Powders and Granulation Flashcards
(a) State the primary bonding mechanisms by which the individual powder components form wet granules.
Adhesive and cohesive forces in the mobile liquid film;
Interfacial forces in the mobile liquid film within granules
Describe a suitable piece of granulating equipment?
Shear granulator, high-speed mixer/granulator, fluidised-bed granulator.
Discuss the critical nature of the absolute amount of water used in terms of the rheological properties of the wet granulation and the effect of extrudate quality.
If too dry, the cohesive and adhesive forces will be weak and formation
of extrudate impossible from the partially wetted powders. The granulation will not exhibit the plastic flow necessary for successful extrusion and densification. Spheronisation will result in a fragmented powder. If too wet, extrusion will be easy but spheronisation will produce large
spheres.
Following spheronisation, the water content of the spheronised
pellets is measured at 30 %(w/w) and the total quantity of pellets
is 250 g prior to drying.
(a) Give a reason for the reduced amount of water measured in the
spheronised pellets compared with the wet granulation prior to
extrusion.
Frictional processes during extrusion and spheronisation produce heat
which causes granulating fluid to evaporate and exposure to the
environment causes further desorption of water
Following spheronisation, the water content of the spheronised pellets is measured at 30 %(w/w) and the total quantity of pellets is 250 g prior to drying.
Based on the absolute quantity of water measured in the pellets prior to drying, calculate the minimum amount of heat energy required to reduce the water content to 3 %(w/w). The specific
heat capacity of water is 4.18 J.g-1.K-1
, the latent heat of vapourisation is 2256 J.g-1 and room-temperature is 20C.
Quantity of water in pellets prior to drying = 250 g 30% = 75 g
Sensible heating from 20-100C (i.e. T = 80K) = Q1 = mcT
Evaporation of water (30% to 3% = 27%) = Q2 = mL
Total heat = Q1 + Q2
= (75 g 4.18 J.g-1.K-1 80K) + (27% of 250 g 2256 J.g-1
= 25,080 J + 152,280 J
= 177,360 J (177.36 kJ)
Describe a method for determining the final water content of the
pellets.
One from thermogravimetric analysis (TGA or heated balance),
Karl-Fischer potentiometric titration or dynamic vapour sorption (DVS).
Whats a powder?
a solid substance in the form of tiny loose particles.
powder (when used to describe a dosage form) describes a formulation in which a drug powder has normally been mixed with other powdered excipients to produce the final product.
What is an example of Powder mixes for Internal use only?
Oral powder - e.g. oral antibiotic syrup (amoxicillin oral suspension)
What is an example for powder mixes for external use only?
Dusting powder e.g antifungal powder (clotrimazole powder)
How do you measure powder properties?
Angle of repose, Bulk density ( tap density), Critical orifice diameter
What is a granule?
a small grain.
granules (when used as a dosage form) consist of
powder particles that have been aggregated to form
a larger particle.
How do you form a segregated powder, granules and monosized granules
Powder then overmixing forms segregated powder
Powder then granulation forms granules and then sieving forms monosized granules
Why do we require to granulate powder?
To prevent segregation
To improve the flow properties
To improve the compaction properties and other reasons in aultons pharmaceutics
State the two methods of granulation
Dry granulation and wet granulation
What is dry granulation?
Powders are mixed and compressed to form a slug
Slugs are then milled and sieved
Can be used for APIs that do not compress well after wet granulation or are sensitive to granulation fluids (mainly water).
What is a wet granulation?
Powders are dry blended and a granulating fluid (normally containing an adhesive binder) is added.
Wet granules are screened, sieved and dried
Individual granules contain bonded powder components
What are the five granulation mechanisms?
Powder particles within granules are bound together by
Adhesive and cohesive forces in the immobile liquid film.
Interfacial forces in the mobile liquid film within granules.
Solid bridges after solvent evaporation.
Attractive forces (adhesive and cohesive) between solid particles.
Mechanical interlocking.
Need to describe each of the five bonding mechanisms in more detail