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Influence of pallet pattern on top-to-bottom compression performance of unitized loads
Author(s) -
Kyle Dunno,
Changfeng Ge,
GLENN ROGERS,
Steve Johnson
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
tappi journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.217
H-Index - 45
ISSN - 0734-1415
DOI - 10.32964/tj20.11.673
Subject(s) - pallet , compression (physics) , container (type theory) , stacking , stack (abstract data type) , corrugated fiberboard , scaling , structural engineering , compressive strength , trimming , engineering , composite material , engineering drawing , materials science , mechanical engineering , computer science , mathematics , geometry , physics , nuclear magnetic resonance , programming language
Environmental scaling factors estimate a corrugated container’s ability to withstand various conditions it will encounter during the storage and distribution process. In this project, we examined the compressive resistance of unitized loads using differing pallet stacking patterns. To simulate real-world failure scenarios in our laboratory tests, we used two different nominal board grades of single-wall C-flute regular slotted containers loaded with a plywood panel and bagged salt to direct the failure location to the bottom of the stack. Our results showed that the columnar aligned pattern provided the greatest compressive resistance and the interlocked stacking arrangement yielded the lowest of the patterns evaluated. Based on the study results, we calculated box compression retention multipliers for each pattern and compared them to scaling factors published by the Fibre Box Association.

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