Compression and compaction properties of plasticised high molecular weight hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC) as a hydrophilic matrix carrier

Hardy, IJ; Cook, WG; Melia, CD

HERO ID

3040068

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2006

Language

English

PMID

16431049

HERO ID 3040068
In Press No
Year 2006
Title Compression and compaction properties of plasticised high molecular weight hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC) as a hydrophilic matrix carrier
Authors Hardy, IJ; Cook, WG; Melia, CD
Journal International Journal of Pharmaceutics
Volume 311
Issue 1-2
Page Numbers 26-32
Abstract The compression and compaction properties of plasticised high molecular weight USP2208 HPMC were investigated with the aim of improving tablet formation in HPMC matrices. Experiments were conducted on binary polymer-plasticiser mixtures containing 17 wt.% plasticiser, and on a model hydrophilic matrix formulation. A selection of common plasticisers, propylene glycol (PG) glycerol (GLY), dibutyl sebacate (DBS) and triacetin (TRI), were chosen to provide a range of plasticisation efficiencies. T-g values of binary mixtures determined by Dynamic Mechanical Thermal Analysis (DMTA) were in rank order PG > GLY > DBS > TRI > unplasticised HPMC. Mean yield pressure, strain rate sensitivity (SRS) and plastic compaction energy were measured during the compression process, and matrix properties were monitored by tensile strength and axial expansion post-compression. Compression of HPMC:PG binary mixtures resulted in a marked reduction in mean yield pressure and a significant increase in SRS, suggesting a classical plasticisation of HPMC analogous to that produced by water. The effect of PG was also reflected in matrix properties. At compression pressures below 70 MPa, compacts had greater tensile strength than those from native polymer, and over the range 35 and 70 MPa, lower plastic compaction values showed that less energy was required to produce the compacts. Axial expansion was also reduced. Above 70 MPa tensile strength was limited to 3 MPa. These results suggest a useful improvement of HPMC compaction and matrix properties by PG plasticisation, with lowering of T-g resulting in improved deformation and internal bonding. These effects were also detectable in the model formulation containing a minimal polymer content for an HPMC matrix. Other plasticisers were largely ineffective, matrix strength was poor and axial expansion high. The hydrophobic plasticisers (DBS, TRI) reduced yield pressure substantially, but were poor plasticisers and showed compaction mechanisms that could be attributed to phase separation. The effect of different plasticisers suggests that the deformation characteristics of this HPMC in the solid state is dominated by hydroxyl mediated bonding, rather than by hydrophobic interactions between methoxyl-rich regions. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Doi 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2005.12.025
Pmid 16431049
Wosid WOS:000236526600004
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword hydroxypropylmethylcellulose; HPMC; plasticiser; matrix; compaction; mechanical properties