A wide variety of goods are thermally labile and therefore need to be maintained above and/or below a target temperature to prevent spoilage, decomposition, deactivation, transformation, conversion, breakdown, etc. Exemplary thermally labile goods include blood, blood products such as red blood cells (RCBs) and blood platelets, transplantable organs, biological tissue, vaccines, antigens, antibodies, bacteriological samples, immunoassays, pharmaceuticals, enzymes, and single-use chromogenic thermometers.
Transportation of thermally labile goods is particularly challenging, especially when the thermally labile goods must be maintained within a narrow temperature range. Numerous insulated shipping containers have been developed over the years, with those deploying a phase change material generally providing superior temperature control over extended periods. A nonexhaustive list of United States Patents and Published Patent Applications disclosing insulated shipping containers employing a phase change material include U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,145,895; 4,579,170; 4,923,077; 4,931,333; 5,626,936; 5,899,088; 6,209,343 and 6,718,776, and United States Patent Application Publications 2005/0188714; 2004/0079794; 2004/0079793 and 2002/0050147.
Insulated shipping containers employing a phase change material can be deployed for a wide range of thermally labile goods over a wide range of target temperatures by using different phase change materials. For example, H2O melts at 0° C., D2O melts at +4° C., a 20% ethylene glycol solution melts at −8° C. and a 50% ethylene glycol solution melts at −37° C. This permits use of insulted shipping containers for a broad range of thermally labile goods. However, packaging mistakes can occur when different thermally labile goods requiring use of different phase change materials are packaged at a single location, such as placement of thermally labile goods in an insulated shipping container charged with the wrong phase change material.
Accordingly, a substantial need exists for a straightforward, fool-proof system that ensures proper matching of thermally labile goods and phase change materials in an insulated shipping container.
The invention is a method of packaging thermally labile goods. The method includes the steps of: (a) obtaining a thermally insulated container defining a retention chamber, (b) obtaining thermally labile goods to be packaged, (c) obtaining a legend correlating some listed thermally labile goods with a first color and other listed thermally labile goods with a second color, (d) locating the thermally labile goods to be packaged on the legend and identifying the correlated color, (e) selecting thermally conditioned panels displaying the correlated color from a supply of thermally conditioned panels with some panels displaying the first color and other panels displaying the second color wherein the displayed color corresponds to the phase change temperature of the phase change material contained within the panels, (f) lining the retention chamber with the obtained thermally conditioned panels, (g) placing the thermally labile goods to be packaged into the lined retention chamber, and (h) closing the container.
Nomenclature
Construction
The invention is directed to a method of packaging thermally labile goods 200 in thermally insulated shipping containers 10 equipped with panels of phase change material 40 (hereinafter PCM panels) when the temperature range within which the thermally labile goods 200 must be maintained (hereinafter target temperature range) can vary from container 10 to container 10.
The steady-state temperature maintained within the thermally insulated shipping container 10 can be adjusted to match the target temperature range of the thermally labile goods 200 by using PCM panels 40 containing different phase change materials. For example, PCM panels 40 containing frozen D2O provide a steady-state temperature at about +4° C. (the melt temperature of D2O), while PCM panels 40 containing frozen H2O provide a steady-state temperature at about 0° C. (the melt temperature of H2O), PCM panels 40 containing a frozen 20% ethylene glycol solution provide a steady-state temperature at about −8° C. (the melt temperature of a 20% ethylene glycol solution) and PCM panels 40 containing a frozen 50% ethylene glycol solution provide a steady-state temperature at about −37° C. (the melt temperature of a 20% ethylene glycol solution).
The method includes the preliminary steps of obtaining a thermally insulated container 10 defining a retention chamber 19, and obtaining thermally labile goods 200 to be packaged. Substantially any thermally insulated container 10 configured and arranged for retaining thermally labile goods 200 and one or more PCM panels 40 are suitable for use in the present process. An exemplary thermally insulated container 10 comprising an outer cardboard shell 20 with cover flaps 21 over the top 20t of the shell 20, and a lining of insulating panels 30 is depicted in
In order to simplify the packaging process and limit the number of different items that need to be ordered and retained in inventory, it is generally desired to use the same thermally insulated containers 10 for packaging all of the various thermally labile goods 200 to be packaged at the particular location.
A wide variety of thermally labile goods 200 requiring storage within a given target temperature range are used across various industry segments ranging from blood to thermometers. A nonexhaustive list of thermally labile goods 200 which may be quickly, conveniently and reliably packaged using the method of this invention include blood, blood products such as red blood cells (RCBs) and blood platelets, transplantable organs, biological tissue, vaccines, antigens, antibodies, bacteriological samples, immunoassays, pharmaceuticals, enzymes, and single-use chromogenic thermometers.
For purposes of facilitating further discussion of the invention, the invention will be described in connection with the packaging of mythical thermally labile goods 200 identified simply as and (thermally labile goods having a target temperature of 4° C.), and ΔΔΔ (thermally labile goods having a target temperature of 0° C.), and ⊙⊙⊙ and (thermally labile goods having a target temperature of −20° C.).
The method includes the additional preliminary steps of obtaining a legend 100 correlating listed thermally labile goods 200 with a color (e.g., black or white), or color scheme (e.g., black and white stripes or red and yellow checkerboard pattern) based upon the target temperature of the thermally labile goods 200. Exemplary legends 100 are depicted in
The legend 100 may be made available in any desired form including printed hardcopy or electronic form. Referring to
Once the legend 100 has been obtained, the thermally labile goods 200 to be packaged can be located on the legend and the correlated color or color scheme identified. The identified color or color scheme indicates the color or color scheme of the PCM panel 40 to be deployed in the thermally insulted container 10 for the thermally labile goods 200. The thermally conditioned PCM panels 40 of the correlated color or color scheme, containing a phase change material 50 providing the appropriate steady state temperature for the thermally labile goods 200 being packaged, can then be withdrawn from the appropriate refrigeration chamber 501, 502 or 503 and inserted into the retention chamber 19 of a thermally insulated container 10. As shown in
The thermally labile goods 200 to be packaged can finally be placed into the retention chamber 19 and the container 10 closed.
(Prophetic)
Referring to
As represented in
Referring to
Referring to
An order is received to ship ten units of the first thermally labile good 201 (), six units of the second thermally labile good 202 (ΔΔΔ), three units of the third thermally labile good 203 () and nine units of the fourth thermally labile good 204 () to a single site.
The ordered thermally labile goods 200 are located on the legend 100 and the corresponding PCM panel color ascertain from the legend 100 as set forth below.
Since the second 202 (ΔΔΔ)and third 203 () thermally labile goods correlate to the same PCM panels 40, they may be packaged together. Hence, three rather than four cardboard outer shells 20 are obtained, placed on the work table 600 and lined along the bottom (unnumbered) and four sides (unnumbered) with insulating panels 30 to form three thermally insulted containers 10 with open tops 10t.
Thermally conditioned red PCM panels 40Red are obtained from the first refrigeration chamber 501 of the second refrigeration unit 500 and one of the thermally insulted containers 10 lined along the bottom and sides with the red PCM panels 40Red to form a first PCM lined thermally insulted container 10 with an open top 10t. Ten units of the first thermally labile good 201 () are withdrawn from the first refrigeration chamber 401 of the first refrigeration unit 400 and placed within the retention chamber 19 defined by the first PCM lined thermally insulted container 10 through the open top 10t. A top PCM panel 40t (also red) and a top insulating panel 30t are sequentially placed over the open top 10t of the first PCM lined thermally insulated container 10 and the cover flaps 21 on the outer shell 20 closed. The finished container is depicted in
In similar fashion, thermally conditioned white PCM panels 40White are obtained from the second refrigeration chamber 502 of the second refrigeration unit 500 and a second of the thermally insulted containers 10 lined along the bottom and sides with the white PCM panels 40White to form a second PCM lined thermally insulted container 10 with an open top 10t. Six units of the second thermally labile good 202 (ΔΔΔ) and three units of the third thermally labile good 203 () are withdrawn from the second refrigeration chamber 402 and third refrigeration chamber 403 of the first refrigeration unit 400 respectively, and placed within the retention chamber 19 defined by the second PCM lined thermally insulted container 10 through the open top 10t. A top PCM panel 40t (also white) and a top insulating panel 30t are sequentially placed over the open top 10t of the second PCM lined thermally insulated container 10 and the cover flaps 21 on the outer shell 20 closed. The finished container is depicted in
Lastly, thermally conditioned blue PCM panels 40Blue are obtained from the third refrigeration chamber 503 of the second refrigeration unit 500 and the last of the thermally insulted containers 10 lined along the bottom and sides with the blue PCM panels 40Blue to form a third PCM lined thermally insulted container 10 with an open top 10t. Nine units of the fourth thermally labile good 204 () are withdrawn from the fourth refrigeration chamber 404 of the first refrigeration unit 400 and placed within the retention chamber 19 defined by the third PCM lined thermally insulted container 10 through the open top 10t. A top PCM panel 40t (also blue) and a top insulating panel 30t are sequentially placed over the open top 10t of the third PCM lined thermally insulated container 10 and the cover flaps 21 on the outer shell 20 closed. The finished container is depicted in
This application is a continuation of prior application Ser. No. 11/927,890 filed Oct. 30, 2007 and claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/866,241, filed Nov. 17, 2006.
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Child | 12371731 | US |