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Experimental and computational determination of the hydrodynamics of mini vessel dissolution testing systems.
Int J Pharm. 2016 Aug 20; 510(1):336-49.IJ

Abstract

Mini vessel dissolution testing systems consist of a small-scale 100-mL vessel with a small paddle impeller, similar to the USP Apparatus 2, and are typically utilized when only small amounts of drug product are available during drug development. Despite their common industrial use, mini vessels have received little attention in the literature. Here, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) was used to predict velocity profiles, flow patterns, and strain rate distribution in a mini vessel at different agitation speeds. These results were compared with experimental velocity measurements obtained with Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV). Substantial agreement was observed between CFD results and PIV data. The flow is strongly dominated by the tangential velocity component. Secondary flows consist of vertical upper and lower recirculation loops above and below the impeller. A low recirculation zone was observed in the lower part of the vessel. The radial and axial velocities in the region just below the impeller are very small especially in the innermost core zone below the paddle, where tablet dissolution occurs. Increasing agitation speed reduces the radius of this zone, which is always present at any speed, and only modestly increases the tangential flow intensity, with significant implication for dissolution testing in mini vessels.

Authors+Show Affiliations

New Jersey Institute of Technology, Otto H. York Department of Chemical, Biological and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Newark, NJ 07102-1982, USA.New Jersey Institute of Technology, Otto H. York Department of Chemical, Biological and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Newark, NJ 07102-1982, USA. Electronic address: piero.armenante@njit.edu.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27317988

Citation

Wang, Bing, and Piero M. Armenante. "Experimental and Computational Determination of the Hydrodynamics of Mini Vessel Dissolution Testing Systems." International Journal of Pharmaceutics, vol. 510, no. 1, 2016, pp. 336-49.
Wang B, Armenante PM. Experimental and computational determination of the hydrodynamics of mini vessel dissolution testing systems. Int J Pharm. 2016;510(1):336-49.
Wang, B., & Armenante, P. M. (2016). Experimental and computational determination of the hydrodynamics of mini vessel dissolution testing systems. International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 510(1), 336-49. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpharm.2016.06.036
Wang B, Armenante PM. Experimental and Computational Determination of the Hydrodynamics of Mini Vessel Dissolution Testing Systems. Int J Pharm. 2016 Aug 20;510(1):336-49. PubMed PMID: 27317988.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Experimental and computational determination of the hydrodynamics of mini vessel dissolution testing systems. AU - Wang,Bing, AU - Armenante,Piero M, Y1 - 2016/06/16/ PY - 2016/04/15/received PY - 2016/06/06/revised PY - 2016/06/12/accepted PY - 2016/6/19/entrez PY - 2016/6/19/pubmed PY - 2017/4/20/medline KW - Agitation speed KW - Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) KW - Dissolution apparatus KW - Dissolution testing KW - Flow pattern KW - Hydrodynamics KW - Mini vessel KW - Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) KW - Strain rate KW - USP 2 KW - Velocity profiles SP - 336 EP - 49 JF - International journal of pharmaceutics JO - Int J Pharm VL - 510 IS - 1 N2 - Mini vessel dissolution testing systems consist of a small-scale 100-mL vessel with a small paddle impeller, similar to the USP Apparatus 2, and are typically utilized when only small amounts of drug product are available during drug development. Despite their common industrial use, mini vessels have received little attention in the literature. Here, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) was used to predict velocity profiles, flow patterns, and strain rate distribution in a mini vessel at different agitation speeds. These results were compared with experimental velocity measurements obtained with Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV). Substantial agreement was observed between CFD results and PIV data. The flow is strongly dominated by the tangential velocity component. Secondary flows consist of vertical upper and lower recirculation loops above and below the impeller. A low recirculation zone was observed in the lower part of the vessel. The radial and axial velocities in the region just below the impeller are very small especially in the innermost core zone below the paddle, where tablet dissolution occurs. Increasing agitation speed reduces the radius of this zone, which is always present at any speed, and only modestly increases the tangential flow intensity, with significant implication for dissolution testing in mini vessels. SN - 1873-3476 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27317988/Experimental_and_computational_determination_of_the_hydrodynamics_of_mini_vessel_dissolution_testing_systems_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -