Abstract

The gas transport properties of compacted tablets consisting of an amorphous mixture of maltodextrin and sodium caseinate were studied by dissolving nitrogen gas in the tablets and then determining the gas release over time as a function of temperature and water activity. Gas was dissolved in the tablet matrix by heating the tablets under pressure, generally to temperatures above the glass transition temperature of the matrix, holding them at these conditions for a specified time and then rapidly cooling them while maintaining the external pressure. The solubility of nitrogen was found to be largely determined by the free volume of the matrix, which in turn can be influenced to some degree by thermal and pressure treatments during gas loading. At the levels of free volume studied, the dissolved nitrogen is densely packed in the free volume, the packing density being virtually independent of the externally applied pressure. Release of gas from the tablets at temperatures below the glass transition temperature is generally well described by Fickian diffusion. The effective diffusion coefficient of gas release is strongly dependent on the microstructure and porosity of the tablet matrix, and an approximate model describing the relationship between tablet structure and rate of gas release is formulated. The model is in semiquantitative agreement with the rates of gas diffusion obtained for tablets and dense granules. Owing to the structural heterogeneity and variability of the tablets and the history-dependent properties of the tablet matrix, the effective diffusion coefficients of gas release from the tablets showed a relatively large spread. The temperature dependence of diffusional release follows an Arrhenius relation below the glass transition temperature. This allows the prediction of the nitrogen retention in the tablets as function of time, temperature and pressure.

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