The kraft paper industry uses the test conditions per ISO 554 – 1976 (Temp of 23 ± 1 °C / RH of 50 ± 2 %) which requires the samples to be conditioned for at least 24 hours.
Hope this helps.
Canadian Kraft Paper Industries Ltd.
Original Message:
Sent: 06-10-2024 08:27 AM
From: Nate Wilhelm
Subject: Temp & Humidity Testing
Hi Georgia. I run a package testing lab at STERIS and do lots of environmental conditioning for our customers. Most follow ASTM D4322. The most common temp/humidity conditions within D4332 that are followed are very similar to ISTA 3A. Extreme Cold: -30C, Tropical: 40C 90%RH, and Desert: 60C 15%RH. D4332 recommends 72 hours at each condition or the amount of time it takes for the packages to equilibrate. These conditions are pretty extreme, but I don't think they're outside of what could be seen by your product being shipped at different times of the year in different parts of the world. Though 72 hours is not very realistic in my opinion. They are meant to be worst case though.
An alternative you could look at is ASTM F2825. This standard is specific for single parcel delivery, overnight or two-day delivery though. It uses less extreme conditions and for shorter durations. -20C, 50C 25%RH, and 30C 90%RH for 4 hours each.
Ultimately you want to use conditions that are realistic to what your product could see. Of course the same product isn't likely to see extreme cold and high temp/humidity conditions during real shipping, but different shipments could depending on where in the world it's going and what time of year. Most people just combine it all into one cycling of extremes for simplicity's sake. For what it's worth, we almost never see failures of packaging from this conditioning cycle. If we do it's corrugate that doesn't hold up to the humidity very well.
Hope this helps!
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Nate Wilhelm
STERIS
Brooklyn Park MN
17633151216
Original Message:
Sent: 06-06-2024 03:54 PM
From: Georgia Rockwell
Subject: Temp & Humidity Testing
Hi everyone,
I'm taking a critical look at our company's temp & humidity testing, and it seems extreme to me, and not representative of an actual shipment. The test is 140 hours (5.8 days). The temp cycles between -40 and 70, and the relative humidity cycles between 10% & 95%. I don't think this would be a common scenario to constantly go back and forth between these temps/humidities out in the world.
I was looking at the ISTA 2A/3A Conditioning tests (they are the same) and looking at possibly using the "Hot, Humid" test which is 72 hours and stays at a steady temp of 38C (100F) and 85%RH. I was curious what other standards other packaging professionals use. We ship globally using all modes of transportation. What conditioning tests do you use at your company? Thanks.
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Georgia Rockwell
Packaging Engineer Leader
GE Healthcare
Waukesha WI
(262) 282-8349
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