Bin bag

A bin bag, swag sack or bin liner (British English) or garbage bag, trash bag, refuse sack, black sack, or can liner (American English) is a disposable bag used to contain rubbish. Such bags are useful to line the insides of waste containers to prevent the insides of the receptacle from becoming coated in waste material. Most bags these days are made out of plastic, and are typically green or black in colour.

Plastic bags are a convenient and sanitary way of handling garbage, and are widely used. Plastic garbage bags are fairly lightweight and are particularly useful for messy or wet rubbish, as is commonly the case with food waste, and are also useful for wrapping up garbage to minimize odour. Plastic bags are often used for lining litter or waste containers or bins. This serves to keep the container sanitary by avoiding container contact with the garbage. After the bag in the container is filled with litter, the bag can be pulled out by its edges, closed, and tied with minimal contact with the waste matter.

Created in 1950, this invention can be attributed to Canadians Harry Wasylyk, Larry Hansen and Frank Plomp. In a recent special on CBC television, the green garbage bag ranked 36th among the top 50 Canadian inventions.[1]

Plastic bags can be incinerated with their contents in appropriate facilities for waste-to-energy conversion. They are stable and benign in sanitary landfills.

Contents

Description

Plastic bags for rubbish or litter are sold in a number of sizes at many other stores in packets or rolls of a few tens of bags. Wire twist ties are sometimes supplied for closing the bag once full. Varying thicknesses are commonly manufactured - thicker bags are used for heavy duty applications such as construction waste, or in order to be able to withstand being compacted during recycling processes. In the mid-1990s bin bags with draw strings for closure were introduced. Some bags have handles which may be tied, or holes through which the neck of the bag can be pulled. Most commonly, the plastic used to make bin bags is the rather soft and flexible LDPE (Low Density Polyethylene) or, for strength, LLDPE (Linear Low Density Polyethylene) or HDPE (High Density Polyethylene) are sometimes used.

Biodegradable plastic bags

Some bags are made of biodegradable polythene film. These will decompose when exposed to air, sun, and moisture or submitted for composting. They do not readily decompose in a sealed landfill. They are also considered a possible contaminant to plastic recycling operations.

Oxo-biodegradable and other degradable plastic bags have certain useful applications when used as rubbish bags. Organic waste can be put into oxo-biodegradable plastic sacks and put straight into the composting plant, unopened, thus reducing smells, disease transmission by insects, and handling hazards. The resulting compost may be used by farmers and growers. Since oxo-biodegradable plastic (unlike the starch-based alternative) releases its carbon slowly, it produces high quality compost. Oxo-biodegradable plastic does not degrade quickly in low temperature "windrow" composting, but it is suitable for "in-vessel" composting at the higher temperatures required by new animal by-products regulations. Oxo-biodegradable plastics become peroxidised and embrittled, and behave like natural waste. It is bio-assimilated by the same bacteria and fungi, which transform the degraded plastic products to cell biomass, like lignocellulosic materials. Oxo-biodegradable plastic is designed to fragment by a process which includes both photo-oxidation and thermo-oxidation, so it can degrade in the dark. Resin identification code 7 is applicable to biodegradable plastics.

Drawstring and flexibility

In 1984, the drawstring garbage bag was introduced by GLAD[2] and Hefty.[3] In 2001, Hefty introduced a garbage bag with a drawstring designed to stretch around the garbage can's rim and stay in place.[4] In July 2004, ForceFlex, a flexible plastic garbage bag, was introduced by GLAD[2] (followed by Hefty's Ultra Flex brand in September).[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ CBC: The Greatest Canadian Invention
  2. ^ a b GLAD ForceFlex® Trash Bags End Garbage Gripes, GLAD Press Release Archive, 20 July 2004 (retrieved 21 August 2010)
  3. ^ HELPFUL HARDWARE; HELP WITH THE TRASH, Daryln Brewer, New York Times, 27 December 1984 (retrieved 21 August 2010)
  4. ^ Pactiv Announces New Hefty® The Gripper™ Waste Bag Patented Stretch & Grip Top™ Goes on Easy And Stays Put, Pactiv Archived News, 20 August 2001 (retrieved 21 August 2010)
  5. ^ Pactiv Announces Hefty Ultra Flex Waste Bags; Thick, strong & stretchable bags respond to consumers' needs, press release, 16 September 2004 (retrieved 21 August 2010 on AllBusiness.com)

Books