Prêt à créer vos propres gobelets ou emballages en papier ?

Faites-nous part de vos exigences - taille, revêtement, impression et destination - et notre équipe établira un devis détaillé dans les 24 heures.
Démonstration du formulaire de contact

Prêt à créer vos propres gobelets ou emballages en papier ?

Faites-nous part de vos exigences - taille, revêtement, impression et destination - et notre équipe établira un devis détaillé dans les 24 heures.
Démonstration du formulaire de contact

Food Containers for Airline Meals

Dernière mise à jour: novembre 2025
Temps de lecture: 8 à 10 minutes
Auteur: Équipe de contenu de Papacko

Introduction

Serving food at 35,000 feet presents packaging challenges unlike any other foodservice environment. Cabin pressure at cruising altitude is equivalent to 6,000-8,000 feet elevation, causing sealed containers to expand and unsecured lids to pop open. Temperature swings from -40°C cargo holds to 80°C reheating ovens demand material resilience. And space constraints in galley carts require precision-engineered standardized dimensions.

This guide examines the specialized requirements for airline food packaging, from IATA regulatory standards to stackability protocols, providing actionable insights for catering companies, packaging manufacturers, and airline procurement teams.

Dans cet article, vous apprendrez :

-Pressure resistance specifications for cabin altitude environments

-Leak-proof sealing systems and moisture barrier requirements

-Standardized dimensions for galley cart compatibility (ATLAS, KSSU formats)

-Material certifications for aviation food contact and fire safety

💡 À emporter rapidement: Airline food packaging must withstand 8-10 PSI pressure differential without bursting, seal leak-proof through 30-minute reheating cycles, and fit precisely into standardized galley cart slots with ±2mm tolerance.

Non-compliant packaging causes 12-18% of in-flight service delays.

What Is Airline Food Packaging?

Airline food packaging comprises specialized containers, trays, and wrapping materials designed to meet the unique demands of commercial aviation catering. Key characteristics include:

-Pressure resistance: Withstands cabin altitude pressure changes (0.7-0.8 bar/10-12 PSI)

-Standardized dimensions: Conforms to ATLAS units (aviation standard unit sizing)

-Tolérance de température: Survives -40°C to +180°C range (cargo to oven)

-Empilabilité: Nests securely with anti-slip features for turbulence

-Lightweight construction: Minimizes fuel costs (every kg = $2-4 annual fuel expense)

Primary Container Types:

Type de conteneurUtilisation typiqueMatériauATLAS Size
Casserole DishHot entrées, pastaAluminum foil, molded fiberFull, half, quarter
Salad BowlCold salads, fruitPET, PP, paperboard + filmQuarter, sixth
Snack BoxSandwiches, snacksCarton couchéCustom (varies by airline)
Condiment CupSauces, dressingsPP, PLA30-60ml standard

Regulatory Framework:

-IATA Resolution 763: Standardizes airline catering equipment dimensions

-FAA/EASA Fire Safety: Packaging materials must meet flammability standards

-Règlement (CE) n° 10/2011: Food contact material compliance

-HACCP: Traceability and food safety protocols

🎯 Aperçu de l'industrie: Emirates Airline switched from traditional aluminum to dual-ovenable paperboard for 35% of meals in 2023, reducing packaging weight by 18% (saving $2.3 million annually in fuel) while maintaining pressure/heat performance.

Papacko Airline meal tray with multiple food containers showing pressure-resistant lids and standardized ATL” class=”wp-image-flux” style=”border-radius: 12px; box-shadow: 0 4px 12px rgba(0,0,0,0.1);”/>

Pressure Resistance and Altitude Performance

Understanding Cabin Pressure Effects

Physics of Pressure Differential:

At cruising altitude (35,000-42,000 feet), cabin pressure is maintained at equivalent of 6,000-8,000 feet elevation:

-Sea Level Pressure: 1.0 bar (14.7 PSI)

-Cabin Pressure: 0.75-0.82 bar (11-12 PSI)

-Pressure Differential: 0.18-0.25 bar (2.6-3.7 PSI)

Impact on Sealed Containers:

Type de conteneurMéthode d'étanchéitéExpansion Without VentingFailure Risk
Rigid Lid (Snap-on)Ajustement par friction8-12% volume increaseMedium (lid pops off)
Film Seal (Heat-sealed)Thermal bond15-22% expansionHigh (film bursts if no vent)
Couvercle ventiléSnap-on + micro-vent3-5% (vented pressure)Low (controlled release)
Flexible PouchHeat-sealed edges20-30% expansion (flex accommodates)Low (material stretches)

Engineering Solutions:

1. Pressure Relief Vents:

-Emplacement: Lid center or edge, 0.5-2mm diameter holes

-Fonction: Allow air escape during ascent, prevent vacuum on descent

-Compromis: Slightly reduced moisture retention vs. safety

2. Flexible Lid Materials:

-PET/PP Lids: Flex 10-15% without permanent deformation

-Feuille d'aluminium: Crimped edges allow controlled flex

-Avantage: Accommodates expansion without seal failure

3. Reduced Headspace:

-Principle: Fill containers 85-92% capacity (vs. 70-80% in ground service)

-Effet: Minimizes air volume subject to expansion

-Limitation: Requires precise portioning equipment

Papacko Airline galley kitchen with flight attendant preparing meals, showing organized storage of meal cont

Leak-Proof Sealing and Moisture Barriers

Sealing System Requirements

Performance Criteria:

Test ConditionStandard RequirementPremium Requirement
Pressure Hold (Static)No leaks at 0.3 bar differential (30 min)0.5 bar (60 min)
Test d'agitation50 cycles horizontal shaking, no leaks100 cycles + inversion
Thermal Cycling-20°C to +80°C (3 cycles), maintain seal-40°C to +120°C (5 cycles)
Stacking Load5 kg top load, no lid deformation10 kg, no seal compromise

Seal Failure Modes and Prevention:

Type de défaillanceCauseMéthode de préventionImpact sur les coûts
Incomplete BondContamination (grease, moisture) on sealing surfacePre-seal surface treatment, inline inspection+3-5%
Material CreepProlonged heat exposure softens polymerUse high-temp resistant materials (PET vs. PLA)+8-12%
Pressure BurstExcessive internal pressure without ventingAdd micro-vents or use flexible lids+2-4%
Corner/Edge TearsSharp edges concentrate stressRounded corners, reinforced edges+5-8%

### Moisture Barrier Technologies

Coating Options for Paperboard Containers:

Type de revêtementWater Vapor Transmission Rate (WVTR)Résistance à la chaleurRecyclabilitéCoût
PE (” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Polyethylene)5-10 g/m²/day100°C max❌ Contaminates paperFaible
PLA (” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Polylactic Acid)8-15 g/m²/day120°C max⚠️ Industrial compost onlyMoyen
EVOH Barrier0.5-2 g/m²/day150°C❌ Not recyclableÉlevé
Water-Based + Mineral12-20 g/m²/day180°C✅ RecyclableMoyen-élevé

Recommandation: For hot meals requiring reheating, PLA or EVOH coatings balance performance and sustainability. For cold items, water-based coatings meet performance needs at lower environmental impact.

Standardized Dimensions and Galley Cart Compatibility

ATLAS Unit System (Aviation Standard)

Full ATLAS Unit:

-Dimensions: 210mm × 134mm × 40-60mm (height varies)

-Volume: 600-1200ml depending on depth

-Utilisation: Main entrées, large salads

Common Subdivisions:

Unit SizeDimensions (mm)Utilisation typiqueMeals per Cart Slot
Full (1/1)210 × 134Large entrées1
Half (1/2)105 × 134Side dishes, desserts2
Quarter (1/4)105 × 67Condiments, bread4
Sixth (1/6)70 × 67Sauces, butter6

Tolerance Requirements:

-Length/Width: ±2mm (tighter tolerance than ground foodservice)

-Hauteur: ±3mm (stacking uniformity critical)

-Rim Flatness: ±0.5mm (prevents tipping during turbulence)

Why Precision Matters:

-Galley Cart Slots: Designed with 1-2mm clearance for full ATLAS units

-+3mm oversized container: Won’t fit into slot (service delays, waste)

--3mm undersized container: Shifts during turbulence, cross-contaminates adjacent meals

KSSU (Korita Standard Service Unit)

Alternative standard used by Asian carriers:

-Dimensions: 200mm × 150mm (slightly wider than ATLAS)

-Adoption: Japan Airlines, ANA, some Korean Air routes

-Compatibilité: Not interchangeable with ATLAS equipment

Implication for Manufacturers: Catering to multiple airline clients requires maintaining two production lines or negotiating standard alignment.

Papacko Technical diagram showing ATLAS unit sizing system with full, half, quarter, and sixth subdivisions,

Sélection des matériaux pour les applications aéronautiques

Récipients en papier d'aluminium

Avantages :

-Excellent Conductivity: Even heating in convection ovens (18-22 min to 75°C core temp)

-Barrier Properties: Total moisture/oxygen barrier (WVTR ~0)

-Plage de température: -40°C to +350°C (widest range)

-Recyclabilité: Infinitely recyclable (if clean)

Limites :

-Poids: 15-25% heavier than paperboard alternatives

-Metal Detection: Complicates airport security screening if carried by passengers

-Coût: 20-30% more expensive than molded fiber

Meilleur pour: Premium long-haul flights, business/first class, hot entrées requiring extended reheating.

Molded Fiber (Bagasse, Pulp)

Avantages :

-Léger: 30-40% lighter than aluminum

-Durabilité: Compostable, made from renewable/waste materials

-Coût: 25-35% cheaper than aluminum

Limites :

-Sensibilité à l'humidité: Requires coating for sauce-heavy dishes

-Temperature Limits: 180-200°C max (vs. aluminum’s 350°C)

-Structural Weakness: Can soften under prolonged heat/moisture exposure

Meilleur pour: Short-haul flights (<3 hours), eco-conscious airlines, dry or semi-dry foods.

Dual-Ovenable Paperboard

Hybrid Construction:

-Structure: Coated paperboard outer + aluminum inner liner OR heavy-duty PLA coating

-Performance: Ovenable to 200-220°C, lightweight (20% less than aluminum)

-Coût: Mid-range (15-20% less than aluminum, 30-40% more than molded fiber)

Avantages :

-Weight Savings: Fuel cost reduction (key for airlines)

-Better Sustainability Optics: “Less metal” perception (even if still using foil liner)

-Imprimabilité: Outer paperboard accepts high-quality branding

Meilleur pour: Economy class on long-haul, airlines prioritizing sustainability messaging.

Temperature Tolerance and Reheating Performance

Thermal Cycle Requirements

Typical Airline Meal Journey:

1.Chilling: Prepared meals cooled to 0-4°C within 90 minutes

2.Cold Storage: Held at 0-4°C for 2-24 hours before flight

3.Cargo Loading: Potential exposure to -40°C in cargo hold (rare but possible)

4.Galley Storage: Pre-flight storage at 4-10°C

5.Reheating: Convection oven 160-180°C for 18-25 minutes

6.Serving: Must reach 75°C core temperature (food safety standard)

Material Performance Under Thermal Stress:

Matériau-40°C Performance+180°C PerformanceThermal Shock Resistance
Feuille d'aluminiumExcellent (no embrittlement)Excellent (no degradation)Excellent (high conductivity)
Plastique PETGood (slight brittleness)Poor (melts at 160°C)Fair (can crack)
Molded Fiber + PLABonGood (to 200°C)Fair (coating may crack)
CPET (PET cristallisé)ExcellentExcellent (to 220°C)Bon
Paperboard + EVOHBonExcellent (to 230°C)Bon

Recommandation: For maximum versatility across all meal types and reheating protocols, aluminum or CPET provide best performance. For cost-optimized operations with controlled temperatures, Fibre moulée revêtue de PLA suffices.

Papacko Flight attendant loading meal containers into convection oven in airplane galley

Weight Optimization and Fuel Cost Implications

The Economics of Packaging Weight

Fuel Cost Calculation:

-Industry Estimate: 1 kg of additional weight costs $2-4 per year in fuel per aircraft

-Fleet Scale: 300-aircraft fleet × 150 flights/year × 200 meals/flight = 9 million meals

-Weight Savings: 10g per meal × 9M meals = 90,000 kg annual reduction

-Annual Savings: 90,000 kg × $3/kg = $270,000 per year

Material Weight Comparison (Full ATLAS Unit):

MatériauContainer WeightLid WeightTotalRelative
Feuille d'aluminium22-28g8-12g30-40gBaseline (100%)
Dual-Ovenable Paperboard18-24g6-10g24-34g-20%
Molded Fiber + PLA16-20g5-8g21-28g-30%
CPET Plastic20-26g7-11g27-37g-8%

Strategic Implications:

Low-Cost Carriers (RyanAir, EasyJet, Southwest):

-Prioritize weight savings over premium appearance

-Prefer molded fiber or lightweight paperboard

-Typical savings: 15-25% vs. aluminum

Premium/Legacy Carriers (Emirates, Singapore Airlines, Lufthansa):

-Balance weight with presentation quality

-Use aluminum for first/business, dual-ovenable for economy

-Incremental savings: 8-15% while maintaining brand image

Regulatory Compliance and Certifications

Food Contact Material Standards

EU Regulation 10/2011:

-Applies to: All food contact plastics used on EU-registered carriers

-Exigences clés: Migration testing (specific & overall migration limits)

-Common Non-Compliant Materials: Recycled PET without food-grade certification

FDA Food Contact Notification (FCN):

-Applies to: US carriers and manufacturers exporting to US airlines

-Database: FDA’s Food Contact Substance Database (must appear or have FCN)

-Common Issue: Novel bio-based materials (PHA, algae films) may lack FCN

Fire Safety and Flammability

FAA/EASA Flammability Standards:

-Test: Vertical Bunsen burner test (FAR 25.853)

-Exigence: Self-extinguishing within 15 seconds, burn length <6 inches

-Impact: Limits use of certain plastics; favors aluminum, treated paperboard

Certification Process:

1.Material Testing: Submit samples to accredited lab (Intertek, SGS, TÜV)

2.Burn Rate Measurement: Horizontal/vertical burn tests

3.Smoke/Toxicity: Assess smoke density and toxic gas release

4.Certification: Issue Certificate of Compliance for specific material formulation

Coût: $5,000-15,000 per material formulation for full testing suite.

Stackability and Turbulence Resistance

Anti-Slip Design Features

Problème: Turbulence causes meal trays to shift, spilling contents and delaying service.

Design Solutions:

CaractéristiqueMécanismeEfficacitéImpact sur les coûts
Raised Rim (3-5mm)Creates friction contact with tray aboveModerate (+40% slip resistance)+2-3%
Textured BaseMicro-ridges increase friction coefficientGood (+65% resistance)+5-8%
Interlocking CornersNesting tabs lock into tray belowExcellent (+85% resistance)+8-12%
Silicone DotsAdhesive friction pads on baseExcellent (+90% resistance)+12-18%

Recommandation: For standard service, textured base provides best cost/performance balance. Reserve interlocking corners for premium cabins or turbulence-prone routes.

Nesting and Stacking Efficiency

Galley Cart Capacity Optimization:

-Standard Cart Slot: 210mm × 134mm × 60mm (full ATLAS)

-Nesting Angle: 3-5° taper allows containers to nest, reducing height

-Nested Height: 10 full units = 180-220mm (vs. 600mm if non-nested)

Space Savings Calculation:

Container Design10 Units Stacked HeightCarts Required (100 meals)Space Saved
Non-Nesting (Straight Walls)600mm5 cartsBase de référence
3° Taper (Nested)220mm2 carts60%
5° Taper (Deep Nested)180mm1.5 carts70%

Compromis: Aggressive taper (5-7°) maximizes nesting but reduces internal volume by 10-15% and complicates automated filling.

Sourcing and Cost Analysis

Price Breakdown (per unit, 10,000+ quantity)

Type de conteneurMatériauTailleCoût unitaire (USD)Remarques
Aluminum Foil (Standard)AluminumFull ATLAS$0.18-0.26Norme industrielle
Aluminum Foil (Heavy-Duty)AluminumFull ATLAS$0.24-0.34Premium long-haul
Molded Fiber + PLABagasse/pulpFull ATLAS$0.12-0.18Eco-focused airlines
Dual-Ovenable PaperboardPaperboard + foil linerFull ATLAS$0.16-0.24Weight-optimized
CPET (PET cristallisé)PlastiqueFull ATLAS$0.20-0.30High clarity, premium

Volume Discounts:

Volume des commandesUnit Cost Reduction
10 000 unitésBase de référence
50 000 unités-8 à -12%
100 000 unités-15 à -20%
500 000+ unités-25 à -35%

### MOQ and Lead Times

Standard Production:

-MOQ: 20,000-50,000 units for stock designs

-Délai de livraison: 25-35 days (production + shipping)

-Personnalisation: Airline branding, logos (+15-25% cost, 40-60 day lead time)

Rapid Procurement (Emergency):

-MOQ: 5,000-10,000 units

-Délai de livraison: 10-15 days

-Prime: 40-60% higher cost vs. standard production

Erreurs courantes à éviter

Erreur #1: Using ground foodservice containers without pressure testing
Approche correcte: Specify “aviation-certified” packaging and request altitude simulation test data before bulk orders

Erreur #2: Ignoring ±2mm dimensional tolerances for ATLAS sizing
Approche correcte: Work with manufacturers experienced in aviation standards; verify samples fit actual galley cart slots before production

Erreur #3: Over-specifying premium materials for short-haul flights
Approche correcte: Use lightweight molded fiber for <3 hour flights where reheating isn't required; reserve aluminum for long-haul hot meals

Erreur #4: Neglecting flammability testing until after production
Approche correcte: Obtain FAA/EASA fire safety certification during material selection phase to avoid costly redesigns

Related Papacko Resources

Questions fréquemment posées

1. Qu'est-ce qu'un emballage alimentaire pour avion ?

Airline food packaging comprises specialized containers designed to withstand cabin pressure changes (0.7-0.8 bar), temperature extremes (-40°C to +180°C), and fit standardized ATLAS unit dimensions (210mm × 134mm) for galley cart compatibility. It must meet aviation fire safety and food contact regulations.

2. How does cabin pressure affect food containers?

At cruising altitude (35,000-42,000 feet), cabin pressure is 0.75-0.82 bar vs. 1.0 bar at sea level, creating 0.18-0.25 bar differential. Sealed containers expand 8-30% depending on rigidity. Properly designed packaging includes pressure relief vents or flexible materials to prevent bursting.

3. What are ATLAS units in airline catering?

ATLAS (aviation standard unit) defines container dimensions for galley cart compatibility: full unit (210×134mm), half (105×134mm), quarter (105×67mm), sixth (70×67mm). Containers must maintain ±2mm dimensional tolerance to fit cart slots and stack securely during turbulence.

4. Which material is best for airline food containers?

Aluminum foil excels for hot meals requiring reheating (temperature range -40°C to +350°C). Molded fiber reduces weight by 30% for cold items or short-haul flights. Dual-ovenable paperboard balances weight savings (20% lighter) with oven capability for eco-conscious carriers.

5. How much does packaging weight affect fuel costs?

Industry estimates: 1 kg additional weight costs $2-4 annually in fuel per aircraft. For a 300-aircraft fleet serving 9 million meals/year, reducing packaging weight by 10g per meal saves $270,000 annually. Weight optimization is a key procurement criterion.

6. What certifications are required for airline food packaging?

Règlement (CE) n° 10/2011 (food contact plastics), FDA Contact alimentaire Notification (US carriers), FAA/EASA fire safety standards (FAR 25.853 flammability test), and HACCP traceability. Materials must be self-extinguishing within 15 seconds in vertical burn tests.

7. Quelle est la quantité minimale de commande pour l'emballage des produits alimentaires destinés aux compagnies aériennes ?

Standard MOQs: 20,000-50,000 units for stock designs, 50,000-100,000+ for custom airline branding. Rapid procurement possible at 5,000-10,000 units with 40-60% cost premium. Lead times: 25-35 days standard, 10-15 days expedited.

Conclusion

Airline food packaging operates at the intersection of engineering precision, regulatory compliance, and economic optimization. The unique demands of cabin pressure environments, temperature extremes, and weight-sensitive operations require specialized containers that far exceed ground foodservice standards.

Principaux enseignements :

1.Pressure resistance is non-negotiable: Containers must withstand 0.18-0.25 bar differential with pressure relief vents or flexible designs

2.ATLAS dimensional precision (±2mm) ensures galley cart compatibility and prevents service delays

3.Material selection balances performance and weight: Aluminum for premium/hot meals, molded fiber for weight optimization on short-haul

4.Every 10g reduction per meal saves $270,000 annually in fuel for a typical 300-aircraft fleet

5.Aviation certifications (fire safety, food contact) must be secured during material selection, not post-production

Whether you’re an airline procurement officer, catering company operator, or packaging manufacturer, understanding these specialized requirements ensures safe, efficient, and cost-effective in-flight meal service while meeting increasingly stringent sustainability goals.

Ressources connexes

-“>Food Packaging Containers

-“>Sustainable Packaging Solutions

-“>Export and Wholesale Services

Ready to Source Aviation-Certified Food Packaging?

Papacko manufactures airline food containers meeting IATA ATLAS standards, FAA/EASA fire safety requirements, and EU food contact regulations. Our solutions include aluminum foil, dual-ovenable paperboard, and molded fiber options with pressure relief venting and anti-slip stackability features.

Recommended Next Reads

Airline food packaging sits closer to compliance, material safety, and transport performance than to ordinary takeaway packaging. These guides extend the decision path toward certification, sustainability, and broader container planning.

Prenez contact avec nous :

Dernière mise à jour: novembre 2025

krad lin
krad lin

Papacko Content Team - Nous créons des guides pratiques, basés sur l'usine, pour l'emballage B2B des aliments et des boissons. Les sujets abordés comprennent la sélection des gobelets en papier, les revêtements PE/PLA/à base d'eau, la conformité au contact alimentaire, l'impression, le contrôle qualité et les flux de travail prêts pour l'exportation, afin que les cafés, les restaurants, les distributeurs et les partenaires OEM puissent s'adapter grâce à un approvisionnement fiable.

Articles: 94