Method for filling a cavity, in particular a blister of a blister packaging, with a liquid, and semifinished product for use in such a method.
The invention relates to a method for filling at least one cavity, in particular a blister of a blister packaging, with a liquid.
The filling of one or more cavities with materials, solid items or liquids is known for example from the field of so-called display packaging or blister packaging. Blister packs are used in different fields and industrial sectors and are provided with at least one cavity into which the contents that are to be packaged therein are placed. As a rule the contents of the cavity or cavities are visible from outside. Blister packs therefore have the advantage that they can be used as retail packaging.
In the pharmaceutical or medical sector, blister packs are used for packaging pharmaceutical formulations, tablets, capsules or other forms of medicaments and serve to protect them from external environmental influences which may in some circumstances adversely affect the pharmaceutical quality of the formulation.
Typical blister packs consist of at least two films which may in turn be composed of a plurality of layers of different or identical materials. These are, on the one hand, a base layer or base film and on the other hand a cover layer or cover film.
One or more wells may be formed in the base film into which the pharmaceutical formulation, tablet or capsule is placed or added. The cover film is then placed on top of the base film and fixed to it, this fixing being carried out for example at the edges by adhesive bonding, heat-sealing, welding or the like. The films are generally made of plastics or metal (e.g. aluminium); in principle, other materials such as paper may be used in the same way or in addition.
DE 103 43 668 A1 shows one possible structure and a possible method of producing a blister pack for medicaments. This is known to the skilled man and therefore need not be described in detail here.
DE 20 2007 003 050 U1 discloses a blister packaging which is filled with an active substance in liquid or gel form. The active substance is supposed to be released into the environment by diffusion. Possible applications include for example room deodorisers or air fresheners, insect repellents, toilet deodorisers, etc. Paragraph 0004 of this specification mentions that a problem arises if the container is no longer completely full after a certain period of use. The specification therefore obviously starts from the premise of total filling of the cavity of the blister pack with liquid or gel. However, the skilled man is not provided with any instruction as to how to achieve total filling, particularly free from air bubbles, in a reliable manner. The solution to this problem is not a task that is addressed by the specification and is of no further significance to the function of the invention described in this specification.
However, there may be instances where the total filling of a cavity with liquid, particularly the blister of a blister pack, with liquid is absolutely essential. This circumstance may arise, for example, if a blister pack is mounted on a medical technical cartridge (for example, a biosensor) and the liquid contained in the cavity of the blister pack and provided with reagents is intended to trigger a certain analytical reaction at specific points in the cartridge. The cartridge will usually contain a microfluidic system. To ensure that a desired analytical reaction using the liquid is not falsified or influenced, it may be necessary, after the cavity of the blister pack has been opened, for example, by means of a mechanism of the cartridge, for the liquid to be transferred onto the cartridge without any air bubbles. In addition to other measures that technically still have to be carried out in the mechanisms of the cartridge, this presupposes at least that the cavity of the blister pack itself is totally filled with liquid, i.e., with no air bubbles.
The invention is based on the problem of providing a method that allows total filling of a cavity, particularly a blister of a blister packaging, with liquid.
This problem is solved by the features of claim 1.
The invention provides a method for filling at least one cavity, particularly a blister of a blister packaging, with a liquid, comprising at least the following steps:
This process makes it possible to fill at least one cavity completely with no air bubbles in a very reliable and dependable manner. Thus, initially only a first cavity needs to be partially filled with liquid, which is technically very easy to do. Moreover, the partial filling has the advantage that during transporting between corresponding stations of a manufacturing plant the liquid cannot escape so easily from the partially filled cavity and contaminate the environment or manufacturing plant.
After the semifinished product, for example, the base film of a blister packaging, has been covered, liquid is no longer able to escape. The semifinished product is thus prepared or “packaged” ready for the subsequent treatment step and can be delivered to the next step of the above-mentioned displacement process immediately or later on. The semifinished product can be stored or transported onwards without any risk of the liquid escaping from it.
The displacement of at least some of the liquid from the already partially filled cavity, which takes place in another process step, then leads to a cooperation of the at least two cavities such that finally one cavity is filled completely (with no air inclusion). Because of the fluidic interaction of the cavities and the overflow, the initially partly filled cavity can be regarded as a kind of “filling cavity”, while the at least one other, completely filled cavity can be termed a kind of “functional cavity”. The at least one overflow that is to be provided may itself also be embodied, for example, as a cavity in the manner of the other cavities. This cavity, which receives some of the displaced liquid and is at least partially filled, can then virtually be termed an “overflow cavity”. After other possible steps that are still to be described, the “functional cavity” may be delivered to its intended destination or its intended function, for example, in a medical technical cartridge.
It is very expedient to design the method so that the fill volume of the liquid in the initially partly filled cavity is such that, even if this liquid is only partly displaced from the initially partly filled cavity, the at least one other cavity is completely filled and the at least one overflow is at least partly filled. In fact, there is a chance that during the displacement of the liquid from the initially partly filled cavity the liquid will be displaced not completely but only partially, with the result that some residual liquid remains in the initially partly filled cavity. However, it should be possible to completely fill the at least one other cavity and to at least partly fill the at least one overflow with excess liquid. For this purpose, as a rule, the volume of the initially partially filled cavity is chosen to be significantly greater than the volume of the cavity that is to be filled completely. The reliability of the method according to the invention is thereby enhanced.
According to another advantageous embodiment of the inventive concept, the covering of the semifinished product is carried out so as to prevent liquid from escaping from the semifinished product and to ensure that a liquid transfer or exchange between the cavities takes place only when a specific pressure is applied. This enables the covered semifinished product to be stored or transported without the liquid that has already been placed in the first cavity getting into another cavity prematurely, i.e., before further treatment (displacement of the liquid from the already partially filled cavity). The skilled man will in any case provide a fluidic connection between the at least two cavities mentioned, but the reliability of the process can be further increased by this embodiment of the invention, as any premature transfer of liquid between the cavities could cause this process to be adversely affected under certain circumstances. The pressure to be applied in order to achieve a transfer of liquid between the cavities is understandably designed, by suitable dimensioning (for example, by the arrangement of fluidic “valves” between the cavities), such that this leads only to a transfer of liquid between the cavities, but not to an escape of liquid from the semifinished product.
The displacement of at least some of the liquid from the already partially filled cavity may be carried out in various ways. For example, it is possible to aspirate the liquid out of the partially filled cavity by the application of a negative pressure or to pump it out by the application of a positive pressure. However, it has proved very simple, in terms of the technical equipment used in the process, if the displacement is carried out by deformation of the cavity. The deformation of the cavity can advantageously be done using a punch-like tool.
It has proved very expedient for the semifinished product to be aligned with its planar expanse substantially vertical, at least during the deformation of the cavity, with the cavity that is to be deformed being positioned at the bottom, in relation to the at least one other cavity and the at least one overflow. As a result, during the deformation, the air in the partially filled cavity can be driven upwards particularly easily before the column of liquid and is able to escape through a suitable venting device.
Expediently, a vent opening should only be formed in the cover of the semifinished product immediately before the deformation of the cavity, so as to ensure that the system is closed off to the outside as much as possible before the step of displacement (deformation).
According to a further feature of the invention, after the deformation of the cavity and total filling of the at least one other cavity, the at least one other cavity is closed off in fluidtight manner and expediently separated from the other cavities or from the overflow after the cavity has been sealed off in fluidtight manner. The totally filled cavity (“functional cavity”) is thus available as a transportable and storable end product and can in due course be delivered to its intended location or its intended function.
Standard machinery for the manufacture of blister packaging, for example, produces the cavities in films by thermoforming. It is therefore advantageous for the cavities to be formed in the semifinished product by thermoforming. Thus at least the production of the semifinished product can be carried out using inexpensive standard machinery.
According to another embodiment of the process it is provided that, after the thermoforming, holes are formed in the semifinished product. Such holes may serve, for example, as positioning holes, in the event that individual semifinished products containing, for example, at least two cavities and at least one overflow are to be machined. However, they may also act as transporting holes if, for example, the semifinished product is configured as an endless strip with a plurality of “individual semifinished products” (as mentioned previously) aligned with one another.
However, the invention relates not only to a method as described above but also to a semifinished product which is particularly suitable for use in such a method.
According to the invention the semifinished product is embodied as a film, at least in parts, and comprises at least two cavities having a first volume and a second volume, respectively, the volumes being of different sizes.
As a result of the film-like configuration of the semifinished product, the cavities may be produced very easily by thermoforming on standard machinery, particularly that used for blister packaging. The different sizes of the cavities are an essential prerequisite to enable the effect of displacement described in relation to the method according to the invention, namely complete filling of a cavity, to take place.
Tests have shown that it is very expedient to make the volume of the first cavity roughly 50 to 150 percent, preferably about 100 percent, greater than the volume of the at least one second cavity.
It is also possible to provide a semifinished product which is already covered, at least in some areas, so that it is impossible for liquid to escape from the semifinished product and the transfer of liquid between the cavities is only possible by the application of a specific pressure. This naturally presupposes that the semifinished product or the at least one first cavity is already partly filled with liquid. A semifinished product prepared in this way could, for example, be obtained from a supplier or produced in-house beforehand and stored intermediately and would then only have to be subjected to the further processing steps. The level of pressure to be applied could be pre-determined, for example, by the dimensions of suitable valve-like breaks in a channel-like region located between the cavities. This ensures that there is no unintentional transfer of liquid between the cavities before the further processing steps are carried out.
The semifinished product may, for example, advantageously be covered, at least in some areas, such that at least one channel-like region is left between the cavities which is interrupted at certain points and the at least one second cavity is connected to at least one overflow.
Expediently, the at least one overflow may be embodied as a further cavity in the manner of the other cavities. In this case, the cavity acting as an overflow may already have been formed in the semifinished product with the other cavities by thermoforming and it is expedient to connect the additional cavity to the cavity that is to be filled completely by means of at least one fluidic channel and to provide it with a vent. The at least one overflow may, however, also be differently configured, for example, purely in the form of a channel, in which case a suitable vent would have to be provided in the channel-like overflow itself.
Further advantages and features of the invention will become apparent from embodiments described by way of example, as will be explained in more detail with the aid of the attached Figures. In the drawings
a to f are diagrammatic representations of different steps of the method according to a preferred embodiment of the method according to the invention, viewed as in
First of all, reference is made to
According to the embodiment of the film-like semifinished product 1 as a continuous strip, a plurality of areas arranged one behind the other, each with three cavities 10 to 12 or 10′ to 12′, etc., may be seen. In addition, transporting holes 13 may be seen along the outer edge regions of the continuous strip. However, it would be possible to process the respective areas (indicated by dashed transverse lines) as individual semifinished products 1′, 1″, etc., while the holes 13 could act as positioning holes.
a to 3f illustrate in more detail a preferred embodiment of a method according to the invention. Manufacturing equipment is shown only where it contributes to the understanding of the invention.
In a first step S1 (
In another step S2 (
As can be seen from
The covering of the semifinished product 1 with the cover film 2 as described and the desired fluidtight connection can be achieved by conventional methods such as heat-sealing, adhesion, welding or the like.
In another step S3 (
This is followed by another step S4 (
It should be pointed out that in
It should be pointed out that in the embodiment shown the third cavity 12 does indeed act as an “overflow cavity”, but the embodiment of an overflow does not necessarily have to be in the manner of the cavity 12. The function of an overflow could be provided by the channel-like region 21′ adjoining the second cavity 11 and provided with a corresponding vent opening. Other forms of overflow are also possible. During the deformation, excess liquid F should be able to escape unimpeded from the second cavity 11 into the overflow. The embodiment of the overflow in the manner of the cavity 12 does, however, have the advantage that it is able to hold a comparatively large amount of excess liquid F and the risk of liquid F accidentally escaping outwards from the overflow (soiling/contamination of the environment) is avoided.
In another step S5 (
In another step S6 (
The end product 9 produced may be used in a microfluidic or medical-technical cartridge, for example, at a later time, as already mentioned.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10195419 | Dec 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/072487 | 12/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 8/15/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/080190 | 6/21/2012 | WO | A |
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20140131247 | Osterloh | May 2014 | A1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140131247 A1 | May 2014 | US |