Packaging Technology and Engineering. Dipak Kumar Sarker

Packaging Technology and Engineering - Dipak Kumar Sarker


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of moulded shapes for volumes ranging from 190 to 500 ml. A higher specification for exact hues in pharmaceutical‐grade tinted glass, which is not essential in food packs, lies behind the higher cost of flint over coloured glass; this is also different from food product glasses, in which recycled glass use of differing tints is commonplace.

      Type I glass is suitable as a packaging material for most parenteral or non‐parenteral pharmaceutical products and is the pharmacy primary packaging standard because of its inertness and thermal stability. This type of glass possesses the highest Tm values and so is much harder to work and shape to the desired form. The chemical robustness of borosilicate means that the glass is also ideally suited to the containment of strong acids and alkalis. Type II glass containers based on soda lime/silica glass (type III) but treated via a surface‐inactivation process to provide a contact surface that has remnant alkali ions removed is suitable for most acidic or neutral aqueous medicinal preparations, whether for parenteral or non‐parenteral use. The modification of the regular soda lime glass surface with sulfur creates a material with excellent resistance to surface hydrolytic reactions that typically occur with the ageing and weathering of glass. Modification of type III glass in this way to produce type II glass removes the sodium and calcium oxides that can be leached from water in contact with the glass surface, thereby preventing weathering and blooming from bottles. Weatherisation and ‘bloom’ formation refer to haze or visual crystalline carbonate (Na2CO3 is the most abundant but it may also contain also CaCO3) found on the inside of plain soda lime glass. Its appearance can alarm consumers, who mistake the clouding for possible microbial contamination and growth. The effect of weatherisation is actually minimal upon the overall quality of the glass but sodium carbonate can influence the pH of the contacting solution according to the glass formulation chemistry and solvent contact time. The hygroscopic nature of soda lime glass means that water films can easily form and accumulate on the glass surface; this happens particularly on the inside surface, where there may be water‐containing product and therefore intrinsic water vapour. Moist conditions and changes in relative humidity driven by variations in temperature, during, for example, sea freight shipping, can affect the amount of atmospheric moisture that the glass is exposed to during storage and shipment, leading to an alternating process of condensation and evaporation. Such surface adsorption can induce the dissolution of glass‐borne Na+ and Ca2+ ions, which then reform as water‐dispersible carbonate crystals on the surface of the glass in the presence of carbon dioxide and as the glass surface dries. Such carbonate frosting can disappear or dissolve. Treating the surface of the glass with fluorine gas can make the surface of the glass 10 times more chemically inert and therefore less susceptible to bloom formation.

      1 1 Environmental Protection Agency. (2016). Documentation for Greenhouse Gas Emission and Energy Factors Used in the Waste Reduction Model: Containers, Packaging, and Non‐Durable Good Materials Chapters, 1–82. USA: ICF, for the US Environmental Protection Agency,


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