How Does the Dissimilarity of Screw Geometry Impact Twin-Screw Melt Granulation?
Abstract
Using a model formulation of 80% gabapentin and 20% hydroxypropyl cellulose (KlucelTM), we investigate how differences in the geometry of mixing elements in the Leistritz Nano-16 and Micro-18 extruders affect granulation mechanisms and the properties of the resulting granules. Two extruders, Leistritz Nano-16 and Micro-18, commonly used in development and manufacturing, respectively, were used. The kneading blocks of the Nano-16 extruder are less efficient in dispersive mixing than the kneading blocks of the Micro-18 due to the thinner discs (2.5 mm wide) of the Nano-16. Therefore, our model formulation could be granulated only under a higher degree of fill (DF) by enhancing the axial compaction and heating of the barrel. In contrast, the thicker (5 mm wide) kneading blocks of the Micro-18 extruder provide efficient dispersive mixing that enables granulation without axial compaction and barrel heating. The higher specific mechanical energy (SME) achieved at higher screw speeds and lower feed rates led to more granulation. Because of the difference in granulation mechanisms between the two extruders, critical processing parameters also differed. Tabletability and degradant content of granules correlated positively with DF for the Nano-16 but with SME for the Micro-18 extruder.
Recommended Citation
N. Kittikunakorn and S. Paul and J. J. Koleng and T. Liu and R. Cook and F. Yang and V. Bi and T. Durig and C. C. Sun and A. Kumar and F. Zhang, "How Does the Dissimilarity of Screw Geometry Impact Twin-Screw Melt Granulation?," European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, vol. 157, Elsevier, Feb 2021.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejps.2020.105645
Department(s)
Materials Science and Engineering
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
0928-0987; 1879-0720
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2021 European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences (EUFEPS), All rights reserved.
Publication Date
01 Feb 2021
PubMed ID
33207275