5 - Week Tablet Compression Physics
5 - Week Tablet Compression Physics
1
Manual hydroulic
presses (simulator)
2
Typical pressure-time profile observed according to the stages
involved in tableting process
Ejection force
3
HD: Due to powder LD: Related to the
and die friction force transmission
Compression of layers
with or without colored
A: Lubr.
B: Unlubr.
4
filling-compression-compaction-decompression-ejection
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Heckel equation
6
Tablet compression energies
𝑋𝐹=𝑚𝑎𝑥
𝐴= න 𝐹. 𝑑𝑥
𝑋𝐹=0
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TABLET TESTING
• Controls of the starting materials
• Mass uniformity
• Decomposition products and impurities
• Hardness / tensile strength
• Friability
• Disintegration
• Dissolution
• Microbial quality
8
In vitro dissolution tests for immediate release solid oral
dosage forms are used:
(1) to assess the lot-to-lot quality of a drug product;
(2) to assess the stability of the drug product;
(3) to ensure continuing product quality and performance after certain
changes, such as changes in the formulation, the manufacturing
process, the site of manufacture, and the scale-up of the
manufacturing process; and
(4) to develop new formulations. In formulation development,
dissolution testing can aid in the selection of excipients, help
optimize the manufacturing process, and enable formulation of the
test product to match the release of the reference product.
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(EP 6.0 V1, Subdivision of tablets, ease of intake or posology –
uniformity of mass)
IMPORTANT...
Products that are not intended to be split, e.g. enteric coated tablets,
tablets which are film coated to maintain stability and some modified
release preparations, should not be split. However, those modified
release preparations using matrix technology or using compressed
film coated components could be split.
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COATING OF TABLETS:
Sugar coating - dragees
Film coated tablets
Formulations
Manufacturing processes
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Why are the coated dosage forms preferred?
12
The types of cores (substrate) for coating
Crystals
Different types of granules
Pellets
Tablets Properties
Soft and hard gelatin capsules Form/shape and size
Mechanicel strength and
friability
Formulation
Sensitivity to heat and
moisture
Interactions with coating
13
There are some drawbacks of sugar coating.
Due to the increase in diameter and weight (about 2 times or
30-100 % increase), packaging and transfer-handling fees have
increased.
There is a possibility of damage due to the fragility of the
coating.
Specialized personnel for coating process are required to
achieve high aesthetic quality.
There is a polishing process that makes coding difficult to
print.
There is a complex application which makes the transition to
automation difficult: Various operations and functions are
used.
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Excipients used in the formulations of sugar coating
• Sugars:
Saccharose
Crystallization
Preparations of
sugar solutions
Inversion
Glocose
Lactose
Invert sugar
Starch sugars
Sugar alcohols
Xylitol
Maltitol
Mannitol
Sorbitol
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Other excipients used in the sugar coating formulation
Coating agents:
Gum acacia, agar-agar, carboxymethyl starch, cellulose ethers, dextrins, gelatin,
PVA, PVP, sodium alginate
Fillers: Calcium carbonate, talc, titanium dioxide, calcium sulfate, calcium hydrogen
phosphate, calcium lactate
Coloring agents:
Soluble organic dyes, pigments, lakes
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• Flavors
Fruit essences, methyl salicylate, vanilla, cocoa, chocolate, condensed
milk, caramel
• Lubricants
Talc
• Polishing agents
Waxes, oils, resins
• Suspending agents
Surfactants
17
Coating process and coating layers
Coating layers:
Priming
1. Sealing (protective coating)
coat
2. Subcoating Rounding
Uniform
3. Corrective coating (rossing/smoothing) layer
coating
4. Color coating Finishing
5. Polishing layer