Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The Importance of Formulating Adhesives Without IBOA for Medical Wearables

The 2000-MW series of light-curable adhesives are a first-of-kind dedicated series of products for assembling medical wearables. Free from TPO, a material of concern, and made without IBOA, a known skin irritant, these adhesives address device manufacturers’ concerns about skin proximity and sensitivity.

Skin is the largest organ in the human body. It breathes, regenerates, and is affected by what’s put on it. As wearable devices continue to grow in popularity the materials used to assemble, and in certain cases affix to the body, need to be taken into consideration.

The use of diagnostic and therapeutic medical wearable devices is becoming mainstream as the technology evolves and consumers demand simple ways of managing their health through monitoring, drug delivery, and pain management systems. Measurement tools like vital sign monitoring devices, sleep monitors, and continuous glucose monitors collect users’ exercise or personal health data, making it easy to keep track of the information, or even send it to a healthcare provider. Insulin pumps and wearable injectors offer a means of insulin and novel drug delivery in a non-clinical setting.


Along with adhesives, coatings, and encapsulants that are used to join and protect electronic components inside wearables, these materials are also used to join or seal the plastics and metals within the assembly.


Sometimes the chemical IBOA (isobornyl acrylate) is found in wearables, which is a known skin sensitizer. IBOA, a monofunctional reactive diluent, is a critical monomer used in the manufacture of acrylic resins because it polymerizes when exposed to free radicals from an energy source such as UV light. IBOA is also used as a plasticizer within various medical device plastics due to its impact resistance, flexibility, and hardness qualities. If an adhesive or a substrate is formulated to include IBOA, it has the potential to cause a skin sensitivity issue if not fully cured and crosslinked.


Furthermore, adhesives, encapsulants, and coatings used to bond components inside a wearable device can potentially outgas during cure and redeposit onto other surfaces that may contact skin. If there is any “spillover” outside the adhesive channel, a small drop or section could be exposed externally. The uncured adhesive in an application can also cause similar issues.

As a result, users may experience skin sensitivity when using medical wearables. 

For these reasons, it’s important for manufacturers involved in the design and assembly of wearable devices to use adhesives that are formulated with skin sensitivity in mind. Adhesives must be formulated without IBOA and have passed ISO 10993 evaluations for irritation and sensitization. Other criteria to consider are ISO 10993-5 Cytotoxicity biocompatibility, the ability to adhere to low-surface-energy substrates and to be moisture and thermal-shock resistant.


source : Dymax

US patent granted for SIP formwork system incorporating recycled composites

The US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has granted a patent to Michael Molinelli of Molinelli Architects and Ashok Chaudhari of ST Bungalow LLC. The patent covers a concrete reinforcement system that remains in place (SIP formwork) and uses geometry to push the concrete used in floors and other structures such as bridges or decking towards pure compression. This compression improves the strength of the flat concrete structure and reduces the amount of concrete required. In addition, the SIP formwork is made entirely from recycled materials, including composites mechanically shredded from wind turbine blades. It provides the necessary tensile strength, eliminating the need for steel rebars, decking or fibre-reinforced rebars.



The SIP reinforcement system developed by Molinelli Architects and ST Bungalow reduces labour, material and transport costs, thereby generating savings and reducing a building’s carbon footprint. Furthermore, modelling shows that a live load capacity of 300 PSF is possible thanks to the arch and vault design used to achieve high compression, compared to the standard live load requirements for residential and commercial buildings, which are 40 PSF and 100 PSF respectively. “The idea of using geometry such as arches or vaults when strengthening concrete is as old as Roman times. But using it for concrete flatwork reinforcement in place of rebar is — remarkably — new,” comments Ashok Chaudhari, founder and inventor, ST Bungalow.


The commercial prospects for this SIP formwork system are high, with the market value of steel rebars exceeding $200 Billion. Molinelli Architects and ST Bungalow are currently in talks to license and commercialise their patented technology.

All photos: The Stay-in-Place (SIP) formwork made from recycled materials (source: ST Bungalow)


More information

https://patents.google.com/patent/US12516522B2


Article source : Jec Composites

Monday, February 2, 2026

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : The Evolution of Shut-Off Nozzles

 Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

💥 From Leaky Beginnings to Precision Flow — The Evolution of Shut-Off Nozzles 💥


Back in the early days of injection molding (1940s–50s 🕰️), machines used simple open nozzles — manual operation, low automation, and lots of unwanted material drooling between cycles 💧😅.


As production speed and automation grew (especially from the 1970s onward ⚙️🤖), manufacturers faced new challenges:

➡️ material stringing,

➡️ unstable shot weights,

➡️ and messy mold surfaces.


🎯 That’s when the shut-off nozzle was born!


This clever innovation transformed molding precision and cleanliness — and over time, several designs emerged:


🔹 Spring-loaded shut-off nozzles — the pioneers! ⚙️

Simple and reliable, automatically closing when injection stops. Still popular for basic applications today.


🔹 Hydraulic shut-off nozzles 💧

Introduced in the 1980s–90s, offering strong closing force — ideal for high-viscosity materials and large parts.


🔹 Pneumatic shut-off nozzles 💨

Fast, clean, and automation-ready — the modern choice for high-speed and multi-component molding.


Today, shut-off nozzles are a must-have in advanced applications like:

🧩 multi-shot and sandwich molding

🚗 automotive precision components

💉 medical & cleanroom molding

♻️ sustainable, waste-reduced production


Their impact?

✅ No drooling or stringing

✅ Faster color changes

✅ Cleaner molds

✅ Better process control


From the first mechanical concepts to today’s smart, pneumatic precision — shut-off nozzles have shaped the evolution of injection molding 🌍💚


source : Tivadar Hamzók


#InjectionMolding #ShutOffNozzle #PlasticsEngineering


Syensqo partners with Moyuum to launch Korea's first baby bottles made from certified circular materials

Syensqo, a leading global provider of high-performance materials and chemical solutions, is pleased to announce that #Moyuum, a premium innovator in baby care products, has selected its circular Duradex™ #polyphenylsulfone (PPSU) ECHO for Moyuum’s new baby bottles. This marks the first time in Korea that #babybottles will be made from certified circular materials, underscoring Moyuum’s commitment to both safety and environmental responsibility.

Duradex™ PPSU ECHO is a high-purity, food-contact PPSU polymer produced with certified circular1 feedstock, attributed by mass balance and verified under the International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC) PLUS System. The material offers exceptional durability, clarity, and safety, being BPA-free and free from artificial pigments, phthalates, and bisphenols. Its outstanding resistance to discoloration, stains, and scratches ensures bottles remain clear and hygienic even after more than 1,000 sterilization cycles. By utilizing circular feedstocks, Duradex™ PPSU ECHO also significantly reduces reliance on fossil resources and lowers carbon emissions. This aligns with the Syensqo One Planet roadmap and its ambition to reach 18% of net sales enabling circularity by 2030.


Moyuum’s new PPSU baby bottles made with #Duradex™ PPSU ECHO will launch in February 2026 and be available in Korea and global markets including Vietnam, the United States, Canada, Chinese Taiwan, Thailand, and Indonesia. Moyuum also plans to expand the use of Duradex™ PPSU ECHO to a broader range of infant and children’s food and beverage containers.

Duradex™ is a trademark of #Syensqo.


source : Syensqo.

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Why Gate Design Matters in Injection Molding

 Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

🔹 Why Gate Design Matters in Injection Molding

The gate is a small but critical feature in every injection mold—it’s the entry point where molten plastic flows into the cavity.



The type, size, and location of the gate all influence:

✅ Flow pattern – affects how well the cavity fills

✅ Cycle time – smaller gates cool faster

✅ Surface quality – poor placement may cause blemishes

✅ Part strength – improper flow can create internal stress


From pin gates to edge gates to hot runners, each option has its place—depending on part geometry, material, and quality requirements.


Smart gate design = fewer defects, faster production, better parts.


source : SCSplastic


#InjectionMolding #GateDesign

Sunday, February 1, 2026

OEE & the 7 Major Losses – Turning Equipment Data into Performance

 🔧 OEE & the 7 Major Losses – Turning Equipment Data into Performance 📊

Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE) is a powerful metric that reveals how effectively manufacturing equipment is utilized. It highlights hidden losses and drives focused improvement.

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⚙️ The 7 Major Equipment Losses


Availability Losses

⏱️ Equipment Breakdowns

🔄 Setup & Adjustment

🛑 Tool Change / Shutdown


Performance Losses

⏳ Minor Stoppages

🐢 Speed Losses


Quality Losses

❌ Defects

🔁 Rework & Startup Losses


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📐 How OEE is Calculated


1️⃣ Availability


«Measures equipment uptime»


Formula:

Availability = (Loading Time – Downtime) ÷ Loading Time × 100


Example:

(460 min – 60 min) ÷ 460 min × 100 = 87%


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2️⃣ Performance Rate


«Measures speed efficiency»


Formula:

(Standard Cycle Time × Total Units Produced) ÷ Operating Time × 100


Example:

100 units ÷ 200 units × 100 = 50%


---


3️⃣ Quality Rate


«Measures good output»


Formula:

(Good Units ÷ Total Units Produced) × 100


Example:

(400 – 8) ÷ 400 × 100 = 98%


---


📊 Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE)


OEE = Availability × Performance × Quality


👉 OEE = 0.87 × 0.50 × 0.98 × 100

✅ OEE = 42.6%


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🎯 Key Takeaway


A low OEE is not a failure—it is an opportunity.

Break down losses, attack the biggest gaps, and drive Lean, TPM, and Continuous Improvement initiatives with data-driven focus.


source : Six Sigma Manufacturing

The Importance of Formulating Adhesives Without IBOA for Medical Wearables

The 2000-MW series of light-curable adhesives are a first-of-kind dedicated series of products for assembling medical wearables. Free from T...