Corona Treatment Concerns You Need to Take a Closer Look At

28 Jul.,2025

 

Corona Treatment Concerns You Need to Take a Closer Look At

Disclaimer: This article is NOT about COVID-19; it is about a surface treatment process for better surface preparation and adhesion properties in manufacturing.

Please visit our website for more information on this topic.

If you're looking for information about cleaning, here's an article that discusses the difference between biological cleanliness and chemical cleanliness: COVID-19: Biological vs. Chemical Contamination in Manufacturing.

This article will explore corona treatment, how it works, and how manufacturers must measure this pre-treatment method to ensure that their substrates are properly prepared to laminate or accept a coating, ink, or paint.

What is Corona Treatment?

Corona treatment is one of the most commonly used methods in adhesion processes for preparing materials like film and polymers manufactured on large rolls. Corona treatment is used to activate a material’s surface or create a molecularly amenable condition on the substrate for the successful adhesion of a rolled material requiring coating, printing of ink, laminating, or painting.

What is the Difference Between Plasma Treatment and Corona Treatment?

Both plasma treatment and corona treatment are surface modification techniques used to improve adhesion for coatings, but they have some key differences:

Corona: Corona treatment employs an electrical discharge in ambient air to modify the surface energy of polymer substrates, thereby facilitating pre-treatment. This technique is prevalent in converting and extrusion industries.

Plasma: Plasma treatment leverages the unique properties of plasma, the ionized state of gas, to modify material surfaces. During this process, the controlled introduction of gases like argon, nitrogen, or helium facilitates various surface modifications, including pre-treatment and altering surface energy. These modifications aim to create a low surface energy and enhance the adhesion of coatings, printing, and other downstream processes.

How Does Corona Treatment Work?

Corona treating works by discharging high-voltage, high-frequency electricity from an electrode in a ceramic tube that runs the length of the roll of material needed to be activated. The electricity is sent through the material to an electrically grounded metal roll called the treater roll, which is wrapped around the material. This interaction between the electrode and the metal roll creates a visible flash on the surface of the plastic film roll as it moves between the two components. However, the effects of corona treatment are completely invisible to the human eye.

As was stated earlier, this treatment alters the surface at a chemical level. Therefore, there is no visual test that could ever offer confidence that the treatment was successful at creating a chemically clean surface. Only a measurable, quantitative measurement gives the data necessary to take action.

There are many different providers of corona treatment systems, each with variations to the standard setup. Even with the diversity of corona treaters available, there are specific variables within every corona treatment process that must be fully understood and controlled to get the best results.

In most corona surface treatment systems, the material roll travels at a controlled speed over the stationary treater roll to ensure uniform surface activation. However, a phenomenon called electrical pinning can occur. The static electrical force attracts the treated material to the treater roll during treatment. If not addressed, this attraction can cause the material to pull on the treater roll, potentially leading to wrinkling. To prevent or mitigate wrinkling caused by electrical pinning, additional parameters like tension and material wrap on the treater roll can be adjusted through devices like a drive shaft and a nip roll.

Often, wrinkling is undetectable by merely observing the roll through a visual inspection because the rotating of the treater roll is so subtle that it creates minute waves in the roll that still impact the uniformity of the corona treatment. So, once again, it is always necessary to measure the treatment level across the entire roll and track changes so adjustments can be made accordingly.

Similarly, modifications to the treatment power (measured in watt density, which is the watts per foot per minute of treatment) are necessary depending on what the coating or adhesive being applied to the film is made up of. The corona treatment's watt density controls the surface energy level of the material being treated. So when this parameter is adjusted, it determines the condition on the surface of that is optimal for bonding.

The Risks of Not Measuring Corona Treatment

Water-based coatings require higher surface energy than solvent-based ones, and UV coatings require even higher surface energy than water-based coatings. Not all coatings in each of these categories have the same pre-treatment needs. Not knowing what the exact range of treatment is necessary to guarantee adhesion can lead to under- or over-treatment. Over-treating a surface can be just as detrimental to adhesion as not prepping the surface enough. It is critical to implement quantifiable supply chain controls to eliminate the risk of treatment outside of established treatment specifications.

Additionally, it’s necessary to establish and measure a material's baseline chemical state before treatment so that it can be compensated for when the treatment is applied.

How to Eliminate Risk Within Your Corona Pre-Treatment Process

Subtle changes in supplier-provided materials or storage conditions of these materials and the coatings may necessitate adjustments to previously established treatment protocols to ensure continued efficacy. Past success with corona treatment does not guarantee its continued efficacy for subsequent pre-treatments. Therefore, ongoing monitoring is essential to verify consistent effectiveness.

Link to Naen

Adhesion failure is a recurrent challenge encountered by many organizations, impacting applications ranging from minor inconveniences (e.g., improper ink adhesion on polymer labels) to critical safety concerns (e.g., coating malfunction leading to sensor failure in automotive components). Identifying and addressing the root causes of such failures can be complex, particularly without the expertise of adhesion specialists or specialized surface quality monitoring equipment.

Organizations utilizing corona treatment, plasma treatment, or other pre-treatment processes can benefit from implementing an intelligent surface quality measurement platform like BConnect. This innovative platform facilitates the measurement and collection of critical data, enabling proactive risk mitigation of adhesion failures and verifying optimal surface treatment performance.

Whether your organization or its customers face recurring challenges with adhesion failure, integrating surface quality measurements as a Key Performance Indicator (KPI) within your surface treatment quality program offers a future-proof approach. This proactive measure empowers data-driven decision-making, ultimately enhancing the effectiveness of your surface treatment processes and mitigating the risk of adhesion failures.

Corona Treatment Theory and Purpose - Pillar Technologies

Purpose Of Corona Treating

The purpose of corona treating is to improve the wettability and adhesion characteristics of plastic substrates to inks and adhesives. Unlike the purely mechanical bond, as in the case of an ink penetrating into a porous surface like paper, plastic films will generally need some means of surface treatment to achieve acceptable chemical bonding with the ink or adhesive.

Theory Of Corona Treating

Although there are numerous theories explaining the principles behind the process of corona treating, the most commonly accepted theory appears to be the theory of high speed oxidation. Basically, this theory states that the energy of the corona breaks the molecular bonds on the surface of the non-polar substrate. The broken bonds then recombine with the free radicals in the corona environment to form additional polar groups on the film surface. These polar groups have a strong chemical affinity to the polar inks and adhesives, which results in improved adhesion. Similarly, the polar surface results in an increased surface energy which correlates with improved wettability.

Components Of Corona Treating Systems

All corona treating systems have two components. The first component is the power source and the second component is the treater station.

Power Source

The power source generally consists of a high frequency generator and a high voltage output transformer. In very general terms, the purpose of the power source is to raise the incoming electricity (typically 50/60 Hz, 230/460 V) to a higher frequency (10-35 kHz) and higher voltage (10 kV). The power source is commonly referred to as a power supply or a generator. Typically, power supplies are rated in kilowatts (kW) and can range from 500 W to 30 kW, depending on the application.

Treater Station

All treater stations have a high voltage electrode and a ground electrode. A solid dielectric (insulating) material is needed to cover one of the two electrodes in order to generate a corona atmosphere, as opposed to a "lightning bolt" charge.

In very broad terms, treater stations are classified into two categories - Covered Roll or Bare Roll.

Covered Roll

Covered roll stations have the dielectric covering on the ground roll and the high voltage electrode is bare metal. Significant advantages and disadvantages of covered roll stations are as follows:

Advantages:

  1. Designed to treat non-conductive surfaces. It is a more efficient system than bare roll.
  2. Must be used for substrates that are difficult to treat (i.e., high slip polypropylene, high slip polyethylene).
  3. Easy to adjust treat width and to "lane" treat specific areas which leave other areas untreated.
  4. Can use a variety of dielectric coverings to accommodate customer preference for cost, durability, size and quality.
  5. Can treat any width material.

Disadvantages:

  1. Dielectric failures can be cumbersome to repair as the roll must be removed from the station.
  2. Stations are typically larger than comparable bare roll stations.
  3. Cannot treat metallized substrates.

Bare Roll

Bare roll stations have the dielectric covering on the high voltage electrode and the ground electrode is bare metal. Significant advantages and disadvantages of the bare roll stations are as follows:

Advantages:

  1. Can treat metallized substrates.
  2. More compact than covered roll treater stations.
  3. Easy to repair dielectric failures on electrodes.

Disadvantages:

  1. Less efficient than covered roll.
  2. Cannot easily adjust treat width or lane treat (Pillar is introducing a new product that eliminates this disadvantage).
  3. Limited to maximum 120 inch treat width.
  4. Will not treat certain substrates.
  5. Requires large volumes of makeup air, as air is needed to cool the electrodes.

In addition to the broad classification of covered roll versus bare roll, treater stations are further classified by the application in which they are used. Stations are designed to be standard for these applications. Typical applications include sheet fed applications, narrow web label presses, flexo/gravure printing presses, coaters/laminators, extrusion coaters, blown film extrusion, cast film extrusion, oriented film extrusion and laboratory treaters.

How Systems Are Sized

The first step in sizing corona treater systems is to determine the desired "dyne level" needed for the substrate that is being converted. The "dyne level" is a measure of surface energy and is a commonly used parameter in the converting industry.

The "watt density" that will be needed to raise the dyne to the desired level for a particular film can be determined from empirical tables. Once the watt density is known, it is multiplied by the maximum treat width of the material and the line speed of the operation to determine the maximum kW needed for the application. This kW level determines the size of the power supply. Based on the kW size of the power supply, there are a number of formulas that are used to calculate the sizes of the electrodes, treater rolls, etc.

Selecting A System

If you are new to corona treating, you will want to consult with a reputable manufacturer of corona treaters to make sure that you order the correct equipment for your application. Ultimately, you want a power supply that has proven reliability. It should be easy to service because at some time during the life of the system you will probably need minor maintenance.

Similarly, the station should be designed to be operator-friendly. The electrode gap and treat width should be easily adjusted. The station should be easy to clean and maintain. The electrode should be rigid and able to withstand high temperatures without distortion. The dielectric should be properly chosen and sized. Finally, the station construction should be rugged and designed to withstand an ozone environment.

If you are looking for more details, kindly visit Corona Plasma Treatment Machine.