Abstract

Medical tablet forming ability of microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) was investigated in relation to the mobility of water molecules in MCC particles. For this purpose, the spin-lattice relaxation time T1 of water in the system was measured by 1H-NMR. Over a wide range of water contents (0.02 ≤ H2O/cellulose (g/g) ≤ 1.79), two different T1 (T1,l and T1,s) values were observed for water in each MCC sample. Below the equilibrium water content, water having these two different T1 values exchange with each other in an MCC particle reaching an equilibrium state within a given time scale (equilibrium constant K). The T1,l, T1,s and K values for water in MCC, estimated at the equilibrium water content, showed fairly good correlations with the hardness of the tablets made by the MCC samples. Sample with a shorter T1, or larger K tended to have a stronger tablet forming ability. In the spin-spin relaxation time T2 measurements for protons in an MCC/D2O system, two T2 components originating from the glassy cellulose solid (T2,G) and the swelling region (T2,l) were observed. It was found that the mole fraction xL of protons with T2,L in the system exhibits a clear linear correlation with K. From these results, a structural model for the distribution of water in MCC particles was propoed by taking the surface of each microfibril and the disordered region within the microfibril into consideration

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