The geometry of the rig allows the disintegration medium to access the tablet from all areas. The dry tablet sample is secured to a probe by a thin strip of double-sided adhesive tape along its diameter. The probe’s surface has a ‘channelled’ design, allowing fluid to flow freely all round the tablet while ensuring contact is maintained with the probe. Once the probe is lowered into the medium, the tablet is positioned on a perforated platform, and the texture analyser applies a constant force onto it. The perforated surface enables free ingress of water beneath the sample and dispersion of the disintegrant.
Jo Smewing, applications manager, Stable Micro Systems, said: ‘The tablet disintegration rig is a more efficient alternative to the older means of assessing dissolution properties traditionally employed by researchers. They involved submerging a tablet attached with tape to the bottom of a cylinder probe and testing the time required for the tablet to dissolve. But the tablet was ‘trapped’ between the tape and the vessel base, restricting its exposure to the medium. The new rig overcomes the issue by allowing the FMT particles to detach easily during the disintegration process, imitating the realistic conditions of drug administration.’
The rig is supplied with five probe heads to enable multiple sample preparation in advance of testing and fast interchange.
Stable Micro Systems boosts breakdown testing
Tablet disintegration rig assesses fast-melting tablet properties
You may also like
Trending Articles
You may also like
You need to be a subscriber to read this article.
Click here to find out more.
Click here to find out more.
Manufacturing
Parenteral delivery — under control
In this second article exploring new methods of quantifying and analysing the performance characteristics of controlled release products*, Jo Smewing, applications manager, Stable Micro Systems, outlines tests for parenteral forms of controlled delivery systems