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Research Article

Continuous production of drug nanoparticle suspensions via wet stirred media milling: a fresh look at the Rehbinder effect

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Pages 266-283 | Received 24 Nov 2011, Accepted 12 Mar 2012, Published online: 16 Apr 2012
 

Abstract

Nanoparticles of BCS Class II drugs are produced in wet stirred media mills operating in batch or recirculation mode with the goal of resolving the poor water-solubility issue. Scant information is available regarding the continuous production of drug nanoparticles via wet media milling. Griseofulvin and Naproxen were milled in both recirculation mode and multi-pass continuous mode to study the breakage dynamics and to determine the effects of suspension flow rate. The evolution of the median particle size was measured and described by an empirical breakage model. We found that these two operation modes could produce drug nanosuspensions with similar particle size distributions (PSDs). A reduced suspension flow rate slowed the breakage rate and led to a wider PSD and more differentiation between the two operation modes. The latter part of this study focused on the roles of stabilizers (hydroxypropyl cellulose and sodium lauryl sulfate) and elucidation of the so-called Rehbinder effect (reduction in particle strength due to adsorbed stabilizers such as polymers and surfactants). Milling the drugs in the absence of the stabilizers produced primary nanoparticles and their aggregates, while milling with the stabilizers produced smaller primary nanoparticles with minimal aggregation. Using laser diffraction, BET nitrogen adsorption, scanning electron microscopy imaging, and a microhydrodynamic analysis of milling, this study, for the first time, provides sufficient evidence for the existence of the Rehbinder effect during the milling of drugs. Not only do the polymers and surfactants allow proper stabilization of the nanoparticles in the suspensions, but they also do facilitate drug particle breakage.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Professor Zafar Iqbal and his student Ye Ying of the Department of Chemistry and Environmental Science for their help in acquiring the Raman spectra and Mohammad Azad for his help with the PXRD experiment. We also thank Anagha Bhakay for providing valuable comments on a previous draft of this manuscript.

Declaration of interest

The authors acknowledge financial support from the National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Structured Organic Particulate Systems through the Grant EEC-0540855.

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