The Institute for Manufacturing (IfM) is part of a new research hub for transforming the way medicines and other high-value materials are made.
We will be building on our current work looking at how digital supply chains can connect patients and consumers using sensors, diagnostics and smart packaging with the digital factory.
Jag Srai
The hub, led by the University of Strathclyde, is one of six in the UK which will share £60 million of government funding as part of the government’s industrial strategy.
The Future Continuous Manufacturing and Advanced Crystallisation (CMAC) Hub has been set up to develop innovative manufacturing processes for today’s high-value products – including medicines – which are estimated to generate £50 billion each year for the UK economy.
Professor David Cardwell, Head of the Department of Engineering, said: “I am delighted that the Centre for International Manufacturing is playing a pivotal role in this new hub which aligns with many of both the University’s and Department’s research priorities and with Cambridge’s expanding healthcare and pharmaceutical ecosystem.”
Jag Srai
Announcing investment in the new hubs, Universities and Science Minister Jo Johnson said: “Developing new innovative manufacturing techniques will help UK industry create new products, explore more business opportunities and ensure the UK becomes more competitive and productive.
“This investment will lay the foundations to allow industry and our world-leading universities to thrive for years to come and is exactly the type of project that our upcoming Industrial Strategy will look to support.”
The hub’s research team is supporting industry in moving from ‘batch crystallisation’ to ‘continuous crystallisation’, a more dynamic process which allows manufacturing to take place within smaller, more cost-effective facilities using smaller quantities of expensive ingredients and less energy, with more control over the final product quality and performance.
Under the leadership of Dr Jag Srai, Head of the IfM’s Centre for International Manufacturing, Cambridge researchers will be looking at how these new technologies and processes will transform the supply chains for medicines and other high-value products.
Jag said: “Continuous manufacturing and digital supply chains have the potential to make truly personalised products and medicines a reality. We will be building on our current work looking at how digital supply chains can connect patients and consumers using sensors, diagnostics and smart packaging with the digital factory.”
Professor Andy Neely, Head of the IfM, said: “The work that Jag Srai and his team have been doing on pharmaceutical supply chains is genuinely ground-breaking and will play a key role in ensuring that the UK remains at the forefront of pharmaceutical and advanced materials manufacturing and innovative supply.”
This article originally appeared on the IfM website.