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| United States Patent | 5181966 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5181966.html |
| Inventor(s) | Honeycutt; Travis W. (3544 Mill Rd., Gainesville, GA 30504);
Taylor, Jr.; Robert L. (130 May Glen Way, Roswell, GA 30076) |
| Abstract | A water soluble package and its method of disposal. The package is provided
with thermoplastic polymer side walls which are capable of dissolving in
water and aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately
37.degree. C. |
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Title Information  |
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| Publication Date |
January 26, 1993 |
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| Filing Date |
June 30, 1992 |
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| Parent Case |
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This Application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No.
07/803,096, filed Dec. 5, 1991, which is in turn a continuation-in-part of
07/683,290, filed Apr. 10, 1991 both applications are still pending. |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
said method comprising subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient
temperature to substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side
walls whereupon said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to
disposal said thermoplastic polymer comprising a polyvinyl alcohol
homopolymer that has been crystallized by postdrawing or by heat
annealing.
2. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
and subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient temperature to
substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side walls whereupon
said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to disposal said
thermoplastic polymer comprising a polyvinyl alcohol that is produced from
crystallized substantially totally saponified polyvinyl acetate.
3. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
and subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient temperature to
substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side walls whereupon
said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to disposal said
thermoplastic polymer being approximately 10 to 200 grams per square yard
in weight.
4. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
and subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient temperature to
substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side walls whereupon
said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to disposal said
thermoplastic polymer being approximately 20-100 grams per square yard in
weight.
5. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
and subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient temperature to
substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side walls whereupon
said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to disposal said
thermoplastic polymer being approximately 30-70 grams per square yard in
weight.
6. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
and subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient temperature to
substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side walls whereupon
said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to disposal and wherein a
portion of said thermoplastic polymer side walls are substantially
transparent so as to reveal the contents of said package before opening.
7. A method of disposing of packaging after the contents of the packaging
has been removed, said packaging having an internal space defined by
thermoplastic polymer side walls being capable of dissolving in water and
aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately 37.degree. C.,
and subjecting said packaging to water at sufficient temperature to
substantially dissolve said thermoplastic polymer side walls whereupon
said water and dissolved packaging are subjected to disposal said
thermoplastic polymer side walls being substantially opaque. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention involves water-soluble packaging and a method of
disposing of such packaging after use. Specifically, the packaging is
composed of thermoplastic polymer which is water soluble only at
temperatures above approximately normal human body temperature of
37.degree. C.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Hospitals and other patient care facilities generate considerable
quantities of medical packaging mostly in the form of plastics. It is
recognized that most plastic packaging materials do not biodegrade in a
reasonable period of time. As such, in 1990, 36 state legislatures
introduced more than 350 bills restricting plastics use. States enacted 54
other plastics laws and local governments contemplated hundreds of other
measures.
In addition to the above, the potential for biohazard contamination make
medical packaging difficult to recycle. Some hospital procedures on
contamination control encourage multiple-barrier packaging. Fear of
infection and cross contamination has encouraged the use of disposables.
In 1987, health-care manufacturers produced 559 million pounds of medical
product packaging. In 1992, that number may reach 821 million pounds.
Ensuring sterility and device safety makes source-reduction solutions all
the more challenging.
The need for an effective way to dispose of medical waste has been
highlighted by the amendment made by to 29 C.F.R. .sctn.1910.1030 which
provides for the federal regulation under the Occupational Safety And
Health Act, 29 U.S.C. 655, 657 to control bloodborne pathogens.
Specifically, the Act calls for the establishment of an exposure control
plan, the containment of specimens of blood or other potentially
infectious materials and the general tightening of precautionary measures
to minimize the spread of disease. A safe and effective way to dispose of
hospital waste in the form of used packaging would greatly facilitate
compliance with the above-referenced Act.
Consumption of medical disposable products has been growing at a rate of
approximately 10% a year. In 1988, sales totaled approximately 1.155
Billion Dollars. It is projected that by 1992, sales of medical disposable
non-woven products will reach 1.54 Billion Dollars.
Although there is clearly a benefit in the use of disposables in the
medical arts by avoiding the necessity of human contact with medical waste
which is necessary in the cleaning of comparable reusables,
non-biodegradable disposables are posing problems which are only now being
recognized. Landfill sites are becoming increasingly burdened with
disposable packaging which does not biodegrade for hundreds of years, if
ever. If landfill sites become fully exploited, new sites must be found
which are rightfully opposed by residents located proximate disposal site
locations.
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide packaging which is
capable of being disposed of after use while avoiding additional burdens
being placed on landfill disposal sites.
It is yet a further object of the present invention to provide packaging
and its method of disposal such that the packaging can be solubilized and
sterilized in a single operation.
These and further objects will be more readily appreciated while
considering the following disclosure and appended claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention involves a water-soluble package comprising a
container having an internal space defined by thermoplastic polymer side
walls. The thermoplastic polymer side walls are capable of dissolving in
water and aqueous solutions only at temperatures above approximately
37.degree. C.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention deals with the disposal of packaging materials
configured into diverse products including pouches which may have a
significant transparent component to enable users to view the contents
thereof. Further, as noted above, a good number of hospital procedures on
contamination control encourage multi-barrier packaging and it is this
type of configuration which also lends itself to the practice of the
present invention.
It is contemplated that the water-soluble packaging of the present
invention be composed of thermoplastic polymer side walls which are
soluble in hot aqueous baths, including water, either alone or with the
addition of surfactants, salts and bleaches. Such packaging would be
insoluble in cold to warm baths, below 37.degree. C., the average
temperature of the human body. Preferably, the thermoplastic polymer would
be soluble in aqueous media only above 50.degree. C. and most preferably
between 80.degree.-90.degree. C. At the latter temperature, packaging
disposal could be accomplished in a hot water bath such as a washing
machine that is dedicated solely to solubilizing and disinfecting such
packaging made of such water soluble thermoplastic polymer. By employing
such a method, two objectives will be accomplished; namely, that the
packaging would be disinfected and would be solubilized for disposal
through the sewer system. Not only would this lessen the burden now being
imposed upon current landfill sites, but liquid sewer disposal would prove
a comparative low cost technique of ridding the user of such packaging.
Polymer or sheet materials useful in practicing the present method comprise
polyvinyl alcohol with or without acetyl groups, cross-linked or
uncross-linked. Ideally, the packaging is comprised of polyvinyl alcohol
homopolymer that has been highly crystallized by post drawing or heat
annealing. Ideal for use in the present invention would be a highly
crystallized totally saponified polyvinyl acetate. Suitable examples of
commercially available materials for use in practicing the present
invention include Vinex.TM. 1003, a PVA polymer sold by Air Products Co.
and Elvanol.TM., a fully hydrolyzed PVA polymer sold by DuPont.
In producing packaging useful in practicing the present invention, a
conventional textile carding machine can be employed whereby a web is laid
down on a conveying structure that typically weighs approximately 50 grams
per square yard. However, packaging materials generally should be in the
range of 10 to 200 grams per square yard or more. More preferably, one
should operate in the range of 20 to 100 grams per square yard while
operating in the range of 30 to 70 grams per square yard is most
convenient.
The web structure produced by the conventional textile carding machine is
cross stretched, compressed and thermally bonded at a temperature near
200.degree. C. across 50 percent or more of its face in a diamond or other
pattern and may or may not be fully calendared to produce a stiff fabric
structure. This fabric structure can then be die-cut into smaller pieces
with and without the application of antistats, tints or fire retardants.
These structures can then be cut into, for example, 9".times.9" pieces
which can be formed into a pouch either in a continuous manner or a batch
manner that can hold medical instruments.
Pieces of the polymeric film and fabric, being thermoplastic, can be bonded
together thermally. Polyvinyl alcohol behaves physically in a
thermoplastic manner and is easily bonded by a Vertrod.TM. impulse heater
system.
It is contemplated that films useful in practicing the present invention be
between approximately 0.0005 to 0.030 inches in thickness for the heat
impulse or thermal sealing of such side wall materials into a suitable
pouch. More appropriately, one would use film thicknesses between
approximately 0.001 to 0.006 inches and most conveniently, from
approximately 0.002 to 0.004 inches.
It is contemplated that the term "packaging" be broadly construed to
include not only pouches but any enveloping structure and particularly
such a structure useful in maintaining a "sterile presentation." For
example, the "packaging" can include procedural trays, such as anesthesia
trays, suture removal trays, wound dressing trays, shave prep trays and
I.V. administration trays which are used throughout patient treatment
areas of hospitals, physicians' offices, dentists' offices and other
health care sites which require sterile wraps and towels. Such wraps and
towels are used not only for "sterile presentation" to the treatment site,
but function as sterile fields during treatment and as towels for clean up
work.
These "towel" products are carded and formed from suitable "textile"
deniers (1-3 denier) in cut lengths (1-3 inches), calendared and
thermoformed into 70-200 grams per square yard fabrics. Thermoforming is
preferred for convenience, but other methods such as needle punching is
certainly possible in practicing the present invention. A commercially
available product for use in the present invention is either type T-B (VEE
1290) or type T-5 (VPB 101) wrap which are each available from Isolyser
Company, Inc., which are manufactured of Kuralon's PVA fiber. Kuralon's
PVA is sold in 44 mm lengths having a hot water solubility point of
80.degree.-90.degree. C. The T-B product is sized at 1.2 denier while the
T-5 product is sold in 38 mm staple lengths of 1.5 denier.
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Description  |
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