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Original Research Article | OPEN ACCESS

Relationship Between Slugging Pressure and Brittle Fracture Tendency - A Case Study for Aspirin Tablets.

F E Eichie , R S Okor, M U Uhumwangho, I Y Osakue

Department of Pharmaceutics and Pharmaceutical Technology, University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria;

For correspondence:-  F Eichie   Email: eichie@uniben.edu

Published: 17 December 2005

Citation: Eichie FE, Okor RS, Uhumwangho MU, Osakue IY. Relationship Between Slugging Pressure and Brittle Fracture Tendency - A Case Study for Aspirin Tablets.. Trop J Pharm Res 2005; 4(2):483-487 doi: 10.4314/tjpr.v4i2.2

© 2005 The authors.
This is an Open Access article that uses a funding model which does not charge readers or their institutions for access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) and the Budapest Open Access Initiative (http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read), which permit unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited..

Abstract

Objective – Slugging is a pre-compression technique for the dry granulation of hydrolysable drugs (e.g. aspirin). The study was carried out to relate the slugging load to the hardness of the granules and the brittle fracture tendency of the final (recompressed) tablets.
Method – Varying compression load were applied to aspirin powder to form slugs, which were subsequently broken down to form granules. These were recompressed to give the final tablets. The hardness of the slugs was determined and taken as measure of the hardness of the resulting granules. The following tableting parameters were measured for the final tablets - tensile strength (T), packing fraction (Pf) and the brittle fracture index (BFI).
Results - A high slugging load was associated with the formation of hard slugs and hence hard granules. Upon recompression the hardest granules formed the hardest tablets (T = 3.29MN m-2) while the softest granules formed the softest tablets (T=1.09MN m-2). In turn, the hardest tablets displayed the highest brittle fracture tendency (BFI = 0.59) compared with the softest tablets (BFI= 0.21). A positive linear correlation existed between tablet hardness (T) and BFI values (r = 0.98).
Conclusion – The study showed that excessive slugging load produces hard aspirin granules which in turn yields hard but friable tablets.
 

Keywords: Slugging pressure, aspirin granules, tablet tensile strength, brittle fracture index

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