Question: Why Is There Painter’s Tape on Food Oxygen Absorbers?

Sep 15, 2025 | FAQs

Answer:

The painter’s tape you see on our oxygen absorbers results from necessary joint connections during production. Below are the reasons and nature of this occurrence:

Why Joints Occur:

  1. Film Roll Length Limits:
    Oxygen absorber packaging film comes in finite rolls. When one roll is depleted, it must be spliced to the next roll – creating a joint.
  2. Equipment Stoppages:
    During continuous production on chained assembly lines, temporary halts (e.g., for maintenance or adjustments) require splicing at the stoppage point upon restart.
  3. Roll Changeovers During Use:
    Joints also form when switching rolls during the absorber-filling process.

Role of Painter’s Tape:
In these three scenarios requiring film or unit connections, painter’s tape (or similar specialized tape) is the industry-standard method for securing joints. This ensures production continuity and product integrity.

Prevalence and Safety:

  • Industry-Wide Practice:
    Notably, oxygen absorbers from leading brands may contain taped joints. This confirms such connections are normal, unavoidable manufacturing features industry-wide.
  • No Impact on Functionality:
    Crucially, the tape only physically bonds materials. It does not penetrate the absorber’s active components (e.g., iron powder), nor affect its core oxygen-scavenging function. Efficacy and safety remain uncompromised.

Summary:

Painter’s tape on oxygen absorbers is a standard indicator of production-line splices – a routine industry practice. It enables continuous manufacturing while having zero impact on the absorber’s performance, safety, or end-use effectiveness.

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