The effect of punch tilting on the mechanism of punch penetration in the die of a rotary tablet machine during the compression cycle was evaluated by installing four displacement transducers on one station of a rotary machine. Two transducers were symmetrically positioned beside the upper punch in the upper turret, and the other two transducers were similarly placed beside the lower punch in the lower turret. Microcrystalline cellulose and dicalcium phosphate dihydrate were compressed at 5, 10, 15 and 20 kN using two different machine speeds, in order to quantify the effect of punch tilting in the evaluation of punch penetration. These compression data served to construct the powder bed reduction curves, from which it was possible to establish that punch tilting is directly proportional to the compression force used. Tilting is maximal at the beginning of the dwell time, disappears at half dwell time, and reaches a new maximum at the end of the dwell time. In latter case, tilting occurred in the direction opposite that of the first maximum. The impact of tilting in powder densification behaviour, evaluated through the construction of Heckel plots, depends on the compression force used in the analysis. Heckel plots are as distorted as the compression force is elevated. Consequently, the calculated Heckel parameters differ from the real values. Unless a very low compression force is used, a proper Heckel analysis can be performed in a rotary machine only if it is fitted with a device that includes the effect of punch tilting in the evaluation of punch penetration.
The effect of punch tilting in evaluating powder densification in a rotary tablet machine
CESPI, MARCO;BONACUCINA, Giulia;PALMIERI, Giovanni Filippo
2008-01-01
Abstract
The effect of punch tilting on the mechanism of punch penetration in the die of a rotary tablet machine during the compression cycle was evaluated by installing four displacement transducers on one station of a rotary machine. Two transducers were symmetrically positioned beside the upper punch in the upper turret, and the other two transducers were similarly placed beside the lower punch in the lower turret. Microcrystalline cellulose and dicalcium phosphate dihydrate were compressed at 5, 10, 15 and 20 kN using two different machine speeds, in order to quantify the effect of punch tilting in the evaluation of punch penetration. These compression data served to construct the powder bed reduction curves, from which it was possible to establish that punch tilting is directly proportional to the compression force used. Tilting is maximal at the beginning of the dwell time, disappears at half dwell time, and reaches a new maximum at the end of the dwell time. In latter case, tilting occurred in the direction opposite that of the first maximum. The impact of tilting in powder densification behaviour, evaluated through the construction of Heckel plots, depends on the compression force used in the analysis. Heckel plots are as distorted as the compression force is elevated. Consequently, the calculated Heckel parameters differ from the real values. Unless a very low compression force is used, a proper Heckel analysis can be performed in a rotary machine only if it is fitted with a device that includes the effect of punch tilting in the evaluation of punch penetration.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.