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= Composite Packaging Materials =
= Composite Packaging Materials =
'''Composite Packaging Materials''' are materials made of two or more different material types that are '''permanently bonded''' and '''cannot be separated manually''' without damaging the material.   
'''Composite Packaging Materials''' are materials made of two or more different material types that are '''permanently bonded''' and '''cannot be separated manually''' without damaging the material.   
They are designed to provide specific technical properties such as strength, barrier performance, or sealing, but they complicate sorting and recycling.
They provide properties like barrier performance, sealing, or stiffness, but complicate sorting and recycling.


== Definition ==
== Definition ==
According to the EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive (94/62/EC, Art. 3), composite packaging is made of different materials of which one forms an outer layer and one or more form inner layers.   
According to the EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive (94/62/EC, Art. 3), composite packaging consists of different materials of which one forms an outer layer and one or more form inner layers.   
In the IMDE model, this definition applies to the level of a '''Packaging Material''', not to the entire packaging or packaging element.
In the IMDE model, this definition applies at the level of a '''Packaging Material''', not at the level of the complete packaging or the packaging element.


In IMDE terms:   
In IMDE terms:   
''A composite packaging material is a single Packaging Material record that represents a permanently bonded structure of two or more materials, referred to as Composite Materials.''
''A composite packaging material is a single Packaging Material record that represents a permanently bonded structure of two or more materials, defined as Composite Materials (layers).''


== Relation to IMDE Hierarchy ==
== Relation to IMDE Hierarchy ==
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|-
|-
| Packaging System
| Packaging System
| Represents the full product packaging setup (for example, bottle + cap + label + carton). May include both composite and mono-material elements.
| Complete packaging setup for a product (for example, bottle + cap + label + carton). May include both composite and mono-material elements.
|-
|-
| Packaging Element
| Packaging Element
| A physical component of the system (for example, bottle, cap, trigger, label). Each element can consist of one or more Packaging Materials.
| A physical component of the system (for example, bottle, cap, trigger, label). An element can consist of one or more Packaging Materials.
|-
|-
| Packaging Material
| Packaging Material
| The layer or substance defining the material composition of an element. A Packaging Material can be either mono-material or composite (multi-material). Composite materials may consist of several Composite Material layers (for example, PET + EVOH + PE).
| The material used by an element. A Packaging Material can be mono-material or composite. A composite material is built from multiple Composite Material layers.
|-
|-
| Composite Material
| Composite Material
| Defines each layer or constituent within a composite Packaging Material, with its own material type, thickness, or weight share.
| A constituent layer within a composite Packaging Material, with its own material type, thickness or weight share.
|}
 
== Dominant Material (for EPR reporting and automation) ==
Composite is a structural description, not a fee class. For EPR reporting the composite must be declared under one material category using the '''dominant material''' rule, consistent with EU Decision 2005/270/EC.
 
'''Rule'''
* If one layer represents '''more than 50% of total weight''', that layer’s material is the '''Dominant Material'''.
* If no layer exceeds 50%, use the '''outermost layer''' as the Dominant Material.
* If neither can be determined, report under '''Other Materials'''.
 
'''Automation field guidance'''
* ''PackagingMaterial.DominantMaterialCode'' stores the resolved material type.
* ''PackagingMaterial.Composition[]'' stores each Composite Material layer with weight share or thickness.
 
'''Pseudo logic'''
<pre>
function ResolveDominantMaterial(composite):
  if max(layer.weight_share) > 0.50:
      return layer.material_of_max_share
  else if composite.has_outer_layer:
      return composite.outer_layer.material
  else:
      return OTHER_MATERIALS
</pre>
 
'''Edge cases'''
{| class="wikitable"
! Case
! Example
! Result
|-
| One layer > 50%
| Paper 60% + PE 40%
| Dominant = Paper → report as Paper & Cardboard
|-
| No layer > 50%, outer layer paper
| Paper 40% + Plastic 35% + Alu 25%
| Dominant = Paper (outer layer) → Paper & Cardboard
|-
| No layer > 50%, no clear outer layer
| Mixed textile polymer pouch
| Dominant not determinable → Other Materials
|}
|}


== EPR Classification ==
== EPR Classification ==
Composite materials are '''not a separate EPR fee class'''.   
Composite materials are '''not a separate EPR fee class'''.   
Each composite must be reported under the '''dominant material type''' or, when no dominant material exists, under '''Other Materials'''.
Each composite is reported under the '''dominant material''' as defined above.


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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! Example
! Example
|-
|-
| Paper / Plastic / Aluminium laminate
| Paper, plastic, aluminium laminate
| Paper
| Paper
| Drink Cartons (Composite)
| Drink Cartons (Composite)
| Tetra Pak, SIG Combibloc
| Tetra Pak, SIG Combibloc
|-
|-
| Plastic / Plastic multilayer (different polymers)
| Plastic multilayer (different polymers)
| Plastic
| Plastic
| Plastic – Rigid or Plastic – Flexible
| Plastic – Rigid or Plastic – Flexible
| PET/PE tray, PE/PP film
| PET/PE tray, PE/PP film
|-
|-
| Paper / Plastic laminate (no aluminium)
| Paper, plastic laminate (no aluminium)
| Paper or Plastic (depending on weight)
| Paper or Plastic (by dominant rule)
| Paper & Cardboard or Plastic
| Paper & Cardboard or Plastic
| Paper bag with plastic window
| Paper bag with plastic window
|-
|-
| Plastic / Metal laminate
| Plastic, metal laminate
| Plastic
| Plastic
| Plastic – Flexible
| Plastic – Flexible
| Metallized coffee pouch
| Metallized coffee pouch
|-
|-
| Mixed / Non-dominant (unclear main layer)
| Mixed, non-dominant, unclear
| –
| –
| Other Materials
| Other Materials
| Textile-polymer mailer bag
| Textile polymer mailer
|}
|}


== Recyclability Impact ==
== Recyclability Impact ==
* Composite materials often hinder recyclability because they cannot be separated into pure streams.   
* Composite materials often hinder recyclability because layers cannot be separated into pure streams.   
* Plastic composites containing different polymer families (for example, PET/PE) or barrier layers (for example, EVOH, PA, Al) are classified as '''non-compliant''' for recyclability discounts.   
* Plastic composites with mixed polymer families (for example PET with PE, or PA barriers) or metallized layers are typically '''non-compliant''' for recyclability discounts.   
* Paper-based composites (Drink Cartons) have dedicated collection and recycling in some EU markets.
* Paper based composites used as drink cartons can be collected and recycled in dedicated systems in some markets.


== Examples ==
== Examples ==
* PET bottle with PE sealing layer and EVOH barrier (plastic composite)  
* PET bottle with PE sealing layer and EVOH barrier   
* Coffee pouch (PET/Alu/PE)  
* Coffee pouch with PET, aluminium, and PE   
* Paperboard carton with plastic window   
* Paperboard carton with a plastic window   
* Paper/Alu/PE laminated drink carton (classified as ''Drink Carton'')
* Paper, aluminium, PE laminated drink carton


== Relation to Other IMDE Terms ==
== Relation to Other IMDE Terms ==
* [[taxonomy:Packaging Element]] – component that uses one or more materials, including composites.  
* [[taxonomy:Packaging Element]]   
* [[taxonomy:Packaging Material]] – level where composite structure is modelled.  
* [[taxonomy:Packaging Material]]   
* [[taxonomy:Composite Material]] – sub-records defining each layer within a composite material.  
* [[taxonomy:Composite Material]]   
* [[taxonomy:Material Classes]] – identifies the dominant material family used for EPR reporting.  
* [[taxonomy:Material Classes]]   
* [[taxonomy:Polymer]] – for polymer-based composites and barriers.
* [[taxonomy:Polymer]]


[[category:taxonomy]]
[[category:taxonomy]]
[[category:material classes]]

Revision as of 07:57, 10 November 2025

Composite Packaging Materials

Composite Packaging Materials are materials made of two or more different material types that are permanently bonded and cannot be separated manually without damaging the material. They provide properties like barrier performance, sealing, or stiffness, but complicate sorting and recycling.

Definition

According to the EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive (94/62/EC, Art. 3), composite packaging consists of different materials of which one forms an outer layer and one or more form inner layers. In the IMDE model, this definition applies at the level of a Packaging Material, not at the level of the complete packaging or the packaging element.

In IMDE terms: A composite packaging material is a single Packaging Material record that represents a permanently bonded structure of two or more materials, defined as Composite Materials (layers).

Relation to IMDE Hierarchy

Level Description
Packaging System Complete packaging setup for a product (for example, bottle + cap + label + carton). May include both composite and mono-material elements.
Packaging Element A physical component of the system (for example, bottle, cap, trigger, label). An element can consist of one or more Packaging Materials.
Packaging Material The material used by an element. A Packaging Material can be mono-material or composite. A composite material is built from multiple Composite Material layers.
Composite Material A constituent layer within a composite Packaging Material, with its own material type, thickness or weight share.

Dominant Material (for EPR reporting and automation)

Composite is a structural description, not a fee class. For EPR reporting the composite must be declared under one material category using the dominant material rule, consistent with EU Decision 2005/270/EC.

Rule

  • If one layer represents more than 50% of total weight, that layer’s material is the Dominant Material.
  • If no layer exceeds 50%, use the outermost layer as the Dominant Material.
  • If neither can be determined, report under Other Materials.

Automation field guidance

  • PackagingMaterial.DominantMaterialCode stores the resolved material type.
  • PackagingMaterial.Composition[] stores each Composite Material layer with weight share or thickness.

Pseudo logic

function ResolveDominantMaterial(composite):
  if max(layer.weight_share) > 0.50:
      return layer.material_of_max_share
  else if composite.has_outer_layer:
      return composite.outer_layer.material
  else:
      return OTHER_MATERIALS

Edge cases

Case Example Result
One layer > 50% Paper 60% + PE 40% Dominant = Paper → report as Paper & Cardboard
No layer > 50%, outer layer paper Paper 40% + Plastic 35% + Alu 25% Dominant = Paper (outer layer) → Paper & Cardboard
No layer > 50%, no clear outer layer Mixed textile polymer pouch Dominant not determinable → Other Materials

EPR Classification

Composite materials are not a separate EPR fee class. Each composite is reported under the dominant material as defined above.

Type of Composite Dominant Layer Typical EPR Fee Category Example
Paper, plastic, aluminium laminate Paper Drink Cartons (Composite) Tetra Pak, SIG Combibloc
Plastic multilayer (different polymers) Plastic Plastic – Rigid or Plastic – Flexible PET/PE tray, PE/PP film
Paper, plastic laminate (no aluminium) Paper or Plastic (by dominant rule) Paper & Cardboard or Plastic Paper bag with plastic window
Plastic, metal laminate Plastic Plastic – Flexible Metallized coffee pouch
Mixed, non-dominant, unclear Other Materials Textile polymer mailer

Recyclability Impact

  • Composite materials often hinder recyclability because layers cannot be separated into pure streams.
  • Plastic composites with mixed polymer families (for example PET with PE, or PA barriers) or metallized layers are typically non-compliant for recyclability discounts.
  • Paper based composites used as drink cartons can be collected and recycled in dedicated systems in some markets.

Examples

  • PET bottle with PE sealing layer and EVOH barrier
  • Coffee pouch with PET, aluminium, and PE
  • Paperboard carton with a plastic window
  • Paper, aluminium, PE laminated drink carton

Relation to Other IMDE Terms