COLOR CODING

20200305998 ยท 2020-10-01

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A medical instrument, including an atomic layer deposition, ALD, coating to indicate the type of the medical instrument, and use of ALD to indicate number of re-uses of a medical instrument.

Claims

1. A medical instrument, comprising: a coating on a surface of the medical instrument comprising a plurality of ALD layers configured to be removed one-by-one by a pre-determined process to indicate the number of re-uses performed with the medical instrument.

2. The medical instrument of claim 1, wherein the coating indicates the number of re-uses experienced by the medical instrument.

3. The medical instrument of claim 1, wherein the coating indicates the number of re-uses by a color appearance of the coating.

4. The medical instrument of claim 3, comprising said coating to indicate the number of re-uses seen by bare eyes or by a scanner.

5. The medical instrument of claim 1, wherein the pre-determined process is a sterilization process or an autoclave process.

6. The medical instrument of claim 1, comprising metal as a base material on which said plurality of ALD layers is deposited.

7. The medical instrument of claim 1, wherein the coating comprises a nanolaminate structure deposited on a base material, the nanolaminate structure comprising alternating first and second material layers, wherein the first and second material layers are of different material.

8. A method, comprising: loading a medical instrument into a reaction chamber of a deposition reactor; depositing, by ALD, a coating on a surface of the medical instrument comprising a plurality of conformal ALD monolayers configured to be removed one-by-one by a pre-determined process to indicate the number of re-uses performed with the medical instrument.

9. Use of an ALD coating on a surface of a medical instrument to indicate number of re-uses of the medical instrument.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0030] The disclosed embodiments will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

[0031] FIGS. 1a and 1b show marking the type of medical instruments in accordance with certain embodiments;

[0032] FIG. 2 shows how the thickness of a coating on a medical instrument defines the color of the coating in accordance with certain embodiments;

[0033] FIG. 3 shows a nanolaminate structure in accordance with certain embodiments;

[0034] FIG. 4 shows using the structure of FIG. 3 in predicting the number of re-uses in accordance with certain embodiments; and

[0035] FIG. 5 shows a substrate processing apparatus in accordance with certain embodiments.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0036] In the following description, Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) technology is used as an example.

[0037] The basics of an ALD growth mechanism are known to a skilled person. ALD is a special chemical deposition method based on the sequential introduction of at least two reactive precursor species to at least one substrate. It is to be understood, however, that one of these reactive precursors can be substituted by energy when using, for example, photon-enhanced ALD or plasma-assisted ALD, for example PEALD, leading to single precursor ALD processes. For example, deposition of a pure element, such as metal, requires only one precursor. Binary compounds, such as oxides can be created with one precursor chemical when the precursor chemical contains both of the elements of the binary material to be deposited. Thin films grown by ALD are dense, pinhole free and have uniform thickness.

[0038] The at least one substrate is typically exposed to temporally separated precursor pulses in a reaction vessel to deposit material on the substrate surfaces by sequential self-saturating surface reactions. In the context of this application, the term ALD comprises all applicable ALD based techniques and any equivalent or closely related technologies, such as, for example the following ALD sub-types: MLD (Molecular Layer Deposition), plasma-assisted ALD, for example PEALD (Plasma Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition) and photon-enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition (known also as photo-ALD or flash enhanced ALD).

[0039] A basic ALD deposition cycle consists of four sequential steps: pulse A, purge A, pulse B and purge B. Pulse A consists of a first precursor vapor and pulse B of another precursor vapor. Inactive gas and a vacuum pump are typically used for purging gaseous reaction by-products and the residual reactant molecules from the reaction space during purge A and purge B. A deposition sequence comprises at least one deposition cycle. Deposition cycles are repeated until the deposition sequence has produced a thin film or coating of desired thickness. Deposition cycles can also be either simpler or more complex. For example, the cycles can include three or more reactant vapor pulses separated by purging steps, or certain purge steps can be omitted. On the other hand, photo-enhanced ALD has a variety of options, such as only one active precursor, with various options for purging. All these deposition cycles form a timed deposition sequence that is controlled by a logic unit or a microprocessor.

[0040] When different materials are used as different thin film layers on top of each other, they are referred to as laminates or nanolaminate.

[0041] The deposition device, comprising means of altering the required materials to be deposited (or the laminate structure), is a reactor apparatus preferably configured to exploit principles of a selected vapor-deposition based technique. In terms of an overall implementation, the reactor may be based on an ALD installation described in the U.S. Pat. No. 8,211,235 (Lindfors), for example, or on the installation Picosun R-200 Advanced ALD system available from Picosun Oy, Finland. Nevertheless, the features underlying a concept of the disclosed embodiments can be incorporated into any other chemical deposition reactor embodied as an ALD, PEALD (Plasma-Enhanced ALD), MLD (Molecular Layer Deposition) or CVD (Chemical Vapor Deposition) device, for example.

[0042] FIGS. 1a and 1b show marking the type of medical instruments in accordance with certain embodiments. FIG. 1a shows a single use instrument. In certain embodiments, the single use instrument is processed by ALD to deposit a coating that appears in a first color, or the single use instrument may be left uncoated. FIG. 1b shows a reusable instrument. In certain embodiments, the reusable instrument is processed by ALD to deposit a coating that appears in a second color that is different from the first color to differentiate from the single use instrument.

[0043] FIG. 2 shows how the thickness of a coating on a medical instrument (such as surgical or dental instrument) defines the color of the coating in accordance with certain embodiments. An ALD coating 101 with a thickness is deposited onto a base material 201, which may be stainless steel for example. Incident light 200 reflects 210 from the surface of the coating 101. A ray of light that propagates into inside of the coating 101 reflects 260 from the interface between the base material 201 and the coating 101. An interference of the reflected rays 210 and 260 causes the reflected light to appear in a color different from the color of the incident light. Since the thickness of the coating is a multiple of atomic layers, a difference in interference is a function of the atomic layer thickness and therefore predictable. A certain coating thickness appears in a predictable color. The thickness of the coating is therefore derivable from the color appearance. Further, different materials deposited with ALD give different predictable effects of color appearance with respect to thickness. For example, removal of a certain thickness of a first material causes different predictable changes in color appearance compared to removal of the same thickness of another material. In certain embodiments, the refractive index of the structure is varied based on material selection, which will affect the external appearance of the coated surface in a predictive manner.

[0044] The horizontal lines within the coating 101 in FIG. 2 illustrate that the layer thickness of the coating may be originally different, or the thickness may become reduced as the coating wears off (or due to removal of atomic layers, or conformal ALD monolayers one-by-one, in sterilization processes for example).

[0045] Depending on the coating material and its thickness the color of the coating/medical instrument or differences in the color can be seen by bare eyes or by a scanner. In certain embodiments, it is immediately visible from a set of medical instruments waiting for sterilization which of them are disposable instruments and which are reusable.

[0046] FIG. 3 shows a nanolaminate structure deposited on the base material 201. The nanolaminate structure comprises material layers or coatings of different coating materials A and B on top of each other in an alternating fashion.

[0047] FIG. 4 shows using the structure of FIG. 3 in predicting the number of re-uses in accordance with certain embodiments. In each sterilization step (e.g., exposing the medical instrument to sterilizing liquid or steam) a layer of the nanolaminate structure dissolves, and a corresponding change in the color of the coating occurs. The number of re-uses of the medical instrument is derived from the color of the coating/medical instrument.

[0048] FIG. 5 shows a substrate processing apparatus (or deposition reactor) 550 in accordance with certain embodiments. The apparatus 550 comprises a reaction chamber 553, and at least one coating material inlet 551 to the reaction chamber 553. The apparatus 550 further comprises a fore-line 552 to a pump (for exhaust of gases). In the embodiment shown in FIG. 5, the inlet 551 for the coating material (or reactive chemical) is positioned in a top section of the reaction chamber 553 and the fore-line 552 in a bottom section, the general flow direction within the reaction chamber 553 thus being vertical (downwards).

[0049] A substrate support 554 supports a medical instrument 555 loaded into the reaction chamber 553 for example from a side. The medical instrument 555 is processed by ALD to produce a coating with a pre-determined number of layers of pre-determined material(s).

[0050] Without limiting the scope and interpretation of the patent claims, certain technical effects of one or more of the example embodiments disclosed herein are listed in the following. A technical effect is facilitating the identification of different types of medical instruments. Another technical effect is providing color coding of medical instruments by ALD. Another technical effect is aiding in predicting the number of re-uses of medical instruments.

[0051] The foregoing description has provided by way of non-limiting examples of particular implementations and embodiments a full and informative description of the best mode presently contemplated by the inventors for carrying out the disclosed embodiments. It is however clear to a person skilled in the art that the disclosed embodiments are not restricted to details of the embodiments presented above, but that it can be implemented in other embodiments using equivalent means without deviating from the characteristics of the disclosed embodiments.

[0052] Furthermore, some of the features of the above-disclosed embodiments may be used to advantage without the corresponding use of other features. As such, the foregoing description should be considered as merely illustrative of the principles of the disclosed embodiment, and not in limitation thereof. Hence, the scope of the disclosed embodiments are only restricted by the appended patent claims.