Particle Size, Moisture, and Fluidization Variations Described by Indirect In-line Physical Measurements of Fluid Bed Granulation

被引:0
作者
Tanja Lipsanen
Tero Närvänen
Heikki Räikkönen
Osmo Antikainen
Jouko Yliruusi
机构
[1] Orion Corporation Orion Pharma,Division of Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmacy
[2] University of Helsinki,undefined
来源
AAPS PharmSciTech | 2008年 / 9卷
关键词
fluid bed granulation; fluidization parameter; particle size; pressure difference; temperature;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The aim of this study was to evaluate an instrumentation system for a bench scale fluid bed granulator to determine the parameters expressing the changing conditions during the spraying phase of a fluid bed process. The study focused mainly on four in-line measurements (dependent variables): fluidization parameter (calculated by inlet air flow rate and rotor speed), pressure difference over the upper filters, pressure difference over the granules (lower filter), and temperature of the fluidizing mass. In-line particle size measured by the spatial filtering technique was an essential predictor variable. Other physical process measurements of the automated granulation system, 25 direct and 12 derived parameters, were also utilized for multivariate modeling. The correlation and partial least squares analyses revealed significant relationships between various process parameters highlighting the particle size, moisture, and fluidization effect. Fluidization parameter and pressure difference over upper filters were found to correlate with in-line particle size and therefore could be used as estimates of particle size during granulation. The pressure difference over the granules and the temperature of the fluidizing mass expressed the moisture conditions of wet granulation. The instrumentation system evaluated here is an invaluable aid to gaining more control for fluid bed processing to obtain repeatable granules for further processing.
引用
收藏
页码:1070 / 1077
页数:7
相关论文
共 77 条
  • [1] Aulton M. E.(1981)Fluidised bed granulation—factors influencing the quality of the product Int. J. Pharm. Technol. Prod. Manuf. 2 24-29
  • [2] Banks M.(1998)Wet granulation—fluidized bed and high shear techniques compared Pharm. Technol. Eur. 10 27-30
  • [3] Wørts O.(2001)Nucleation, growth and breakage phenomena in agitated wet granulation processes: a review Powder Technol. 117 3-39
  • [4] Iveson S. M.(1990)Granulation of potassium chloride in instrumented fluidized bed granulator—Part I: effect of flow rate Acta Pharm. Fennica 99 13-22
  • [5] Litster J. D.(1993)Influence of granulation and compression process variables on flow rate of granules and on tablet properties, with special reference to weight variation Int. J. Pharm. 102 117-125
  • [6] Hapgood K.(2000)Next generation fluidized bed granulator automation AAPS PharmSciTech 1 26-36
  • [7] Ennis B. J.(2001)Process analysis of fluidized bed granulation AAPS PharmSciTech 2 13-20
  • [8] Niskanen T.(2001)Visualization of fluid-bed granulation with self-organizing maps J. Pharm. Biomed. Anal. 24 343-352
  • [9] Yliruusi J.(2008)A new rapid on-line imaging method to determine particle size distribution of granules AAPS PharmSciTech 9 282-287
  • [10] Niskanen M.(2006)Process analytical technology in the pharmaceutical industry: a toolkit for continuous improvement PDA J. Pharm. Sci. Technol. 60 17-53