Sensors (Nov 2020)

IR Imaging of Solid Lubricant Coatings on Concealed/Disjointed Surfaces for Transparent Polymer Delivery Device Applications

  • Anton Walsh,
  • Natalia Rebrova,
  • Steven Darby,
  • Killian Barton,
  • Raymond Wolfe,
  • Finbarr Buckley,
  • Liam Lewis,
  • Michael McAuliffe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s20226408
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 22
p. 6408

Abstract

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Transparent polymer delivery devices often contain a solid lubricant coating on a stronger bulk polymer. The distribution of lubricant coating must be monitored for device optimisation appraisals and to ensure consistency during mass production. However, coating evaluation is difficult to perform as surfaces are often concealed and/or disjointed. Dye stain analysis, which is destructive and time-consuming, is the current industry standard. We present a prototype IR transmission microscope to evaluate micron-level coating coverage of polyurethane and/or polyvinylpyrrolidone on a poly(propylene)-based delivery device. The device has a common industrial configuration, containing a duct and bevel. Inferred absorption of the coating was used to identify coating coverage and a multivariate analysis was used to remove the effects of absorption and scattering by the bulk. Coverage on concealed and disjointed surfaces was imaged and evaluated from a single camera viewpoint and ≈50 μm defects were detectable. The industrial applicability of the prototype was demonstrated using comparisons with dye stain analysis by estimating water dilution of coating and identifying artifacts in coating, which may indicate machine malfunction. The sensitivity and speed of the IR technique makes it a favourable alternative to the current industry standard.

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