Difference between revisions of "FIBCs"

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[[Image:Big-bag-filling-machine.jpg|thumb|200px|Big Bag Filling Machine]]
[[Image:Big-bag-filling-machine-portable.jpg|thumb|200px|Portable Big Bag Filling Machine]]
[[Image:Big-bag-filling-machine-highspeed.jpg|thumb|200px|High Speed Portable Big Bag Filling Machine]]
 
 
A '''Big Bag''', Flexible Intermediate Bulk Container, FIBC , or Bulk Bag is a standardized container in large dimensions for storing and transporting dry, flowable products, for example sand, fertilizers , and granules of plastics.
Big Bags are most often made of thick woven  polyethylene or polypropylene,  either coated or uncoated, and normally  measure around 110 cm or 45-48  inches in diameter and varies in height  from 100 cm up to 200 cm or 35  to 80 inches. Its capacity is normally  around 1000 kg or 2000 lbs, but  the larger units can store even more. The average bulk bag made to ship  one metric ton can weigh between 5-7  lbs.
Transporting and loading is done on either pallets  or by  lifting it from the loops. Bags are made with either one, two or  four  lifting loops. The single loop bag is suitable for one man  operation as  there is no need for a second man to put the loops on the  loader hook.  Emptying is made easy by a special opening in the bottom such as a  discharge spout, of which there are several options, or by simply  cutting it open.
 
 
==Size==
 
 
Bulk  Bags come in many different sizes, they can be customized into just  about any 3 dimension size possible. There are limits to the sizes of  course, but usually you'll see standard bulk bags with a standard base  dimension of 35" x 35". The heights of a bulk bag can range up to 96  plus inches tall. Again, the size and dimensions of bulk bags are  determined by safety, functionality and usability by the customer.
 
 
==History==
 
 
Although  there is disagreement on exactly where FIBCs were first made  and used,  it is certain that they have been employed for a variety of  packaging  purposes since the 1940s. These forerunners of the FIBC as we  know it  today were manufactured from PVC rubber and generally utilised within  the rubber industry for the transportation of carbon black  to be used  as a reinforcing agent in a variety of rubber products. One  of the  first known importers of the PVC containers into the United  States is  Robert Williamson, founder and CEO of B.A.G. Corp., in 1969.  These  first PVC bags were imported from Japan as an efficient way to  solve  the loading and handling problem faced by crop dusters.
By the  1960s, with the development of polypropylene combined with  advances in  weaving, the bulk bags as we know them today came into being  and were  rapidly adopted by a wide variety of oil and chemical  companies to  store and transport powdered and granular products.
It was during  the oil crisis of the mid 1970s that the FIBC really  came into its own  for transporting huge quantities of cement to the  Middle East from  across Europe for the rapid expansion of the oil  producing countries.  At its zenith, upwards of 50,000 metric tons of  cement was being  shipped out on a weekly basis to feed the vast building  programme. The  Flexible Intermediate Bulk Container Association (FIBCA)  was formed in  1983 by the companies that were manufacturing bulk bags  at that time.
The  modern FIBC transports a growing figure of over ¼ billion tonnes  of  product each year and is used to handle, store and move products as  varied as cereals to powdered chemicals and flour  to animal feeds. With  a capacity of up to 3m³ and load capability  ranging from ½ a tonne to  two tonnes FIBCs are highly cost effective,  easily recyclable and ideal  for virtually any free-flowing granule,  powder, pellet or flake. FIBCs  are also being developed to hold and  filter fluid products.
 
 
 
==Construction==
U-Panel construction
Circular/Tubular construction
Baffle construction
Four side panel construction
Round construction
 
 
==Lifting options==
Cross corner lifting loops
 
Corner lifting loops
 
Four loops
 
Two loops
 
Sling loops
 
Full loops
 
 
==Electrostatic properties==
Type - A - no special electrostatic safety features
 
Type  - B - Made from plain (non-antistatic) polypropylene. Type B  bags are  not capable of generating propagating brush discharges. The  wall of  this FIBC exhibits a breakdown voltage of 4 kilovolts or less.
 
Type  - C - Conductive FIBC. Constructed from electrically conductive  fabric, designed to control electrostatic charges by grounding. A  standard fabric used contains conductive threads or tape.
 
Type  - D - Anti-static FIBCs, essentially refers to those bags which  have  anti-static or static dissipative properties without the  requirement of  grounding.
 
 
 
==Industries Served==
 
Chemicals
 
Fertilizers
 
Fiberglass
 
Food Products
 
Grains
 
Mining (Used to hold shotcrete)
 
Pharmaceuticals
 
Pigments
 
Plastics
 
Refractories
 
Rubber Additives
 
SeedPeanuts
 
Starchwall coat powder
 
 
 
==Flood Barrier Use==
 
Thailand  utilized big bags to erect temporary walls to protect areas during the  2011 Thailand floods. Walls built using big bags instead of smaller  traditionally used sand bags were termed the big bag wall, or big bag  barrier.
 
 
 
== Video==
 
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<youtube>4h74r_Y8PBI</youtube>

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