Abstract
In this study, a novel phase-transient multilayer drug delivery system responsive to a unique stimulus, i.e., temperature, was introduced in cylindrical coordinates. The system is composed of three individual sections, including the drug core, phase-transient intermediate layer, and protecting polymeric coverage. The phase-transient layer gives smartness to the system and creates an “On-Off” release profile with increasing or decreasing the environmental temperature around the melting point of the layer. The “On-Off” response of the system was mathematically modeled by analyzing the heat and mass transfer equations in the pseudo-steady state and the effects of various parameters on the performance of the system were investigated. The modeling results showed the intensity of the effects of different kinds of factors, including the geometrical characteristics of the system (e.g., the radius of the drug core and the thicknesses of the intermediate and polymeric layers), the physical properties of the matrix materials (e.g., the thermal conductivities and diffusion coefficients of the intermediate and polymeric layers), and the operation conditions, on the response time lag and release kinetics of the presented system. The obtained results in this study predict methods to prepare multilayer temperature-responsive drug delivery systems with desired and optimized responses (e.g., with a short lag time) for practical biomedical applications.