L'Oréal embraces automation for new blister-sealing lines

Multiple robots help pick-and-place blister packs of L’Oréal’s Baby Lips line of lip balms on two lines running 50 and 100 packs/min.

PACK UNLOADING. On the 100-pack/min line, finished blister packs are removed from the blister-sealing machine via a ceiling-mounted robot and are placed in front of sensors for inspection.
PACK UNLOADING. On the 100-pack/min line, finished blister packs are removed from the blister-sealing machine via a ceiling-mounted robot and are placed in front of sensors for inspection.

Cosmetics giant L’Oréal USA is one CPG that needs no convincing when it comes to the value of incorporating robotics and automation into its packaging operations. Since 1987, the company has been using robots in its Somerset, NJ, Florence, KY, and North Little Rock, AR, plants, which respectively produce cosmetics and skin care products, hair care products, and cosmetics.

“We started using robots years ago to take products out of pucks to either apply labels or place products into a carton or case,” says Erin Morris, L’Oréal USA Project Engineer. Since it began investing in automation, L’Oréal has worked with systems integrator Clear Automation, LLC.

In 2012, when L’Oréal’s Consumer Products Division launched the Baby Lips line of Moisturizing Lip Balms under the Maybelline brand, it looked to Clear Automation to automate a dedicated blister-packing line at its Somerset facility. “Years ago, blister packing was a manual operation, because there were not many products that were blistered,” explains Morris. Drawbacks to manual blister packing for the Baby Lips application, she adds, included cost, safety, and a lack of efficiency and flexibility.

For the new line, L’Oréal required robots that could meet its speed, reliability, and ease of use specifications. “The type of robot is determined by the requirements of the line for speed, but they must be low maintenance regardless,” says Morris. “They must also be easy to use in terms of programming, debugging, and general maintenance. Having a common platform that is easily supported is critical.”

Clear Automation’s solution included three robots: one to pick lip balm tubes out of pucks and place them into stepper motor-driven pockets for labeling, one to load the blisters, and one to pick finished blister packs from the packaging machine and place them onto an exit conveyor. All three robots are Fanuc LR® 200iC/5H servo-driven tabletop mini-robots with five axes of controlled motion.

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