The present invention relates to an improved contact lens mould design, a process of producing contact lenses using said mould and the contact lens so produced.
A common method of manufacturing contact lenses commercially on a large scale is cast moulding using single use plastics moulds. A monomer composition is introduced into a mould which comprises a pair of mould halves which form a closed mould cavity when brought together. A significant problem with such a system is that the monomer compositions used in contact lens manufacture undergo volumetric shrinkage by as much as 10 to 20% upon polymerisation. If this shrinkage is not accounted for, the resultant lens may contain voids, bubbles or other imperfections such as edge defects, and may exhibit poor lens surface quality.
In the “Shepherd” process (see for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,121,896), a well known and commercially successful process, a flexible lip is provided on one of the mould halves. The lip is positioned so that when the mould halves are brought together, the lip contacts the lens forming surface of the other mould half and defines the periphery of the mould cavity. Upon polymerisation, the lip deforms (usually inwardly) allowing the two mould halves to move more closely together and hence reduce the volume of the mould cavity, so accounting for the shrinkage of the monomer composition. The Shepherd process is not without its problems however. In practice, it is found that the majority of the lenses produced in this manner are uncomfortable to wear due to edge defects. To produce reproducibly acceptable product at economic process yields therefore, the edges of the lenses are polished. This introduces an extra step into the manufacturing process and adds significant cost. In addition, the polishing step itself may damage the fragile lenses and some lens materials (e.g. fluorocarbon polymers) are too soft to polish successfully. Other problems include misalignment of the mould halves and contamination with polymer particles (“flash”).
As the popularity of contact lenses has increased, a considerable amount of effort has been expended on how to overcome the shrinkage issue and maintain quality at reasonably low cost without high rejection rates. For example, in WO 93/64848, rather than having a deformable lip, the mould parts are designed for one to deform into the other during polymerisation. In U.S. Pat. No. 4,197,266 a reservoir is provided around the mould cavity and connected therewith, such that during polymerisation monomer composition from the reservoir can flow into the cavity. In GB 2 185 933 one of the lens forming surfaces is provided with a flexible diaphragm portion which moves towards the other mould half under the suction forces created by the shrinkage. None of the above offers a completely satisfactory solution and so the need for an improved contact lens mould remains.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved contact lens mould which obviates or mitigates one or more of the known disadvantages of the prior art moulds. In particular, it is an object to provide an improved Shepherd-type mould which is capable of producing high quality lenses which do not require additional edge polishing.
According to the present invention there is provided a contact lens mould for producing a contact lens, said mould comprising first and second mould halves, the first mould half having a convex moulding surface of predetermined curvature, the second mould half having a concave moulding surface of predetermined curvature,
It will be understood that the convex and concave moulding surfaces define respectively the front and rear surfaces of the contact lens produced from the mould. It will also be understood by the skilled person that the convex moulding surface may be a bi-curve or even a tri-curve, i.e. the curvature may change towards the peripheral edge of the convex moulding surface. Such changes of curvature towards the periphery of the lens are commonly referred to as “edge lift”.
As defined herein, where a surface is curved, the angle defined between that surface and another surface is the angle defined between the tangent of the curved surface and the other surface at their intersection.
The restriction in the angle between the radially inner surface of the lip and the abutment surface (hereinafter referred to as the included angle) ensures that when the mould halves are brought closer together during polymerisation, the lip flexes radially outwardly. The included angle before flexing is preferably about 65° to 75° and most preferably about 70°.
Preferably, the mould is configured so that after the lip has flexed radially outwardly the included angle is less than 75° and more preferably less than 65°. Preferably, the included angle is more than 30° and preferably more than 45°. Most preferably, the included angle is from about 55° to 65°. In addition, the included angle (after flexing) determines, at least in part, the edge shape of the lens produced.
Preferably, the angle between the abutment surface and the convex moulding surface is from about 140° to 160°, more preferably from about 145° to 155° and most preferably about 150°.
Mould halves are normally referred to as a male and female pair, the male half being received within the female half. The convex moulding surface may form part of either a male or female mould half. However, the convex moulding surface is preferably part of the male mould half, the concave moulding surface therefore preferably forming part of the female mould half.
Preferably, a reservoir is provided in one of the mould parts radially outwardly of and adjacent to the respective moulding surface. Preferably, the reservoir is a groove or channel which at least partially surrounds the respective moulding surface. More preferably, the reservoir is an annular groove which completely surrounds the respective moulding surface, usually the concave moulding surface.
In a preferred embodiment, the concave moulding surface is provided in the female mould half and the reservoir is an annular groove defined in part by a radially outer wall of the flexible annular lip.
The reservoir allows excess monomer which spills out of the moulding cavity as the mould halves are brought together to be collected. After polymerisation, the excess material (“flash”) is retained in the reservoir and contamination of the lens is avoided.
Preferably, means are provided to limit the minimum distance between the convex and concave moulding surfaces. Said means (“dead stop”) may conveniently comprise an abutment surface on each of the mould halves, relative movement of the male mould half towards the female mould half being prevented when the abutment surfaces are in mutual contact. It will be understood that the minimum distance between the moulding surfaces must be less than the distance between the moulding surfaces when the mould cavity is formed (i.e. when the flexible lip first touches the annular abutment surface of the first mould half), to allow shrinkage to be taken up by flexing of the lip.
Preferably, the mould halves are provided with centring means to ensure that in use the moulding surfaces are correctly aligned. Preferably, said mould halves are dimensioned such that one mould half (male) is an interference fit inside the other (female). Preferably, the interference fit is between peripheral walls of the mould parts remote from the moulding surfaces.
The present invention further resides in a method of manufacturing a contact lens using a mould in accordance with the present invention, comprising the steps of:
The present invention also resides in a contact lens produced by the method of the present invention or from the mould of the present invention.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
FIGS. 2 is a detail view of
Referring to
Referring specifically to the female mould half 12, an upper surface of the base region 14f has a concave region which serves as the concave moulding surface 26f in use and sequentially radially outwardly thereof an annular lip 28f, a groove 30f which serves as a monomer reservoir in use, and a shoulder 32f. The lip 28f is of relatively thin cross section and is therefore flexible. The shoulder 32f has a horizontal annular surface 34f which serves as part of a dead stop. The radially outer end of the horizontal annular surface 34f intersects with the vertical lower section 18f of the sidewall inner surface.
Referring specifically to the male mould part 10, a lower surface of the base region has a central convex region which serves as the convex moulding surface 36m in use and-contiguous therewith an annular region of different curvature (in the embodiment shown the annular region is linear in section) which serves as an abutment surface 38m for the flexible lip 28f of the female mould half 12. A shoulder 32m is defined by the vertical lower section 18m of the sidewall outer surface and a horizontal annular surface 34m which serves as part of the dead stop.
The geometry of the two mould halves 10, 12 is such that when in the initial moulding configuration (as shown in
Referring to
In use, a measured dose of liquid monomer composition (such as a copolymer of acrylate and/or methacrylate and N-vinyl-lactams) is poured onto the concave moulding surface 26f of the female mould half 12. The male mould half 10 is then guided into the female mould half 12 until the lip 28f of the female mould half 12 abuts the abutment surface 38m thereby forming the mould cavity 40. As the two mould halves 10, 12 are brought together, liquid monomer composition overflows the mould cavity 40 into the annular groove 30f. The volume of monomer composition dosed is marginally greater than the volume of the mould cavity 40 to ensure that voids are not formed. Correct centring and location of the mould halves 10, 12 is ensured by the interference fit between the inner and outer surfaces 18f, 18m of the respective sidewalls 16f, 16m.
Polymerisation is effected by thermal initiation (although UV light or other initiation means may be used). As the monomer composition polymerises, the volume of monomer/polymer in the mould cavity 40 decreases (shrinkage). The shrinkage causes a pressure drop in the mould cavity 40 which draws the male mould half 10 further into the female mould half 12 until the respective horizontal annular surfaces 34m, 34f forming the dead stop abut, at which time no further relative movement is possible. The provision of the dead stop ensures that the shrinkage is controlled. To enable the shrinkage to be accommodated, the flexible lip 28f deflects radially outwardly along the abutment surface 38m, while maintaining line contact with the abutment surface 38m.
Once polymerisation is complete, the mould halves 10, 12 are separated and the contact lens recovered. Excess polymer flash is retained in the annular groove 30f and so contamination of the lens is avoided. The dry lens is hydrated and packaged without edge polishing.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0304148.0 | Feb 2003 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB04/00514 | 2/9/2004 | WO | 5/12/2006 |