Flexible intermediate bulk container


A flexible intermediate bulk container, jumbo, bulk bag, super sack, or big bag, is an industrial container made of flexible fabric that is designed for storing and transporting dry, flowable products, such as sand, fertilizer, and granules of plastic.
FIBCs are most often made of thick woven polyethylene or polypropylene, either coated or uncoated, and normally measure around in diameter and varies in height from. Its capacity is normally around, but the larger units can store even more. A bulk bag designed to transport of material will itself only weigh.
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.

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 utilized within the rubber industry for the transportation of carbon black to be used as a reinforcing agent in a variety of rubber products.
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 of cement was being shipped out on a weekly basis to feed the vast building program.
The modern FIBC transports a growing figure of over 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 and load capability ranging from 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.

Types of Flexible Intermediate Bulk Container

Styles of Bag Construction:
Circular – This style of bag is made on the loom as a tube and is the lowest standard of bulk bag. It will not maintain its shape when loaded and will sit down and bulge out in the middle.  It will resemble a tomato when loaded, as the product will stretch the fabric when it is subjected to the pressure of the product being loaded.
U-Panel – A U-panel bag is a step up from a circular bag, as it will have two pieces of fabric resembling a U shape that are sewn together to make the shape of the bag. It will maintain it’s a square shape much better than the circular style.
Four-Panel – The four-panel bag is the best bag for staying square other than a baffle bag. It is made of up four pieces of fabric that make up the sides and one for the bottom.  These are all sewn together which resist the stretching tendencies of the bag and holds it in a cube shape much better.
Baffle – This style will be the best at keeping the cube shape of your product when the bag is loaded. It has additional baffles sewn down each corner to act as a pocket to fill each corner.  In addition, there are other pockets sewn on each side for all the product to gather around the baffles and pockets.  These are perfect if you have a small diameter product such as soybeans which can flow through the baffles without getting hung up.  These bulk bags will be easier to stack as they will make a nice square cube.
Specialty Bags:
Different Lift Loop Configurations:
Types of Lift loops
FIBC Bags with Liners
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 sandbags were termed the big bag wall, or big bag barrier.
In North America, bulk bags are often used in flood prevention as well. An 1850 kg bag has a foot print of at least 3 feet by 3 feet, and a height of almost 4 feet – building a solid wall of sand, 400 regular sized sandbags at a time.

Emptying FIBC

The discharge of FIBC for further processing the product it contains must be performed on a station specifically designed for this purpose in order to cope with different difficulties linked to the handling of Big Bags weighing in some cases more than 1000 kg. Those stations must be equipped with a crane to lift the Big Bag, a safety cage to avoid risks related to fall, and a system to contain dust emission during discharge.