Cold-chain temperature control is necessary to prevent damage to life-saving vaccines caused by heat exposure. However, keeping vaccines too cold is just as harmful, since freezing damages many vaccines. Protecting vaccines from freeze damage remains one of the most poorly addressed problems in vaccine management. Cold-chain practices tend to prioritise the protection of vaccines from heat damage, often at the risk of exposing them inadvertently to freezing temperatures. The maintenance of accurate and uniform temperatures is, therefore, of significant importance in improvements to global human healthcare. Exposure to heating or freezing conditions will weaken and subsequently break the hydrogen bonds holding the tertiary structure together, causing the vaccine to become ineffective. This paper demonstrates a design innovation process leading to the development of a high-performance, sustainable fibre material, with cradle-to-cradle credentials, that has transformed the market for passive insulated packaging used in the global distribution of temperature-sensitive pharmaceutical products for human use. The extensive scientific research on this natural ‘smart fibre’ has resulted in an insulated packaging material that substantially exceeds the temperature performance criteria required by European and US good distribution practice regulations for the distribution of medicines. This smart fibre is 100% pure sheep’s wool.
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2 August 2016
Research Article|
July 26 2016
Commercialisation of a natural material – wool: a bio-based PCM Available to Purchase
Angela Morris, BA (Hons), MA, MInstPkg, FRSA;
Angela Morris, BA (Hons), MA, MInstPkg, FRSA
*
Chief Executive
The Wool Packaging Company Limited, Stone, UK
*Corresponding author e-mail address: angela@woolcool.com
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Keith Spilsbury, BA (Hons), Dip. Inst. Marketing, IIB, GAI
Keith Spilsbury, BA (Hons), Dip. Inst. Marketing, IIB, GAI
Managing Director
The Wool Packaging Company Limited, Stone, UK
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*Corresponding author e-mail address: angela@woolcool.com
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
January 20 2016
Accepted:
June 13 2016
Online ISSN: 2049-1239
Print ISSN: 2049-1220
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2016
Green Materials (2016) 4 (2): 89–97.
Article history
Received:
January 20 2016
Accepted:
June 13 2016
Citation
Morris A, Spilsbury K (2016), "Commercialisation of a natural material – wool: a bio-based PCM". Green Materials, Vol. 4 No. 2 pp. 89–97, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jgrma.16.00001
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