NIR-based intelligent sensing of product yield stress for high-value bioresorbable polymer processing
Date
2022-04-07Author
Mulrennan, Konrad
Munir, Nimra
Creedon, Leo
Donovan, John
Lyons, John G.
McAfee, Marion
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PLA (polylactide) is a bioresorbable polymer used in implantable medical and drug
delivery devices. Like other bioresorbable polymers, PLA needs to be processed carefully to avoid
degradation. In this work we combine in-process temperature, pressure, and NIR spectroscopy
measurements with multivariate regression methods for prediction of the mechanical strength of
an extruded PLA product. The potential to use such a method as an intelligent sensor for real-time
quality analysis is evaluated based on regulatory guidelines for the medical device industry. It is
shown that for the predictions to be robust to processing at different times and to slight changes in
the processing conditions, the fusion of both NIR and conventional process sensor data is required.
Partial least squares (PLS), which is the established ’soft sensing’ method in the industry, performs
the best of the linear methods but demonstrates poor reliability over the full range of processing
conditions. Conversely, both random forest (RF) and support vector regression (SVR) show excellent
performance for all criteria when used with a prior principal component (PC) dimension reduction
step. While linear methods currently dominate for soft sensing of mixture concentrations in highly
conservative, regulated industries such as the medical device industry, this work indicates that
nonlinear methods may outperform them in the prediction of mechanical properties from complex
physicochemical sensor data. The nonlinear methods show the potential to meet industrial standards
for robustness, despite the relatively small amount of training data typically available in high-value
material processing.
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