Process Improvement: Removal of the Second Alkaline Cleaning Step in Dual‑Anodized Products

Date

Publisher

Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico

Item Type

Article
Poster
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Abstract

This study addresses the removal of the second Alkaline Cleaning step in the dual-anodized process for titanium medical device components, which currently involves Color Anodize followed by Type II Anodize. Repetition of this cleaning step exposes silicone masking plugs to elevated temperatures, weakening their integrity and increasing the risk of cosmetic or functional defects. In addition, the redundant operation extends cycle time by 8–10 minutes per lot and reduces equipment availability. A structured validation methodology was applied, including risk and impact assessments, baseline scrap data review, confirmation runs, and operator readiness activities. Results demonstrated a significant and sustained reduction in scrap levels after eliminating the second cleaning step, with stability observed for multiple consecutive months. Process parameters remained within compliance, and throughput efficiency improved without compromising inspection rigor or product quality. The improvement aligns with lean manufacturing principles by eliminating non-value-added activities and strengthening process reliability. Keywords ⎯ Alkaline Cleaning, Anodize Process, Lean Manufacturing, Scrap Reduction.

Description

Design Project Article for the Graduate Programs at Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico

Keywords

Citation

Rosado Santana, M. M. (2025). Process Improvement: Removal of the Second Alkaline Cleaning Step in Dual‑Anodized Products [Unpublished manuscript]. Graduate School, Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico.