Granulation 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is granulation?

A

process by which dry primary powder particles are processed to adhere and form larger particles

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2
Q

Why is granulation important?

A

improves flow properties of the mixture

prevents segregation of the mixture
- differently sized particles cause segregation which affects dose and weight uniformity

improves compaction characteristics of the mixture
- via the use of granulation fluids

reduce the hazard of cake formation for hygroscopic materials

increases bulk density

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3
Q

What are hygroscopic materials?

A

materials which absorb moisture from their surroundings

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4
Q

What is the difference between wet and dry granulation?

A

wet
- uses granulation fluid to facilitate agglomeration by formation of wet mass by adhesion
= granulation fluid can be used alone or with a binder

dry
- uses mechanical compression or compaction to facilitate the agglomeration of dry powder particles

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5
Q

What are the properties of a good granulation fluid? What are examples?

A

must be volatile
- must be able to be evaporated at specific temperatures
= allows removal from the final product

must be non-toxic
- must be safe to use

water - most commonly used
ethanol
isopropanol

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6
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of water as a granulation fluid?

A

advantages

  • cheap
  • environmentally friendly
disadvantages
- has a higher boiling point resulting in longer drying time
= affects chemical stability of the drug
- can start hydrolysis 
= affects stability of the drug
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7
Q

What are the different bonding mechanisms of granulation?

A

adhesion and cohesion forces
interfacial forces
solid bridges
attractive forces

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8
Q

How do adhesion and cohesion forces work?

A

adhesion and cohesion forces are found in immobile film
- takes place by a sufficient amount of liquid
= moisture content on the drug substance can form immobile films

  • immobile film decreases interparticulate distance and increases contact area
    = Van der Waals forces increase as it is inversely proportional to the square distance of separation
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9
Q

How do interfacial forces work?

A

interfacial forces are found in mobile liquid films
- when the added liquid exceeds the amount required to form an immobile layer then the excess forms a mobile layer

dry state
pendular
funicular
capillary suspension

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10
Q

How do solid bridges work?

A

can occur in three ways

partial melting
- binder with low melting point is used
= pressure causes melting, upon relieving the pressure the binder will crystallise starting the formation of solid bridges

hardening binders
- adhesive binder/polymer (polyvinylpyrolidine/PVP) is used
= binder will form liquid bridges which will harden over time as they are dried/heated

crystallisation of dissolved materials
- binder (lactose) will solubilise/dissolve some of the materials
= solubilised/dissolved material will adhere as the bidder hardens upon drying

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11
Q

How do attractive forces work?

A

electrostatic forces
- help with powder cohesion during mixing

Van der Waals
- strength increases as particle size decreases
= are stronger than electrostatic forces

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12
Q

What is the mechanisms of granule formation?

A

nucleation
- formation of a small nuclei as particles come in contact with each other
= adhesion/liquid bridges, pendular state then capillary state which acts as a nuclei

transition
- nuclei grows larger as single particles are added to the nuclei by pendular bridges
= a limited amount of nuclei are bound

ball growth
- further nuclei growth by different mechanisms
= coalescence, breakage, abrasion transfer, layering

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13
Q

What are the different mechanisms of ball growth?

A

coalescence
- granules join to form a larger granule

breakage
- granules (1) break into other fragments that adhere to other granules (2)

abrasion transfer
- attrition (reduction) of materials from granules during agitation and adhere to other granules

layering
- addition of a second batch of the powder mix that form a layer around the granule

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