Packaging - Dye migration test (size < A4 paper)
Packages appearing visually intact may harbor microscopic channels enabling microbial ingress - physical seal testing confirms strength yet cannot detect small pathways that compromise sterility creating false confidence in package integrity. Dye penetration testing following ISO 11607 and ASTM F1929 provides sensitive detection of channel leaks in package seals through passive dye migration method. This technique reveals pathways that might admit microorganisms while seals appear visually intact, detects defects that physical testing misses including incomplete seal fusion or microscopic channels, and provides visual evidence of leak locations enabling targeted corrective actions. Critical for validating seal integrity ensuring sterile barrier properties beyond mechanical strength assessment, detecting channels that physical tests miss but microorganisms could penetrate, and demonstrating microbial barrier properties required by sterile packaging standards. For medical device packaging, dye penetration sensitivity exceeds microbial challenge testing providing conservative assessment, enables testing finished packages without destructive sampling required for other integrity tests, and provides rapid screening identifying problematic lots before release. The passive diffusion methodology simulates long-term storage exposure where small channels enable eventual dye penetration, reveals whether seal defects communicate through entire seal thickness creating pathways, and accommodates various package configurations from simple pouches to complex trays. Manufacturing validation uses dye testing verifying process parameters produce consistently sealed packages, investigating quality excursions when visual inspection appears acceptable yet dye reveals channels, and demonstrating corrective actions effectively eliminate channel formation restoring seal integrity.