what is granulation?
advantages of granulation
improves flowability
reduce segregation tendency
improve compactability
reduce dust
4 different methods of granulation
(bet wet and thermoplastic: continuous wet granulation using twin screw extrusion)
material characteristics required for direct compression
when is direct compression used
to prepare free flowing powders for tableting, mix and blend, wo the additional step to increase particles size
what are the tablet (slug) characteristics at the end of dry granulation - slugging method
what to do to convert slugs into granules?
what is dry granulation - slugging?
powdered tableting where pre-mix are compressed in large tablets/slugs of 25mm or larger, using heavy-duty compaction machines
what is dry granulation - roll compaction
mixed powder blend passed bet 2 counter-rotating rollers and the compact is formed, which is milled into granules
compacts = flake, ribbon, briquette
why is the roll surface in compaction roll important
establishes the friction required bet product and roll surface
adv and disadv of smooth compacts
adv: force applied was even
disadv: material can slip between the roll, thus no ribbon may be formed
adv and disadv of serrated/textured compacts
adv: provide better grip
disadv: pressure at top and bottom (peak and valley is different)
advantages of roller compaction
bonding mechanism in dry granulation
step 1: particle rearrangement
~ powder moves to fill spaces, thus displaces air –> increase powder density
~ particles start to deform as compression forces increase, more contact points bet particles –> more bonding happens where plastic deformation happens
step 2: particle fragmentation
~ at higher compression: second stage of bond formation
~ fragmented particles create new surfaces, increase contact, thus increase bonding sites
step 3: particle bonding
~ occurs at molecular level, by vdW forces
factors affecting compact strength for dry granulation
why is wet granulation preferred over dry
wet granulation can use two types of solvent. but which is more preferred
- non-aq solvent for water sensitive material = factory has to be explosion-proof
disadvantages of wet granulation
steps for a small scale wet granulation
when does agglomerate growth happens?
when the eq between crushing and coalescence, and when the eq FAVOURS the coalescence mechanism
3 ways agglomerate growth happens
(1) stronger agglomerates coalesce by collision with other agglomerates to form bigger ones
(2) weaker agglomerates are crushed, where the fragments/fines re-enter into the cycle of nucleation-coalescence
(3) or the fragment/fines picked up by bigger agglomerates by layering process
what is liquid saturation?
ratio of pore volume occupied by liquid to the total volume of pores within agglomerate
can have:
3-phase = air, liquid, solid (unsaturated)
2-phase = liquid, solid (saturated)
why does densification promote agglomerate growth by coalescence
densification increases liquid saturation and surface plasticity –> promote agglomerate growth by coalescence
4 different states of during densification of agglomerate and the trend seen with agglomerates becoming denser
(1) pendular
(2) funicular
(3) capillary
(4) droplet (has surface plasticity, agglomerate growth occurs)
when agglomerates becomes denser, more resistant to breakdown due to attrition