Historical Review Of Glasses Used For Parenteral Packaging

Glass has long been used for packaging precious liquids, in particular pharmaceuticals. Its unique combination of hermeticity, transparency, strength, and chemical durability make it the optimal material for such an important role. Today's life-saving drugs are stored in borosilicate glasses, which evolved from applications in microscope optics and thermometers. As the glass compositions improved, so did the methods used to shape them and the tests used to characterize them. While all of these advances improved the quality of the glass container and its ability to protect the contents, problems still exist such as delamination, cracks, and glass particulates. In addition to these issues, new developments in glass composition development, performance, and testing in the 21st century are reviewed.

Author
R A Schaut & W Porter Weeks
Origin
Corning Inc
Journal Title
Pda J Pharm Sci Technol 71 July-Aug 2017 279-296
Sector
Container glass
Class
C 5897

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Historical Review Of Glasses Used For Parenteral Packaging
Pda J Pharm Sci Technol 71 July-Aug 2017 279-296
C 5897
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