Sub-100nm drug particle suspensions prepared via wet milling with low bead contamination through novel process intensification

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-7-2015

Abstract

There is sustained interest in sub-100. nm particles of poorly water-soluble drugs as such small particles offer improved permeation through various biological barriers and result in rapid onset of therapeutic action. An intensified wet stirred media milling process was developed here for fast production of sub-100. nm drug particles with low bead contamination and reduced energy consumption. Griseofulvin and indomethacin, two model poorly water-soluble drugs, were wet-milled. Yttrium-stabilized zirconia beads with a nominal size ranging from 50. μm to 800. μm were used in the baseline process, which was subsequently intensified with the optimal bead size by increasing rotor tip speed, bead loading, and suspension flow rate stepwise, as guided by a microhydrodynamic model. Laser diffraction, dynamic light scattering, scanning electron microscopy, and XRD were used to characterize the milled suspensions. Results from the baseline process indicated that sub-100. nm griseofulvin particles were only produced when 50 or 100. μm beads were used in the 360. min milling experiments. Interestingly, using 50. μm beads led to the formation of sub-100. nm griseofulvin particles within 240. min with the lowest bead (zirconium) contamination and specific energy consumption. This could be explained though the microhydrodynamic model, revealing that 50. μm beads led to the highest frequency of drug particle compressions yet generated the lowest bead contact pressure. The processing time was further reduced to as low as 64. min producing griseofulvin particle size of 100. nm through step-wise intensification of the milling process with the 50. μm beads, as quantified by a milling intensity factor. Due to the enhancement of the breakage kinetics, the process intensification enabled shorter milling to attain 100. nm particles, thus resulting in significant energy savings and low bead contamination despite an increase in power consumption. The general applicability of the process intensification method was confirmed through milling of indomethacin, which also led to sub-100. nm particles faster with reduced energy consumption and low contamination.

Identifier

84926457178 (Scopus)

Publication Title

Chemical Engineering Science

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ces.2015.03.020

ISSN

00092509

First Page

207

Last Page

220

Volume

130

Grant

EEC-0540855

Fund Ref

National Science Foundation

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS