Moisture-impermeable polymer using graphene for pharmaceutical packaging


Use of graphene will also bring down the cost of packaging drugs, food and electronic items

Scientists from the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru, are close to field-testing an alternative to plastic packaging for the electronics and pharmaceutical industry, which can increase the shelf-life of electronics, drugs and subsequently bring down costs. Prof Srinivasan Raghavan from the Centre for Nano Science and Engineering and Prof Praveen C Ramamurthy from the Department of Materials Engineering are using graphene to make paper impermeable, that is moisture-proof, which will in turn help replace plastic packaging. A prototype has already been made.

While flexible, transparent and moisture impermeable materials are critical for packaging applications in electronic, food and pharmaceutical industries, the average plastics or polymers are, not water proof enough, thereby reducing the lifetime of electronics and medicines.

"For the packaging industry, it will be significant, especially for pharma. Medicines have expiry dates and major issue is due to packaging failure, as a result of which moisture and oxygen seeps into the packets. So drugs interact with the oxygen and moisture and consequently fail. Hence, if there is better packing, this will increase the lifetime or expiration date of drugs by several more years, automatically reducing the cost of medicines. The field tests are expected to start within a month," Prof Ramamurthy told Bangalore Mirror.

The team says that if realised, it could be an invention that parallels the invention of plastics themselves atleast as far as packaging goes, with particular respect to current packaging used for medicines and electronics.

As a step in this direction, the researchers have developed and demonstrated moisture-impermeable polymer using graphene. This, according to the team, reduces its water vapour transmission rate by up to a million fold. The team has applied for a patent and the findings have been published in ACS Nano journal.

According to Gubbi Labs, which is a private research collective, the new organic polymer is expected to address the challenge of "permeation of atmospheric water vapour into flexible organic electronic devices, thus increasing its active lifetime and improving performance."

This whole project started when Prof Raghavan told Prof Ramamurthy that they make graphene in their lab and it was impermeable even to helium and that they were attempting to make paper impermeable. "This is when I suggested that we first try it on plastics as he was working on making plastics, which are supposedly waterproof and even more impermeable. The next week we had the first result and soon the patent was submitted," added Prof Raghavan.

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