Traditionally, products such as pharmaceuticals, biopharmaceuticals, enzymes, nutriceuticals and the like were processed in stainless steel containers. After use the steel containers had to be cleaned and sterilized. This often required the use of steam and/are caustics to accomplish this task.
Additionally, for regulated products such as pharmaceuticals, the sterilization process had to be validated to show that it could sterilize the device and could so time after time.
Both the cleaning process and the validation are time consuming and expensive and can't be varied without a new validation.
This has led to the use of single use, disposable plastic bags to store and process many of these products. These bags are provided sterile (generally gamma irradiated), do not require cleaning as they are disposed of after use and reduces the validation required by the user and/or shifts the validation to the bag supplier.
These bags contain one or more ports through which liquids, additives, product and the like are added or removed from the bag during processing.
These bags are generally placed into a holder such as steel plastic, fiberglass, graphite or other composite vat, tote or carboy to help hold the weight of the liquid and to protect the bag from rupture due to contact with other items on the manufacturing floor. These holders have an opening in their bottom portion through which the ports extend. As the port arrangements differ by bag type, manufacturer or customer requirement, the bottom of the holders generally have large rectangular or circular opening and a matching plate that has several openings in it through which the ports are arranged while supporting the bag bottom by the remainder of the plate.
The ports are generally unmarked and indistinguishable from each other. However their arrangement is critical to the use of the bag due the arrangement of inlets and outlets from the holder. Often, the bag is inserted wrongly (backward for example) and is only discovered when the bag is at least partially filled. This requires the removal of the liquid and either rearrangement of the bag in the holder so that the ports are properly aligned or the use of a new bag.
What is needed is a better means for properly arranging a bag in its holder.
The present invention is an alignment device for a bag containing one or more ports wherein the alignment device is attached to either the one or more ports such as by wire ties, clamps or cable ties or to the bag adjacent the one or more ports via adhesives or welding or molding such as overmolding. The plate has either an indicator or an unique outer edge shape that is designed to fit into a corresponding unique opening in a bag holder such as a carboy or tote to ensure proper alignment of the bag and its port(s) in the holder.
In one embodiment the plate formed of plastic has a series of holes equal to and in alignment with the one or more ports of the bag and the port(s) are extended through the holes of the plate and the plate is attached to the bag by retainers on the port(s) below the plate. Such retainers can be plastic cable ties, wire ties, tube clamps and the like.
Alternatively, the plate may be fitted over the port(s) and attached to the bag such as by thermal bonding or welding.
In another embodiment, the plate is overmolded to the bag or the bag is formed and molded to the plate.
The plate may have any unique design that ensures that the alignment of the bag in the holder is correct and cannot be reversed or incorrectly aligned. Such designs use a plate that is affixed to the bag or its port(s) in such a way that it cannot be realigned or moved out of register.
Such designs include but are not limited to plates having a permanent graphical representation as to the alignment or an asymmetrical design which corresponds to a similar opening in the holder.
In another embodiment, the plate has two parts, an inner asymmetric portion and symmetric outer portion selectively attachable to the inner asymmetric plate portion and is of a configuration to fit into a standard opening in a holder.
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Bags 2 containing two or more ports 6 that extend through the plate 10 do not necessarily need a separate alignment device 20 but may have one if desired.
While the plate 10 in the above embodiments is shown as being a rectangle, the shape of the plate 10 and its corresponding hole 12 is not limited to such. It may be any symmetric or asymmetric shape or design that is desired, such as any polygon including but not limited to triangles, squares, pentagons, hexagons, heptagons, octagons and the like. They may also be circular or ova s. They may also be combinations of the different shapes such as two circles of different sizes or two polygons of different sizes or different shapes.
Multiple plates 10 may also be used, with each one associated either with at least one port 6 or an alignment device 20.
Any of the embodiments discussed above may if desired contain the graphical design 18 discussed above.
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The alignment plate can be made of various materials, such as plastic (thermoplastic or thermoset) composites (such as graphite composites or fiberglass composites), metal (such as stainless steel or aluminum) or wood (such as pine, cedar or wood composites or plywood).
One preferred material is stainless steel in that even when relatively thin it is still strong, is well known and widely used in the industry and is compatible with the bags and holder.
Another is a thermoplastic such as polyethylene, polypropylene, PVDF, PES, and the like. One embodiment is to use a high density polyethylene. Another is a linear low density polyethyelene.
Thermosets such as urethanes or epoxies may be used to form the plate. Composites such as fiberglass or graphite composites are also useful.
Wood is relatively inexpensive and light weight and can be used in the present invention as well. Rot resistant woods such as cedar or various pines are useful. Plywood, chip board, wood laminates and the like are also useful, although they may need a protective coating if they are to be subjected to a wet environment.
In a further alternative embodiment of this invention, one can coat the steel, plastic or wood layer with a thermoplastic layer, a thermoelastomeric layer such as a thermoplastic elastomer (TPE) or an elastomeric layer such as a silicone layer. In one example of this embodiment, the rigid plate is made of steel, preferably stainless steel, which is coated on at least one side and preferably encapsulated in a plastic such as polyethylene or polypropylene, a TPE or a silicone. In another embodiment, the plate is made of a plastic to which silicone adheres such as polysulfones or polyethersulfones. In a further embodiment, the plastic plate can be coated or encapsulated or laminated with another plastic layer or TPE layer. In the same way, a wood plate can also be coated or encapsulated with one of these layers.
The coated layers may provide additional cleanliness to the plate or act as a bonding layer between the plate and the bag to which it is attached if such bonding is desired. It also reduces the potential for flash or rough surfaces on the plate to pierce the adjacent bag.
The plate may in the case of plastics, composites and metals either formed from a blank sheet of material or molded as the finished plate. Wood can be formed from a blank and shaped into the desired configuration and port arrangement.
Additionally, wireless tracking devices such as RFID chips, Zigbee® or Bluetooth® devices may also be included on the plate to provide manufacturing data about the plate, the bag to which it is attached and with devices having read/write capabilities to track the use of the bag at the user's facility. There information relating to a trackable event such as entry into inventory, use, the material made or stored in the bag, etc can added by the user to the tag.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/927,598, filed on May 4, 2007, entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein. The present invention relates to a bag for use in a holder, such as a vat or carboy, and arranging the bag in a proper alignment within the holder via an alignment feature attached to the bag. More particularly, it relates to a disposable bag for use in a holder, such as a vat or carboy, with the bag having one or ports and an alignment feature attached to the bag adjacent the one or more ports to properly orient the bag in its holder.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60927598 | May 2007 | US |