Powders and granulation Flashcards

1
Q

Pharmaceutical definition of a powder

A

Describes a formulatin in which a drug powder has normally been mixed with other powdered exipients to produce the final product.

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2
Q

what is dusting powder

A

powder mixes for external uses only
- dusting powder
- clotrimazole powder

powder mixes for internal use only
-oral powders
-oral antibiotic syrup (amoxicillin oral suspension)

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3
Q

Measurments of powder flow properties

A

Angle of response

Bulk density

Critical orifice diameter

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4
Q

Pharmaceutical granule definition

A

powder particles that have been aggregated to from a larger particle

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5
Q

why do we granulate powders?

A

to prevent segregation
to improve the flow properties
to improve compaction properties

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6
Q

Two granulation methods

A

Dry granulation
-powders are miexed and compressed to form a slug
-slugs are then milled and sieved.
-used when APIs do not compress well after wet granulation or are sensitive to granulation fluids (water)

Wet granulation
-powders are dry blended and a granulating fluid is added.
-wet granules are screened, sieved and dried

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7
Q

five primary bonding mechanisms

A

NEED AULTONS FOR MORE DETAIL
1. adhesive and cohesive forces in the immobile liquid film
2. interfacial forces in the mobile liquid film within granules.
3. solid bridges after solvent evaporation
4. attractive forces (adhesive and cohesive) between solid particles
5. mechanical interlocking

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8
Q

Adhesive and cohesive forces

A

the presence of a sufficient amount of liquid in a powder will result in a very thin, immobile layer (adhesive forces)

Interparticular distances will be reduced causing increased particle attraction due to van der waals (cohesive)

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9
Q

Interfacial forces in mobile liquid film

A

addition of increasing amounts of granulation fluid will produce a mobile liquid film around the particles

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10
Q

solid bridges

A

solid bridges due to partial melting, hardening binders, crystallisation of dissolved substances play a part in sticking the pwoder particles together into granules

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11
Q

attractive forces between solid particles

A

in the absence of a granulating fluid, 2 attractive forces operate:
-electrostatic
van der waals

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12
Q

mechanical interlocking

A

particle size and shape will determine the degree of interlocking

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13
Q

granulation equipment

A

shear granulator
-high-speed mixer/granulator
-fluidised-bed-granulator

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14
Q

one common application of wet granulation

A

Multiparticulates (pellets/beads)
-small size 0.7 - 2.0mm
- good flow properties
- narrow particle size distribuiton
-low friability reduces dust formation
-distributed throughout GI track
-high surface area / volume ratio ideal for coating and maximises dissolution

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15
Q

extrusion / spheronisation

A

wet granulation is not immidietly dried until it has been shaked into sphetirical form by extradating them and then spheronisation they are then dried and sphere coated, the converted into capsules or tablets

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16
Q

advantages of pellets in the GI track

A

-less irregular passage through the GI track than single unit dosage forms
-less chance of ulcerative damage often experienced with single unit dosage forms
-failure of individual pellets will not result in dose dumping
-can contain high levels of active ingridient without using excessively large particles

17
Q

Advantages of pellets

A

-immidiete release or controlled release possible
- can be filled into hard gelatine capsules or compacted into tablets to form unit dosage forms
-can contain two or more active ingridiens
incompatible actives can be manufactured as seperate pellets
-can be coated at different ‘coat weights’ to produce

18
Q

Advantages of pellets

A

-immidiete release or controlled release possible
- can be filled into hard gelatine capsules or compacted into tablets to form unit dosage forms
-can contain two or more active ingridiens
incompatible actives can be manufactured as seperate pellets
-can be coated at different ‘coat weights’ to produce a range of release rates

19
Q

advantages of pellets in processing

A

-increased bulk density
-improved flow properties
- reduced dust production
-increased strength
-smooth surface for coating
regular shape for packing capsules

20
Q

disadvantages of pellets in processing

A

manufacture is more labour intensive than other granulation methods mainly due to the high levels of solvent required

21
Q

manufacturing process for pellets

A
  1. dry blending of a single batch using normal powder mixing equipment
  2. wet granulated
  3. extrusion and forms a rod shaped particles uniform in diamter
    4.spheronised and forms spherical shaped particles
  4. dried to achieve desired water content
    6.screened to achieve the desired narrow distribution
22
Q

factors effecting pellet quality

A

water content
-if less than the lower limit lots of dust formed furing spheronisation, producing a large yield of fines
-if more then over wetted mass results in agglomeration of individual pellets (large sphere)

composition
- different grades of the same exipient
-solubility of exipients and drug
-particle size of starting materials
-amount of type of granulation fluid used