• Title of article

    Study of the compaction behaviour and compressibility of binary mixtures of some pharmaceutical excipients during direct compression

  • Author/Authors

    Valeriu and Kلsa، نويسنده , , Péter and Bajdik، نويسنده , , Jلnos and Zsigmond، نويسنده , , Zsolt and Pintye-Hَdi، نويسنده , , Klلra، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    859
  • To page
    863
  • Abstract
    Tablets produced in the pharmaceutical industry consist of more than one component. The densification behaviour, the compaction properties of a formulation are strongly influenced by the characteristics of the mixture, e.g. the particle size fractions of the components. compression is a well-known and simple method in tablet manufacturing. It has a number of advantages, the greatest of which are the saving of time, labour and cost. It involves only a few processing steps from beginning to end, as compared with up to a dozen steps for wet granulation. However, direct compression also has certain disadvantages: the physical limitations of the drug and the physical properties of the raw materials present become more critical and must be controlled more precisely. died the compressibility of some excipients commonly used in pharmaceutical technology, both alone and in binary mixtures. With this aim, we compressed the materials into tablets with a Korsch EK0 instrumented eccentric tablet machine (Emil Korsch Maschinenfabrik, Berlin, Germany). The compression tools were flat-faced bevel-edged punches 8 mm in diameter with a halving line on one side, equipped with strain gauges and a displacement transducer. The binary mixtures were compared through the use of compression cycles and energetic parameters.
  • Keywords
    Compaction , Pharmaceutical excipients , Compressibility , Direct compression , Energetic parameters
  • Journal title
    Chemical Engineering and Processing: Process Intensification
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Chemical Engineering and Processing: Process Intensification
  • Record number

    1609985