Capsule and tablet weighers play a  critical role in highly regulated pharmaceutical production, ensuring accurate  dosages are packaged to be delivered to patients in need. 
 
At PACK EXPO 2022, Work Microwave,  which is a Germany-based developer and manufacturer of RF electronics  technologies and products, showed its WORKsens  FT-96 Pharmaceuticals Weight Measurement  Sensor.
The sensor is based  on the microwave resonance method and it’s small enough to be integrated  into a filling machine directly to characterize the weight of capsules and  tablets in continuous production systems. 
With  traditional checkweighers, there’s a limit to how fast products can move  through machines. As product manager Lukas Lischke explained at the show,  conventional load cells in pharma checkweighers require that the individual  tablets or capsules be at a standstill for a brief period of time for accurate  measurement. The systems based on gravitational force are also sensitive to  vibration, so checkweighers must be heavy machines (often ~1,000kg) to remain  stable in the face of vibration on busy production floors. Most operations also  require a lot of load cells to achieve the throughput pharma companies demand.
With  the WORKsens FT-96, tablets or capsules flow through a duct tube of 12 mm  outer diameter and are measured one at a time without stoppage at up  to 15 capsules per channel per second. Units are compact, so they can be  stacked to run in parallel for higher throughput. 
“As it's based on RF microwave detection, the capsules can go in freefall—you  don't need the stopping moment or the one square meter of floor space that  traditional checkweighers require,” Lischke said. “It  can integrate directly into another company's filling machine, for example, and  create a closed-loop cycle without a big distance. If 500 capsules pass through  a distance before an error such as a clogged nozzle is detected, then you have  to throw away everything that's in between. Here, your loop cycle is way  quicker because your distance is way shorter.”
More details in the  video: High-speed capsule and tablet weight measurement on the fly
As the company reports,  “A data acquisition platform attached  to the sensor head permanently monitors the resonator head for changes in  product properties. This allows the sensor to detect if pharmaceutical tablets  are fully intact or exhibit defects, with the option to reject under- or  overfilled capsules or cracked tablets.”
The  sensor must be calibrated for each capsule. For a CMO or brand owner running a  variety of tablets, they would calibrate the system initially before running a  new product. After each initial calibration, there is no further recalibration  required on product changeovers.
Potential applications
The WORKsens FT-96 was a finalist in the PACK EXPO International 2022  Technology Excellence Awards in the  "Personal Care/Pharma" category. The sensor has the ability to harmonize with new digital Industry 4.0  concepts and has potential for continuous  manufacturing of pharmaceutical products down the road, not just for its speed,  but as a sensor that will help companies identify process drift or product  issues in near real-time.
The sensor has a range of potential  applications for weighing small products that require accuracy that are  non-conductive. While the demo on show was for oral solid dose drugs, Lischke said the technology  could even be applied to syringe and vial filling systems.
“We can build a resonator in a way that it is  a fixture of the wheel already, and you can monitor the filling process from  the empty bottle up to the correct filling weight,” said Thomas Wiesner,  regional sales director.
As drugs become more and more potent, and  their volumes become smaller and smaller, companies must maintain filling  accuracy both for regulatory needs and patient safety. “There are some  applications where the filling volume is very, very small. Sometimes the filling  weight is smaller than the tolerance of the single dose vial. In that  situation, you cannot measure it anymore with a typical scale. But this system  can detect low weights because you only measure the difference between the empty  and filled single dose vial,” explained Wiesner.
“Sometimes you even have droplet measurements—if  you want to add specific volume by droplets. You can let those droplets fall through  the resonator and you can measure the volume of each falling droplets,” added Lischke.
Next steps
                                                                                                                                
WORK  Microwave is currently looking for beta testers, as the system is not GMP- or  FDA-compliant yet. So, while a company cannot use this on the last step of  their line for compliance, checking, and record creation, it can be used as a feedback system on a filling line to close the loop  quicker. “You still need a conventional checkweighing system at the end of the  line at the moment because the FT-96 is not yet compliant. Currently, we’re  looking for partners to run our system in parallel with conventional load cells  for case studies that show we are as accurate or even more accurate than  conventional load cells for each type of product,” said Lischke.