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Research Article

Powder flow in an automated uniaxial tester and an annular shear cell: a study of pharmaceutical excipients and analytical data comparison

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Pages 1476-1483 | Received 13 Apr 2012, Accepted 05 Sep 2012, Published online: 08 Oct 2012
 

Abstract

Background: An automated version of uniaxial powder flow testing has recently been developed and there is a need for experimental data from pharmaceutical powders.

Purpose: To compare the novel testing method with an annular shear cell using different pharmaceutical excipients. A particular aim was to gain an improved understanding of potential differences in the obtained flow results.

Methods: Nine excipients were studied with both flow testers at different consolidation levels. Unconfined yield strengths were determined at similar major consolidation stresses. Finally, an anisotropic stress factor was calculated and the fractal character of the powders was assessed by means of image analysis in a rotating drum.

Results: Data correlated generally well; however, the unconfined yield strength from uniaxial testing resulted mostly in lower values compared to annular shear cell testing. Differences were specific for the given excipients and mannitol demonstrated the highest discrepancy of measured flow parameters. The differences were first discussed by considering wall friction, anisotropy of forces, brittleness as well as the fractal nature of the powder surface. This heterogeneity of the powder as well as the anisotropy of forces was also found to be important for the relative flow index.

Conclusions: The automated uniaxial method demonstrated faster and more reproducible flow testing as compared to an annular shear cell. Therefore, the new method has a high potential in pharmaceutics for example in the quality-control of powders.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank the School of Life Sciences at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (Muttenz, Switzerland) for funding this research. We express our sincere thanks to Martin Cavegn, Oliver Streng and Nicolas Gautschi for their experimental support.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest.

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