Tablet Compression Consolidation and Compaction Physics
Tablet Compression Consolidation and Compaction Physics
Tablet compression as a phenomenon Inter-molecular bond formation in tableting Force-time and force-displacement treatments Reasons for its popularity are e.g. : - Accurate dosage of medicament - Ease of administration - Good stability - Suitable for large scale production
Tablet formulation
Tablet formulation generally consist of drug (or drugs) together with a varying number of other substances called excipients
Powder fluidity
Fluidity is essential for adequate filling of the dies in the tablet machine Pharmaceutical powders are mainly insulators. During powder handling operations, particles become electrically charged.
(microcrystalline cellulose, lactose) (PVP) (magnesiumstearate, talc) (MCC, Alginates) (Titanium dioxide, Riboflavin) (sucrose, mannitol, dextrose)
Electrostatic charge produces a tendency for particles to stick to themselves and to other surfaces.
Fine particles ( < 100 m), which have a high surface to mass ratio, are most cohesive. Ideal particle size for tablet compression is usually between 200 - 500 m If average powder particle size is too low, it must be granulated before tablet compression.
Granulation
Granulation is often necessary tabletting pre-process which converts powdered material into aggregates called granules
Granulation methods
Dry granulator
Granulation: 1. Improve fluidity 2. Degrease segregation of the powder components 3. Degrease dusting 4. Improve compressibility of the material
Tablet machines
- Two
3.
4.
1. Powder flows from the hopper into the die 2. The hopper swings away, and the upper punch is lowered to compress the tablet 3. Both punches are raised and the lower punch lift the tablet out of the die
Granules
5. Feeding mechanism
Hopper Die
Lower punch Upper punch
4. The hopper comes back into its original position and knocks the ejected tablet out
Die
Lower punch
The fill weight (weight of the tablet) can be adjusted by the (low) position of the lower punch The compression pressure (and hence the the hardness and porosity of tablet ) can be adjusted by the (low) position of the upper punch
Lower punch
Die
Series of dies are positioned circularly on the die table The upper and lower punches glide on cams
10 - 60 tablets/ minute Compression time : 120 - 1000 ms. Compression force: 0 - 30kN Instrumented - upper- and lower punch compression force -upper- ja lower punch displacement - ejection force
The filling takes place between points A and B under the feed frame. This is fed by the hopper As the table rotates, punches glide between pressure rolls and the upper punch is brought down and lower punch raised to compress a tablet. Both punches are then raised (by the cam contour) and the tablet is ejected
Most common problems facing tablet manufacturing: Kilian rotary tablet machine 1. Capping
16 punch pairs 300-700 tablets/minute Compression time : 30 - 100 ms Compression force: 0 - 50 kN Instrumented: upper- and lower punch force upper and lower punch displacement ejection force.
reasons: too dry powder, too fast compression, too high compression force, effect less binder
2. Lamination
reasons: same as in capping
3. Picking
reasons: not enough lubricant , too wet powder
In tablet compression, powder flow first from the hopper of the tablet
When the punch start to penetrate in to the die, the powder is forced to transform to a denser form. At first, smaller particles move to tha voids between larger particles
When the punch moves further there will not be any more free space for additional relative movement of particles. Stress starts to delelop at the particles contact points and material starts to deform.
The volume reduction mechanism that will dominate for a specific material is also dependent on factors such as: temperature (lower temperatures facilitate consolidation by fragmentation )
Tablet bonds
The process by which the consolidated powders are bonded together under pressure is not well undestood. The five dominating mechanisms, which are considered to adhere particles together are:
compaction rate (faster loading will generally facilitate consolidation by fragmentation) particle size (effect mainly on compression properties of brittle materias)
Bonding due to movable liquids such as capillary and surface tension forces Mechanical interlocking
Solid bridges
Solid bridges are proposed to form by melting, diffusion of atoms between surfaces or recrystallisation of solube materials in the compacts.
Van der Waals forces (most important distace attraction forces in tablet )
Compression force is spread in to the mass by particle to particle contacts. If particles are irregular and have a very small area at the contact points, the pressure there is very high. This increases atomic thermal motion and diffusion at these points.
Hydrogen bonding (important for some pharmaceutical materials.Mcc, lactose and sucrose add they compact strength considerably by them)
Electrostatic forces (are not considered to contribute to any large extent to the tensile strength of tablet)
Materials that have low melting point can also as a consequence of plastic flow and friction melt in contact points.
The thickness of the sorbed water layer depends upon the polarity of the powder surface and the humidity of the atmosphere.
At high relative humidity, the amount of water in the powder can increase so much that, in addition to the sorption water, there will be separate movable water phase, which is denoted condensed water.
In a fairly dry atmosphere, the water will be tightly bound, as a non-freely movable layer of water, which is denoted monolayer-adsorbed moisture.
The water molecules are linked to the surface and to each other by hydrogen bonds.
Molecules of the solid can dissolve in this water. The critical humidity at which this takes place is characteristics of the solid.
If two this kind of particles are brought into close proximity, water sorption layer can interact. The result is strong inter-particular attraction and particles have a joint water sorption layer.
Free water liquid bridges can be formed at contact points between particles. Because of the high surface tension of pure water there will be strong attraction between particles
Particles, which have a rough texture and irregular shape, can form bonds by mechanical interlocking. Particle are bond together by hooking and twisting.
Microcrystalline cellulose is considered to have the potential to bond by this method Pressure-porosity (volume) relationship (such as Heckel plot) Different types of stress relaxation mesurements
It is, however, often difficult to compare results from different authors. This is usually due to differences in the technical setups they have used, altough there are also serious conflicts in conclusions researchers that have employed similar methods.
Compression profiles
Force-Time Compression Profile Force-Distance Compression Profile
15000
12500
10000
10000
7500 5000
7500
5000
2500
2500
0 200
250
300
350
400
450
500
550
0 0 2 4 6 8
Time (ms)
As the upper punch penetrates deeper in to the dye, the force that is applayed to upper punch increases, with a slope that is determined by the deformation properties of the material compressed.
12000
upper punch force. This is due to die wall friction. The greater the die wall friction is, the greater is the difference between upper- and lower punch force.
12000
II In decompression
Compression force (N) Puristusvoima
10000
II
10000
II
the upper punch force do not drop to zero immediately. This is because the tablet
8000
III
8000
6000
will follow the upper punch for some time becauase of the elastic recovery
If tablet would recover totally, the shape of the profile in decompression phase would be a mirror image of the compression phase.
4000
2000
IV
0 150 200 250 300 350
IV After the upper punch has lost its contact to the tablet surface, there will still remain same residual force in the lower punch. This is because the tablet stick to the wall of the die
III
6000
4000
2000
IV
0 150 200 250 300 350
II
III
8000
III
6000
6000
4000
4000
2000
2000
IV
0 150 200 250 300 350 0 150 200 250 300
IV
350
Force-displacement curve
The area that remains under upper punch force-displacement curve is called with several names: Compression work
There is not big difference between the upper and lower punch forces. This is because both punches are
Puristusvoima (kN)
8
Time period, when the distance between the upper and lower punch is constatnt
Ylpaininvoima Alapaininvoima
12000
Upper punch force Ylpaininvoima Lower punch force Alapaininvoima
10000
Gross work
4
8000
Upper punch work II Part of this work is done to overcome die wall friction. III During decompression phase some of the work is recovered because the tablet itself will expand slightly when the pressure is relieved.
6000
II
4000
2000
III I
9000 9500 10000 10500 11000
12000
10000
force force
12000
volume reduction of powder bed and to an interparticulate friction and to a bond formation. It is calculated by subtracting W friction and Wexpand from gross work.
W kitka friction
8000
10000
Ylpaininvoima Alapaininvoima
6000
W muodonmuutos ja sidos
Net work
8000
Wfriction
4000
6000
W laajenemis
expand
2000
II
4000
2000
III I
9000 9500 10000 10500 11000
P 1 = 100
Materials that have high P1 values utilize large part of the energy input during compression to irreversible deformation. The value of P1 is not pressure independent
W1 PF = 100 % W1 + W 2
In order to get comparable results between different materials, powders should be compressed using such amount of powder that in the zero porosity the tablets have same height. Naturally, the dimensions of punches and the compression speeds must be the same.
6 10000
Fsmax 2000
W1
8000
1500
There is often a risk for large errors in force-displacement measurements because extremely large numbers (force measurements) are multiplied by extremely small numbers (displacement measurements). Errors in the compensations of the machine deformation and non - linearities in the displacement measurements can result in great errors, especially in equations where different work ratios are calculated.
6000
1000
W2 W2
4000
500
2000
0
0 0 50 100 150 200 250
11000
sp
11100
smax
11200
Avicel PH-101
5000
EF =
4000
3000
PF (%)
2000
Lactose 1
1000
0
Calipharm 0 50 100 150 200 250 Compression pressure (MPa)
so
10500
sod 11000
smax
17.5
15.0
Maize starch
12.5
Lactose
EF (%)
2.5