Abstract

In the pharmaceutical industry, innovative continuous manufacturing technologies such as twin-screw melt granulation (TSMG) are gaining more and more interest to process challenging formulations. To enable the implementation of TSMG, more elucidation of the process is required and this study provides a better understanding of the granule formation along the length of the barrel. By sampling at four different zones, the influence of screw configuration, process parameters and formulation is investigated for the granule properties next to the residence time distribution. It showed that conveying elements initiate the granulation by providing a limited heat transfer into the powder bed. In the kneading zones, the consolidation stage takes place, shear elongation combined with breakage and layering is occurring for the reversed configurations and densification with breakage and layering for the forward and neutral configurations. Due to the material build-up in the reversed configurations, these granules are larger, stronger, more elongated and less porous due to the higher degree of shear and densification. This configuration also shows a significantly longer residence time compared to the forward configuration. Hence, the higher level of shear and the longer period of time enables more melting of the binder resulting in successful granulation.

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