No market. The polymers they're using now are dirt cheap and their customers don't know the difference.Sue U wrote:Well there's a business opportunity for you, then. Here's a list of all the IOL manufacturers, each linked to their product specs. Sell them on some new polymers and, given the volume of cataract surgery, you could be rich beyond your dreams.rubato wrote:They use an acrylic plastic which is very very very cheap but turns yellow over time after exposure to UV. I make better optical polymers than that at work, as do many other people, and I can't figure out why they're not using them. Inertia? The opthamologist was surprised to hear that nearly all organic materials turn yellow under UV and that alternatives were available, but not used by the prosthesis makers. Weird.
And I make more money than I need, or want.
Currently I'm making a material (actually 3 materials) to make better photovoltaic devices. It's cheap to make (yay!) and provides a very large financial benefit to our customers (yay!). I have a great high-transmittance optical material with a high refractive index which is a little pricey but is very rubust to x-rays and gamma rays (UV does nothing to it) but other than optics for satellites (too small a market to care about) its not worth anything... yet.
yrs,
rubato


