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Top Technology Trends in Packaging Verification...
 
 

Article by:
Navas, Deb

Top Technology Trends in Packaging Verification
Manufacturers are increasingly relying on packaging systems to reduce risk, improve quality and productivity, and enhance profitability.

The demands of global competition and regulatory compliance issues are driving fundamental changes in packaging line design and implementation. Packaging lines evolved in the 1990s from strictly mechanical assemblages—positioned at the end of manufacturing lines to label, wrap, bundle, or carton finished product for shipment—to bar code-enabled systems capable of packaging reconciliation. Over the last ten years, in industries that affect public health, packaging lines have increasingly included CCD cameras or laser scanners to perform inspection, label verification, and packaging materials reconciliation by reading both linear and 2-D symbols on all components.

These bar code-based quality control systems came into use in the pharmaceuticals industry beginning in the early 1990s, when problems with drug product mislabeling and recalls led the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to issue a proposal tightening its packaging and labeling control regulations. Enactment of Rule 211.122g of the FDA's CGMPs (current good manufacturing practices) has been annually postponed over the ensuing years, and many industry analysts now believe enactment is no longer necessary because all the big drug manufacturers have implemented labeling and packaging reconciliation systems in anticipation of enactment.

Use of these systems for packaging reconciliation only, however, is old hat; what's new is the degree to which they are being integrated into centralized line control systems and also into corporate business systems, proactively as opposed to reactively.

Tighter Line Integration
"Companies needing machine vision inspection and packaging verification are increasingly sharing line resources —that is, using standard packaging equipment for multiple products on combined lines," said Paul O'Connell, president and CEO of Operations Concepts Inc. (Cherry Hill, NJ), an independent project management and systems integration firm whose clients—Sterling Pharmaceuticals, FMC International, and Searle Ltd. among them —are leaders in the pharmaceuticals and food industries.

In a combined line, for example, vial and bottle products that have been filled on separate lines might then share the same labeling and inspection/verification systems (in separate runs). After labeling, the products would be diverted into two separate lines for unique unit cartoning or bundling. The lines might then converge again at palletizing. With resource sharing, relatively expensive machine vision inspection and bar code label verification systems can support several products; separate implementations on each dedicated product line are no longer necessary.

Another recent trend, according to Mr. O'Connell, pertains to broader corporate-wide centralized management initiatives. "Today there is a strong desire for automation using centralized management and monitoring software on both stand-alone and combined packaging lines," he said. In such scenarios, each machine on the line has its own PLC connected on a data highway to a centralized logic controller, which can communicate with a line control and monitoring software package resident on a local PC or LAN terminal. The centralized management package monitors and adjusts all line machinery while it's operating. The program also tracks all packaging components used and rejected for every lot, batch, or shift. It provides downtime documentation as well as component reliability reports.

The most prominent use of packaging line management systems can be observed within the pharmaceuticals industry, according to Mr. O'Connell. Line management software provides the operating system within which packaging and label verification takes place. It integrates inspection, identification, and data collection within a complete line management system. "These systems are understandably very complex and have taken years to develop in order to be compatible with all the different PLCs out there," he said. "But now you can literally buy the software off the shelf and have a packaging integrator fit it to all the equipment pieces on your line. It can also be directly integrated into the corporate LAN, thus making investigation and reconciliation reports directly available to QA departments companywide."

The line management system currently seeing most widespread use in pharmaceutical packaging is TIPS Advisor, from SYSTECH (Sys-Tech Solutions Inc., Cranbury, NJ), a company that produces intelligent machine vision systems integrated with packaging line technologies. TIPS Advisor can be integrated into packaging lines to perform line setup and process control. By acquiring real-time data, TIPS Advisor enables process monitoring at any stage in production to ensure optimal productivity and efficiency.

Tips Advisor

"The increasing complexity of global markets, increasing manufacturing costs, and shortened life cycles are challenging manufacturers to produce more product with quicker response times, while using fewer resources in terms of both capital assets and employees," said SYSTECH's president, Robert DeJean. "With supply chain initiatives under way, every sensor and scanner on the line must become a knowledge source for production status, making data available at all times to increase product quality and drive process improvement."

Packaging lines use bar coding, machine vision, and sensors, among other technologies. The ideal situation for making critical process and product decisions is an integrated system that optimizes all these line technologies. The packaging line is the most advantageous point for quality inspections—it is where manufacturers can take the last long qualitative look at the product and its wrapping before delivering it into the customer's hands, Mr. DeJean noted. For industries such as pharmaceuticals and food, where public health is a critical issue, machine vision provides the most reliable final inspection, and the data can be analyzed to pinpoint the source of any problems or errors.

"The FDA initiated CGMP compliance regulations to first push automated inspection/verification technologies back in 1993," Mr. DeJean explained. "But the industry is now pulling for purely business reasons: risk management, quality improvement, and increasing traceability, productivity, and profitability."

Regarding 2-D symbologies in label/ packaging verification, Mr. DeJean commented that the industry hasn't seen the rapid growth expected: "We are seeing an increasing rate of [2-D] usage in packaging, partly because of improving printing techniques and the fact that packaging primarily uses fixed readers. The real growth won't occur for these applications until 2-D scanners become competitive with laser scanners in cost and ease of use."

2-D Packaging Verification
The price gap between fixed-mount and handheld imagers that read 2-D symbologies and their laser counterparts, however, is fast closing. According to Jim Hahn, president of Auto Image ID (Cherry Hill, NJ), a 2-D scanner and verifier systems supplier, the current street price of a fixed-mount imager is in the $900 to $1000 range, as opposed to $500 to $600 for an equivalent laser. "Right now, customers who want 2-D are willing to pay more for the scanners, but prices will probably be at parity within the next two years," he said. "What inhibits 2-D growth more is the up-front bill in replacing an entire existing system. Currently users don't convert to 2-D until they see a payback or are constrained by the need for more marking space or data capacity."

The ease of use issue may be more a matter of perception than substance in that current imaging scanners—either fixed-mount or handheld—are no more difficult to operate than laser scanners. The one caveat Mr. Hahn suggested was the possibility that the laser beam itself is a more obvious targeting mechanism: It is easier to see than the 2-D imager's targeting LEDs, which aren't quite as bright. Such perceptions disappear as the technology becomes more familiar.

Many drug companies and packaging printers are introducing the most space-efficient 2-D symbology, Data Matrix ECC200, to their packaging lines. AxiCode Technologies, a systems integrator located in Monrovia, CA (with headquarters in York, PA), recently installed an Auto Image ID verifier for one of its clients, Royal Paper Box in nearby Montebello.

Jeff Russell, vice president of AxiCode, noted that Royal Paper Box's client, a large pharmaceuticals firm, was already using a Data Matrix encoded product number on its cartons for its own in-house packaging verification but requested that the symbol be verified at printing as well. Royal Paper Box is now using the Auto Image ID verifier to validate the prepress master, verifying against the ANSI Data Matrix standard. Cartons are printed on the flat, and a fixed-mount imaging scanner on the gluing line scans and counts boxes as they are folded and glued. "This system wasn't FDA motivated but selected absolutely on the merits of Data Matrix alone, for in-house quality control," said Mike Cizek, who handles Auto Image ID's Western sales.

Auto Image ID Inc.
Cherry Hill, NJ
1.856.424.5599

AxiCode Technologies Inc.
Monrovia, CA
1.800.654.7973

Label Vision Systems Inc.
Peachtree City, GA
1.800.432.9430

Operations Concepts Inc.
Cherry Hill, NJ
1.856.667.4461

Sys-Tech Solutions Inc. (SYSTECH)
Cranbury, NJ
1.800.847.7123

Uniform Code Council (UCC)
Dayton, OH
1.937.435.3870

"Requests for 2-D are beginning to come in from pharmaceuticals manufacturers to our clients," Mr. Russell said. "The primary reasons they're moving to 2-D are code integrity and the smaller code footprint."

According to Mr. Cizek, "Verification is becoming very important for 2-D in packaging, because the data encoded often isn't a license plate look-up, but product-critical information such as lot and date data.

"Data Matrix has built-in error detection and correction that makes it far more accurate than 1-D symbologies. Code 39 with a check digit registers one error in 3 million characters; Data Matrix ECC200 registers one error in 1020. Probably not in your lifetime will you see an error." (For more on verification processes at Royal Paper Box, see "No Margin for Error," April 1998, p. 54.)

Tim Lydell, director of sales and marketing for Label Vision Systems (Peachtree City, GA), has seen dramatic growth in both interest in and sales of 2-D systems. "We've been experiencing ever-increasing, almost explosive, growth in 2-D," he reported. "In the last four months, especially, there has been an upsurge in its use in electronics, where we're reading Data Matrix on chips and wafers. We're also seeing significant interest from packagers. One of our packaging clients is using a Data Matrix encoded number as an 'intelligent registration mark' to identify packaging material on press runs more accurately."

Data Matrix is replacing a cruder registration method long used by the printing industry, whereby a simple black box was positioned in a unique location on the waste area of uncut sheets; the location of the box on a sheet signified the product ID. Positioning a photo eye to locate this mark for proper registration might take anywhere from five to fifteen minutes of set-up time. The benefits of using the 2-D code and scanner system instead include significantly reduced set-up time and enhanced accuracy, ensuring that the correct materials are used for the job.

"We're seeing this technology finally taking off," Mr. Lydell said. "Two-D has been around for a while, but now because of its compact size and accuracy benefits, people who are upgrading their lines are asking for it."


Product Information:
LVS® 6000 Data Sheet (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
LVS® 3200 Data Sheet (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)

More information:
Label Vision Systems, Inc.
101 Auburn Court
Peachtree City, GA 30269
1-800-432-9430
+1 770-487-6414

www.lvs-inc.com

Helmers Publishing, Inc .
174 Concord St.
Peterborough, NH 03458
Telephone: (603) 924-9631
Fax: (603) 924-7408
E-mail: mailto:editors@idsystems.com
Copyright © 1998 Helmers Publishing, Inc.
All rights reserved.


 
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