Editions   North America | Europe | Magazine

WhatTheyThink

CTI Introduces New Heat-Activated, Tamper-Evident Ink to Improve Detection

Press release from the issuing company

‘Tamper Alert’ Assists Chemicals, Pharma, Food & Electronics Industries 

Colorado Springs, Colorado U.S.A. - Chromatic Technologies Inc. (CTI) announced the introduction of Tamper Alert, a new irreversible, heat-activated ink technology to identify tamper evidence in labels and packaging for chemicals, pharmaceuticals, food, electronics and other products targeted for theft and counterfeiting.

CTI’s newest technology is a breakthrough in tamper-evidence providing customers with a tight activation window where the alert transitions from colorless to full color within a range of 10° C.  Traditional irreversible technologies require a transition window between 30° to 50° C. (86° F. to 122° F.).  This results in weak color activation and detection at lower temperatures.

The new Tamper Alert technology is available in target activation temperatures of 50° C. (122° F.), 60° C. (140° F.), 70° C. (158° F.) and 80° C. (176° F.). 

“For much of our 24-year-history, CTI has produced inks that change ‘back and forth’ based on temperature or sunlight. This was demonstrated in our ink used recently for the U.S. Postal Service 2017 solar eclipse stamp,” said Lyle Small, CTI’s founder and chief executive officer. “Now, we’ve perfected an ink that goes only one-way. It’s irreversible and it’s used to show a product that has been tampered with, or has undergone temperature changes that impact the product’s quality.”

The Tamper Alert invention also incorporates CTI’s “Turbo” color technology creating the strongest color alert in tamper evidence in blue, green, black and red.

“CTI receives 30 calls every year from across the world seeking improved tamper evidence technology,” Mr. Small added. “We’re constantly asked, ‘Do you have something that activates in a tighter temperature window and has stronger color?’ It was very tough chemistry to figure out, but the team finally did it.”

At present, Tamper Alert is available only in water-based applications.

 

Discussion

Join the discussion Sign In or Become a Member, doing so is simple and free

WhatTheyThink is the official show daily media partner of drupa 2024. More info about drupa programs