Review of sensing technologies for measuring powder density variations during pharmaceutical solid dosage form manufacturing

Oral solid dosage forms, the most widely used pharmaceutical products, are typically manufactured through a series of processes that transform a blend of drug and excipient particles into a densified product with consistent quality attributes. While the densification of powder during processing is crucial and directly impacts the quality of the drug product, there is still scarcity of non-destructive and fast sensor systems that provide access to the powder density at critical process stages.

Highlights

Review of sensors for powder density variation measurements during processing.
Focus on major conventional pharmaceutical solid oral dosage form processing routes.
Discussion on impact of variation in powder density on final product quality.
Principles, instrumentation and applications of common/emerging technologies.
Technology comparison: Data acquisition/processing, resolution, system integration.

This review discusses methods for monitoring density variations of particulate matter by describing their principles and presenting application examples. The techniques discussed range from common in-line methods such as near-infrared spectroscopy, acoustic emission and ultrasonic methods as well as techniques with potential to be more frequently applied in a pharmaceutical manufacturing line, i.e. terahertz spectroscopy and imaging, microwave technique, electrical tomography and X-ray based methods. This review also compares these techniques in terms of measurement and data processing time, resolution and its ability to be integrated in a process.

See the article here

Author links open overlay panelS. Stranzinger, D.Markl, J.G.Khinast, A.Paudel
TrAC Trends in Analytical Chemistry
Available online 9 December 2020, 116147
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trac.2020.116147

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