Abstract

Full-field optical coherence tomography (FF-OCT) using a conventional light-emitting diode and a complementary metal-oxide semiconductor camera has been developed for characterising coatings on small pellet samples. A set ofen-faceimages covering an area of 700 × 700 μm2was taken over a depth range of 166 μm. The three-dimensional structural information, such as the coating thickness and uniformity, was subsequently obtained by analysis of the recordeden-faceimages. Drug-loaded pharmaceutical sustained-release pellets with two coating layers and of a sub-millimetre diameter were studied to demonstrate the usefulness of the developed system. We have shown that both coatings can be clearly resolved and the thickness was determined to be 40 and 50 μm for the outer and inner coating layers, respectively. It was also found that the outer coating layer is relatively uniform, whereas the inner coating layer has many particle-like features. X-ray computed microtomography measurements carried out on the same pellet sample confirmed all these findings. The presented FF-OCT approach is inexpensive and has better spatial resolution compared with other non-destructive analysis techniques such as terahertz pulsed imaging, and is thus considered advantageous for the quantitative analysis of thin coatings on small pellet samples.

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