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Practical application of roller compaction process modeling

By Reynolds, Gavin; Ingale, Rohit Roberts, Ron Kothari, Sanjeev; Gururajan, Bindhu

Published on

Abstract

Very limited work has been reported on comparing the performance of the roller compaction process at different scales. The majority of the approaches highlighted in the literature discuss the applicability of using confined uniaxial compaction for predicting the performance of the roller compaction process. In this paper a method was developed that allows the rolling theory of granular solids developed by Johanson [Johanson, J. R. (1965). A rolling theory for granular solids. ASME, Journal of Applied Mechanics Series E, 32(4), 842–848] to be used to infer the underlying material parameters from small-scale roller compaction experiments for both separation controlled or screw controlled configurations. Once these parameters are determined, the model can be used for predictive process design and scale-up in order to achieve target outputs such as ribbon density and throughput. The peak pressure, predicted by the model, can also be used to present roller compaction of a given formulation from a scale-independent perspective. This approach can be used to justify process parameter and equipment flexibility in the context of a pharmaceutical design space based on a proven acceptable range of peak pressures, or achieving target intermediate quality attributes, such as ribbon density.

Journal

Computers & Chemical Engineering. Volume 34, 7, 2010, 1049-1057

DOI

10.1016/j.compchemeng.2010.03.004

Type of publication

Peer-reviewed journal

Affiliations

  • AstraZeneca

Article Classification

Research Article

Classification Areas

  • odeling

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