Shiyi Zhou, Yiting Wang, Zhe Li, Fei Wu, Yanlong Hong, Lan Shen, Xiao Lin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The study aimed to fingerprint the physical manufacturing properties of five commonly used acid sources in effervescent systems for designing the formulation and process of such systems. The hygroscopicity, texture properties, rheological torque, compressibility, tabletability, etc., were investigated to inspect 'powder direct compression (DC)' and 'wet granulation and compression' properties of citric (CA), tartaric (TA), malic (MA), fumaric (FA), and adipic acid (AA). The DC ability was evaluated by the SeDeM expert system. The results indicated that all acid powders failed to meet flowability requirements for DC, and plastic deformation dominated during compression. Furthermore, CA exhibited strong hygroscopicity and punch sticking, while MA demonstrated the best tabletability. TA had a large wet granulation space and was relatively the most suitable for DC. AA was extremely hygroscopic, and its flowability improved significantly as particle size increased. Finally, FA displayed the lowest hygroscopicity and ejection force as well as great compressibility and wet granulation space, and did not exhibit punch sticking, while the granule fragments dissolved slowly during disintegration. Generally speaking, the formulation or granulation affected the tabletability, indicating that pairing with other acids or suitable fillers could potentially improve its disadvantages. These multidimensional assessments effectively reduce the pre-exploration and enhance the efficiency of the development of effervescent systems.
期刊介绍:
Pharmaceutical Development & Technology publishes research on the design, development, manufacture, and evaluation of conventional and novel drug delivery systems, emphasizing practical solutions and applications to theoretical and research-based problems. The journal aims to publish significant, innovative and original research to advance the frontiers of pharmaceutical development and technology.
Through original articles, reviews (where prior discussion with the EIC is encouraged), short reports, book reviews and technical notes, Pharmaceutical Development & Technology covers aspects such as:
-Preformulation and pharmaceutical formulation studies
-Pharmaceutical materials selection and characterization
-Pharmaceutical process development, engineering, scale-up and industrialisation, and process validation
-QbD in the form a risk assessment and DoE driven approaches
-Design of dosage forms and drug delivery systems
-Emerging pharmaceutical formulation and drug delivery technologies with a focus on personalised therapies
-Drug delivery systems research and quality improvement
-Pharmaceutical regulatory affairs
This journal will not consider for publication manuscripts focusing purely on clinical evaluations, botanicals, or animal models.