2018 AIChE Annual Meeting
(200al) Anti-Static Agent Addition in Excipients – Always a Decent Way to Increase Powder Process-Ability in Pharmaceutical Industries?
Authors
Moreover, to increase powders process-ability, it is commonly admitted to blend excipients and antistatic material, in order to decrease powders triboelectric effect. In this poster, we will show how different talc mass fractions additions affect excipients behaviour. For this purpose, two different lactose grades were selected: Inhalac 400 and Flowlac 90. Five talc mass fractions are studied: 0, 5, 10, 15 and 20%. The blends compaction dynamic (GranuPack instrument), electrical charges (GranuCharge instrument), granulation and dynamic flowability (GranuDrum instrument) are investigated. The additions are found to decrease the electrical charges in contact with Stainless-Steel material (for a specific amount of talc), to limit lactose agglomeration tendency, but also to decrease powder dynamic flowability. Moreover, for the Flowlac 90 it was found that the compaction dynamic is faster with a high fraction of talc.
It will be also shown, that the anti-static agent addition is not every time a decent solution.