Cleanroom Manufacturing: Controlling Particle Contamination in Medical Seals.

Cleanroom Manufacturing: Controlling Particle Contamination in Medical Seals

Problem Statement

Medical device seals require ISO Class 7 cleanroom manufacturing to prevent particle shedding. Standard EPDM compounds generate >5,000 particles/cm³ during demolding, exceeding ISO 16232 Level C cleanliness limits for surgical tools.

Material Science Analysis

Traditional sulfur-cured EPDM fails due to:

  • Zinc stearate blooming (creates surface particulates)
  • Carbon black filler abrasion during ejection

RubberQ’s peroxide-cured FKM solution succeeds because:

  • No zinc additives required (eliminates blooming)
  • PTFE-coated mold surfaces reduce friction-induced particles by 78%
  • Fluorine backbone resists gamma sterilization degradation

Technical Specifications

Parameter FKM-70G (RubberQ) EPDM-60S Silicone-50R
Shore A Hardness 70 ±2 60 ±5 50 ±3
Tensile Strength (MPa) 18.5 12.0 8.2
Compression Set (% @ 70°C/22h) 12 25 35
Particle Count (particles/cm³ >5µm) ≤800 5,200 1,500
Gamma Resistance (kGy) 50 25 40

Standard Compliance

RubberQ’s IATF 16949 processes ensure:

  • ISO 3601 Class A seal dimensions (±0.05mm tolerance)
  • ASTM D2000 M6BG 714 A25 B34 E034 F17
  • ISO 16232 Level B cleanliness via ultrasonic washing

For custom material compound development or IATF 16949 documentation, consult RubberQ’s engineering department.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *