Block hopes to make more nitrile gloves than one plant can produce, but first he's focused on completing the Grove City plant and beginning to build market share, he said.
He's getting help from Akron and its eponymous university, which has played a role in American Nitrile getting off the ground with engineering help from its polymer schools thanks to an introduction by Barry Rosenbaum, a senior fellow at the University of Akron Research Foundation.
Rosenbaum connected Block to, among others, University of Akron professor and researcher Dr. Sadhan Jana. He and others at the school are working with American Nitrile and Ohio Penal Industries on a program that uses the university to provide associates degrees to people in Ohio prisons, and Block has said he'll hire about 50 of those students for his plant.
But Jana thinks the university can do much more work with American Nitrile, not only to help it continuously improve its product and processes, but ultimately to revolutionize the gloves entirely.
"A glove needs to be smarter," Jana said. "It can expand its functions beyond what people are immediately thinking about."
How can a glove be smart? Jana has lots of ideas for that, but some of the first smart gloves will likely be able to detect certain chemicals or drugs, he said.
For example, maybe a police officer or EMS worker would have gloves that turn a different color when exposed to fentanyl, or even turn different colors depending on which drug or chemical they touched. That's also in keeping with work done by others. The University's Dr. Abraham Joy has invented technology that can be applied to wipes, enabling them to detect opioids.
Block, who already employs 15 engineers, including four chemical engineers, said he looks to Akron for technical help, engineering hires and ideas. He said he's excited about some of the technologies Jana discussed with him and said American Nitrile plans to use them.
"We absolutely plan to manufacture it," Block said of a drug-detecting glove. "It's just a question of when the technology will be ready."
Hull hopes to make further contributions as well. He's hoping American Nitrile also will get into surgeons' gloves, which unlike most medical nitrile gloves are hand-specific to offer more dexterity. They also cost a bit more and have a slightly better margin, Hull said.
Hull already has contributed a new hand mold to American Nitrile, in exchange for a small amount of equity in the company, he said. Block said those molds, patented by Hull, provide more finger dexterity than competing gloves, giving him another competitive edge.
Hull said he can help more, if needed, and is more than willing.
"We have more than 50 patents," he said of Summit Glove.
Block said he's grateful for all of the local support he's gotten so far. A Columbus native, Block moved from the New York City area to start his company here because he thought he would be close to the expertise and support he'd need to succeed.
He's gotten it, too, he said. The state has helped, with a JobsOhio grant of $3.5 million. Hull has been more than generous with his time and expertise, and the University of Akron is proving valuable as a source of both technology and worker training, Block said.
It's all in keeping with what drove Block to do this in the first place, when the U.S. found itself short on gloves and other PPE in the pandemic.
"There's no reason PPE can't be manufactured here," he reasoned then.
Block said he's not quite done hiring for the Columbus plant, which currently employs about 150 people.
That number will go up to about 200, but probably no higher, he said. More people will be needed for new production lines, but fewer will be needed for packaging as that function is further automated, he said.
Then, he'll start exploring opportunities to open a second plant.
"We're just scratching the surface here," Block said.