, and the secondary packaging. In the shrink tunnel, for instance, special attention had  to be paid to the bottle shoulder – and the bottle of course shouldn’t fall over  during conveying.” 

High-speed development

“Not only the weight but also the time in which the project was implemented are possibly record-breaking,” Osterhold states. Thanks to the great teamwork between Husky and the many KHS departments involved in the development process, the project was successfully concluded in just four  months. 

Great interest in the market 

Factor 101 was first presented live by Husky at the NPE 2024 plastics trade show in Orlando, Florida, in May of last year. The extreme lightweight was met with great interest in the industry. “The bottle in this form is of particular relevance to contract fillers who operate under great cost pressure,” believes  Osterhold. The prime target markets are the United States, the Middle East and South America. The first projects are already in preparation.

Frank Haesendonckx, head of stretch blow molding technology at KHS, says Factor 101 is an excellent example of combining  Husky’s engineering expertise in preform manufacturing with our proficiency in bottle design and production. “Our joint aim is to produce a high-quality,  high-performing, lighter-weight result than either of us could do working on our own. Or, as I like to put it: for us, one plus one is greater than two.” 

“We aim to combine more cost-efficient performance and bottle manufacture with improved performance, also above and beyond Factor  101,”  Haesendonckx said.

Michael Müller, director of  aftermarket PET tooling for Husky Technologies, says, “We see great benefit in combining our technical expertise and envisage leveraging this for future projects. Here, Factor 101 acts as a starting point for discussion of a lightweight program and optimization of current packaging systems and solutions.” 

“We’re joined by a common spirit and goal – namely, working towards developing sustainable packaging,” Müller said.

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Naresh Khanna – 21 January 2025

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