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Experimental observations of dry powder inhaler dose fluidisation

Experimental observations of dry powder inhaler dose fluidisation
Experimental observations of dry powder inhaler dose fluidisation
Dry powder inhalers (DPIs) are widely used to deliver respiratory medication as a fine powder. This study investigates the physical mechanism of DPI operation, assessing the effects of geometry, inhalation and powder type on dose fluidisation. Patient inhalation through an idealised DPI was simulated as a linearly increasing pressure drop across three powder dose reservoir geometries permitting an analysis of shear and normal forces on dose evacuation. Pressure drop gradients of 3.3, 10 and 30 kPa s?1were applied to four powder types (glass, aluminium, and lactose 6 and 16% fines) and high speed video of each powder dose fluidisation was recorded and quantitatively analysed. Two distinct mechanisms are identified, labelled ‘fracture’ and ‘erosion’. ‘Fracture’ mode occurs when the initial evacuation occurs in several large agglomerates whilst ‘erosion’ mode occurs gradually, with successive layers being evacuated by the high speed gas flow at the bed/gas interface. The mechanism depends on the powder type, and is independent of the reservoir geometries or pressure drop gradients tested. Both lactose powders exhibit fracture characteristics, while aluminium and glass powders fluidise as an erosion. Further analysis of the four powder types by an annular shear cell showed that the fluidisation mechanism cannot be predicted using bulk powder properties.
dry powder inhaler, fluidisation, lactose, powder flow, inhalation, shear cello
0378-5173
238-247
Tuley, Rob
dc5e5f04-8410-4ea6-889a-41b7d94ca925
Shrimpton, John
9cf82d2e-2f00-4ddf-bd19-9aff443784af
Jones, Matthew D.
7fc828a3-a068-4b7f-ac05-86ad47843cff
Price, Rob
487fb430-bbd1-46ab-8dfa-bc2ed349fa93
Palmer, Mark
a26656b0-829f-4fd2-8756-d19b2776dba0
Prime, Dave
4ff66a22-d2c3-4a7c-a2af-6f2fa89ef63f
Tuley, Rob
dc5e5f04-8410-4ea6-889a-41b7d94ca925
Shrimpton, John
9cf82d2e-2f00-4ddf-bd19-9aff443784af
Jones, Matthew D.
7fc828a3-a068-4b7f-ac05-86ad47843cff
Price, Rob
487fb430-bbd1-46ab-8dfa-bc2ed349fa93
Palmer, Mark
a26656b0-829f-4fd2-8756-d19b2776dba0
Prime, Dave
4ff66a22-d2c3-4a7c-a2af-6f2fa89ef63f

Tuley, Rob, Shrimpton, John, Jones, Matthew D., Price, Rob, Palmer, Mark and Prime, Dave (2008) Experimental observations of dry powder inhaler dose fluidisation. International Journal of Pharmaceutics, 358 (1-2), 238-247. (doi:10.1016/j.ijpharm.2008.03.038).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Dry powder inhalers (DPIs) are widely used to deliver respiratory medication as a fine powder. This study investigates the physical mechanism of DPI operation, assessing the effects of geometry, inhalation and powder type on dose fluidisation. Patient inhalation through an idealised DPI was simulated as a linearly increasing pressure drop across three powder dose reservoir geometries permitting an analysis of shear and normal forces on dose evacuation. Pressure drop gradients of 3.3, 10 and 30 kPa s?1were applied to four powder types (glass, aluminium, and lactose 6 and 16% fines) and high speed video of each powder dose fluidisation was recorded and quantitatively analysed. Two distinct mechanisms are identified, labelled ‘fracture’ and ‘erosion’. ‘Fracture’ mode occurs when the initial evacuation occurs in several large agglomerates whilst ‘erosion’ mode occurs gradually, with successive layers being evacuated by the high speed gas flow at the bed/gas interface. The mechanism depends on the powder type, and is independent of the reservoir geometries or pressure drop gradients tested. Both lactose powders exhibit fracture characteristics, while aluminium and glass powders fluidise as an erosion. Further analysis of the four powder types by an annular shear cell showed that the fluidisation mechanism cannot be predicted using bulk powder properties.

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More information

Published date: June 2008
Keywords: dry powder inhaler, fluidisation, lactose, powder flow, inhalation, shear cello

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 64565
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/64565
ISSN: 0378-5173
PURE UUID: 1cf31452-c21d-4b61-bb90-d96c5120a8f3

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Jan 2009
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:55

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Contributors

Author: Rob Tuley
Author: John Shrimpton
Author: Matthew D. Jones
Author: Rob Price
Author: Mark Palmer
Author: Dave Prime

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