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	<title>Plastic Injection Molds &#38; Molding &#187; 2009 &#187; April</title>
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	<description>A compilation of manufacturing tips covering plastic mold design, build, injection molding and the inspection of finished plastic products as well as often overlooked manufacturing issues from a small business perspective. Contributed by various employees of Matrix Tooling, Inc. &#38; Matrix Plastic Products.</description>
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		<title>Injection Molding Bioabsorbable Medical Implants</title>
		<link>http://www.matrixtooling.com/blog/injection-molding-bioabsorbable-medical-implants/</link>
		<comments>http://www.matrixtooling.com/blog/injection-molding-bioabsorbable-medical-implants/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2009 13:53:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>brentb</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bioresins]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Engineering/Medical Grades]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Injection Molding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Plastics / Resin]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Medical grades of biodegradable/bioabsorbable PLA, PLGA, and PLG resins can sell for upwards of $1,500 USD per pound.  This and the delicate nature of biopolymers can send shivers down the spine of any injection molder. Really though, the standard precautions and best practices of any high level molding operation familiar with running engineering-grade resins [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Medical grades of biodegradable/bioabsorbable PLA, PLGA, and PLG resins can sell for upwards of $1,500 USD per pound.  This and the delicate nature of biopolymers can send shivers down the spine of any injection molder. Really though, the standard precautions and best practices of any high level molding operation familiar with running engineering-grade resins similarly apply to the processing of these bioabsorbable resins. Every aspect of the manufacturing process must be closely monitored, and proper procedures strictly adhered to.</p>
<p>Mold construction must take into account the rheology or flow characteristics of the resin, shrinkage, and venting requirements.  Due to the relative infancy of the bio-materials there is little data available from the resin makers, so all mold construction should be steel safe.  Selection of mold material should keep corrosion resistance in mind.</p>
<p>Cleanliness, of course, is paramount.  There can be no contamination present in an implantable device.  Purging an injection unit after a run with a different resin, no matter how thorough, is not enough.  The screw must be pulled and all residue removed from the screw and barrel physically.  Don’t use copper gauze (here we differ slightly from the standard molding procedures) for fear of fragmenting and heavy metal contamination.  A plastic abrasive cloth would be better, and the unit should be wiped, dusted, and blown or vacuumed free of any minute debris after cleaning.  Having a dedicated injection unit is a better option, with a dedicated molding machine, dryer, and loading system being the best case scenario.</p>
<p>The molding machine really is not specialized.  Usually a general -purpose screw is fine with about a 3:1 compression ratio and 20:1 length over diameter ratio (again, a general &#8211; purpose unit).  Clearances should be tight in the injection unit, and the check ring non-return valve should be in good shape.  Bioresins are not very heat or shear stable, so sizing the barrel capacity of the machine to the intended shot size is very critical, and high compression screws are not advisable.  Since the resins are so costly, any scrap will immediately affect the bottom line. Savvy molders start and stop the run with a “commodity” bioresin with similar flow characteristics.</p>
<p>PLA/PLGA/PLG for implantables, like most bioresins, are slow to give up their heat and also can be slow to obtain optimum crystallization, so cooling times and pack/hold times can be quite long which lead to longer cycle times. Here, corners can’t be cut by running a colder mold in quest of faster cycles because you risk endangering the end characteristics of the implant.</p>
<p>In addition to shear and heat degradation, bioabsorbable resins are susceptible to hydrolytic degradation.  Careful drying is important, with drying in the cleanroom next to the molding machine being advisable.  Minimum out-of-dryer/in-molding-machine hopper time is also essential. Like many engineering resins, bioabsorbable resins must be dried and maintained at or below 250ppm (0.025%) moisture.  A moisture analyzer is mandatory.</p>
<p>It is important to fast-track the process building and optimization portion of any injection project for PLA implants, if only due to the resin costs.  One tool for this is DOE, or Design of Experiments. Here again, process building with a commodity PLA resin and final tuning with the PLA implantable resin is advised.</p>
<p>The implantable device must be made, handled, and packaged under the strictest of cleanroom conditions.  Packaging must protect the implantable and be hermetic to keep it from picking up ambient moisture.  Vacuum packing with laminated foil pouches is an option, and inclusion of a desiccant in the master carton is also popular.  Sealing options include vacuum and heat sealing. Finally, sterilization methods and their impact on product end characteristics must be cautiously considered.</p>
<p>Care must be taken with these expensive and fragile resins; but the discipline is good for a molder, and the results for following good methods and procedures can be quite rewarding.</p>
<p>Written By:</p>
<p>Brent G. Borgerson<br />
Senior Process Engineer (Older Molder)</p>
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