Industrial design
It is the creative act of determining and defining a product's form and features, which takes place in advance of the manufacture or production of the product.
This presentation on the industrial products, formulation and the equipment of industry. We reserch on the need of industrial design and development.
1. Presented by -
Wambhurkar parmeshwar ( M pharmacy sec year)
Shital zite ( M pharmacy sec year)
Suryawanshi prashant ( M pharmacy first year)
Vavhal prasad ( M pharmacy first year)
2. CONTENTS
Defination of industrial design
Need of industrial design
Essentials of industrial design
Examples of industrial design
Design for packaging
Design for equipment
Design for logos
Product design
Pharmaceutical formulation design
Design for drug
Structure based drug design
3. Industrial design is a process of design applied to physical
products that are to be manufactured by mass production.
It is the creative act of determining and defining a product's
form and features, which takes place in advance of the
manufacture or production of the product.
Industrial design intellectual property refers to compositions of
colors or lines which give a three-dimensional look to a
handicraft or product.
This constitutes the aesthetic or ornamental part of an article
in a legal sense.
4. Industrial design increases the marketability and commercial
value of an object.
Design gives aesthetic sense and appearance to the product .
Industrial design right is an IPR that protect the visual design
of the object
Design includes only the features which looks attractive to the
eyes but has no relation with the functional utility.
5. New or original.
Relates to feature of shape , configuration pattern.
Applied to articles by any industrial process.
It shoud includes any trademark or property mark.
It should not includes artitic works as defined
under the copyright act.
Does not comprises or contain obscence matter.
6. Design for packaging
packaging is the
pharmaceutical quality by
design (QbD) initiative,
which focuses on establishing
a quality plan early in the
product development process.
QbD also has a focus on
patient safety by aiding drug
manufacturers in developing a
risk-based approach to the
development and production
process.
7.
8. The processing equipment industries play a unique role in an
economy. They provide the tools for all the other manufacturing
sectors in the economy. Manufacturing equipment is the platform
for the operation of unit processes. Properly designed equipment is
essential for the production of high-quality, cost-effective products.
equipment design so that it is user friendly for the operation and
maintenance aspects of the process.
For example, designs that are compatible with control features,
requiring minimal intervention during operation, are needed.
Considerations that override all others are to develop equipment that
is safe to operate and imposes no harmful effect on the workers or
environment.
Design for equipment
12. The final design of a pharmaceutical product is very lengthy and
involves several stages. The beginning stage is the drug discovery
phase. During this phase, the active pharmaceutical ingredient
(API) is determined.
Once the API is known, the formulation of the pharmaceutical
product must be determined. Other chemical compounds, called
excipients, are added to the formulation to help stabilize the API and
increase its efficacy. Successive phases involve design of the
manufacturing process, from pilot plant to scale-up.
The final delivery method of the pharmaceutical product is
determined, with oral methods such as tableting or encapsulation the
most common choices. Finally, the product can be approved and
marketed.
Pharmaceutical formulation design
15. Design for drug
Once key binding fragments, or ligands, have been identified
through computational screening, further lead optimization can be
used to generate the final drug molecule. The ligand alone may
not successfully match the specified TPP of the pharmaceutical
product. Of specific concern is the absorption, distribution,
metabolic and excretion properties.
Fragments can be selected from a database of molecular segments that
are often found in drug-like molecules. When scanning molecular
libraries, traditional QSAR methods are often used. New adaptive
functional group reordering techniques use random sampling of the
molecular fragments to measure targeted properties
16. Structure-based drug design is the design and optimization of a
chemical structure with the goal of identifying a compound suitable
for clinical testing — a drug candidate.
The first unequivocal example of the application of structure-based
drug design leading to an approved drug is the carbonic anhydrase
inhibitor dorzolamide,