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Plastics For Every Purpose

  • Application of the right plastics and production methods can cut costs and shorten development time.

The plastics industry has gone through major changes since Dr. Leo Baekland introduced "Bakelite" in 1909. As recently as a decade ago there were perhaps 35,000 plastic formulations. Now it seems that there are specific compounds for every purpose. Today's design challenge is to build increasingly complex and robust products faster, and at a lower overall production cost. Viable solutions can be found with the use of plastics. With thousands of possible choices, product developers need a solid knowledge of the families of plastics, and be aware of the best candidates for specific projects and applications.

The resins that account for 80% of those used in the medical market are the commodity resins: PVC for tubing and bags, polyethylene (medical packaging), polystyrene (lab ware), and polypropylene for syringes. In the remaining 20%, the so called engineering resins, we see uniqueness and extensive cross-over from one category to another. Application requires a specialized knowledge of the materials and processing requirements to make the best use of their particular characteristics.

Most of the products Omnica develops use plastics somewhere in the design.

In the last 30 years we have developed hundreds of molded parts. Before designing a part, we need to make a decision on such factors as how it will be produced, which performance characteristics are most important, the cost and availability of the material, the required aesthetic values, and if it will be exposed to sterilization. One example is how shrink rate properties can affect material selection. A handle, for instance, could be made of many materials including ABS or Delrin™. If injection molding was chosen as the preferred manufacturing process, the designer/engineer needs to be aware that the two plastics behave differently when heated. ABS probably couldn't be used in a mold designed for Delrin™, because it won't shrink to the same dimensions.

Andy March, a fixture at Omnica for over 18 years , shows some of the rotationally-molded designs he has worked on.

Metal replacement plastics

Plastics have often been used as replacements for more traditional materials like metal and glass. Performance plastics like Ryton™, Ultem™ and Valox™ weigh less than metal, and some replacement parts can be less expensive to produce. We recently designed eight plastic parts for Nellcor Puritan Bennett that replaced the same number of metal parts in their conserver valve. We shaved 60% from the total weight and reduced production costs by more than 30%. The prototype tool was machined in-house, where we injection molded and tested the first articles. 

Rubber replacement plastics

The Omnica team can offer alternate choices that can save customers time and money. Thermoplastic elastomers like Kraton™, Pebax™, and Santoprene™ are often good rubber replacements. They can be used for over-molding buttons, keypads, and handles to get just the right "feel". Engineering resins like polycarbonate (Lexan™) and acrylic are aesthetic plastics that take a high polish. They can be used in many applications that in the past would have required glass. Substituting plastic (which can be hardcoated for scratch resistance) for a glass lens can cut costs significantly, reduce weight, and diminish the risk of breakage.

Rotational molding for case design

Knowledge of processes, not just the choice of materials can make huge contributions to aesthetics and cost savings. Recently, a large California-based ophthalmic supply and instrumentation firm hired us to redesign a surgical-support cart. They came to Omnica, expecting us to simply offer some innovative styling concepts. We suggested rotationally molded polyethylene for their design, which ultimately saved hundreds of thousands of dollars in production costs compared to what they had budgeted. The new cart looks great, is easier to clean, and is more rugged than the painted foam they had used in the past. The cart won the American Rotational Molder Association achievement award.

Rotomolding offers many advantages over other manufacturing methods.

1) The parts are rigid and light weight.
2) The integral color is scratch-resistant and easy to maintain. Designers and clients can specify any of a variety of colors and finishes ranging from smooth solid colors, to a heavily textured "granite" look surfaces.
3) Post-finishing is usually not required.
4) Reduced assembly time is another important cost-saving factor. For this project, structural foam components would have required joining many individual pieces after molding. Instead, we were able to design the surgical cart as a single finished part (minus the caster base - we accommodated our client's insistence on that one structural foam part.) with inserts, bosses, supports, and hinge points in place.

In a project we did for Alcon Surgical, we replaced 120 metal housing, hardware, and assembly parts with a single housing made of plastic. The weight savings was over 60 pounds, and no painting was required afterwards.

According to Gordon Sanden, now general manager of Meese Orbitron Dunne Company, California (MOD Custom Rotomolding), finished rotomolded parts cost between 50% and 80% less than similar structural foam parts.

Omnica can offer our customer choices that weren't possible even a few years ago.

Plastics can offer lighter weight, lower cost, and consistent availability. They can be more easily manufactured and produced than traditional materials, and part production costs can be substantially lower. If you have an existing product or one that is ready to be redesigned, let's talk about it. The Omnica team may be able to offer you some options.


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