Method and system for real-time vibroacoustic condition monitoring and fault diagnostics in solid dosage compaction presses
09863917 ยท 2018-01-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01N29/2412
PHYSICS
G01M99/005
PHYSICS
International classification
G01N29/46
PHYSICS
B30B11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B30B11/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present invention relates to methods and systems for condition monitoring of and/or fault diagnostics in solid dosage compaction presses and, more particularly, to methods and systems for real-time vibroacoustic condition monitoring of and/or fault diagnostics in solid dosage compaction presses.
Claims
1. A method of condition monitoring of or fault diagnostics in a solid dosage compaction press and detecting, monitoring or characterizing a drug tablet during compaction comprising the steps of: receiving, by a processor, a first set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a portion of a compaction press; receiving, by the processor, a second set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a drug tablet being formed in the compaction press; analyzing, by the processor, data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals and from the second set of vibrational or acoustic signals; and determining, by the processor, a first condition, a first fault state, or a first wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals; and determining, by the processor, a quality level of the drug tablet or a defect state of the drug tablet based on the analyzed data received from the second set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein at least one step is performed in real time.
3. The method of claim 2, where each of said step is performed in real time.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of receiving, by a processor, a third set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a portion of a compaction press.
5. The method of claim 4, further comprising the step of analyzing, by the processor, data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
6. The method of claim 5, further comprising the step of determining, by the processor, a first condition, a first fault state, or a first wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising the step of comparing said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals with said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising the step of presenting said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals on a display device.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of presenting said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals on a display device.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of transmitting instructions to a compaction press central control unit to tune control parameters of the compaction press based on said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
11. A system for condition monitoring of or fault diagnostics in a solid dosage compaction press and detecting, monitoring or characterizing a drug tablet during compaction comprising: a first acoustic sensor or accelerometer configured to receive a first set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a portion of a compaction press and to transmit said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals to a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium; a second acoustic sensor configured to receive a second set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a drug tablet being formed in the compaction press and to transmit the second set of vibrational or acoustic signals to the non-transitory computer-readable storage medium; said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium having program code for: analyzing, by a processor, data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals, analyzing, by the processor, data received from the second set of vibrational or acoustic signals; determining, by the processor, a first condition, a first fault state, or a first wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals; and determining, by the processor, a quality level of the drug tablet or a defect state of the drug tablet based on the analyzed data received from the second set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
12. The system of claim 11, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for receiving a third set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a portion of a compaction press.
13. The system of claim 12, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for analyzing data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
14. The system of claim 13, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for determining a first condition, a first fault state, or a first wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
15. The system of claim 14, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for comparing said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals with said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
16. The system of claim 14, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for transmitting instructions to a compaction press central control unit to tune control parameters of the compaction press based on said first condition, said first fault state, or said first wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said third set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
17. The system of claim 11, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for transmitting instructions to a compaction press central control unit to tune control parameters of the compaction press based on said first determined condition, said first determined fault state, or said first determined wear state of said portion of said compaction press based on said analyzed data received from said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals.
18. The system of claim 11, further comprising at least one receiving unit configured to receive said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals from a portion of said first acoustic sensor or accelerometer and to transmit said first set of vibrational or acoustic signals to said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium.
19. The system of claim 18, wherein said non-transitory computer-readable storage medium further has program code for comparing said calculated resonance frequency of said at least one punch or die surface with an original resonance frequency of said at least one punch or die surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) The foregoing aspects and many of the attendant advantages of this disclosure will become more readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description, when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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(35) a-d are pictures showing various other types of multi-component tablets (as compared to
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(43) This application discloses methods of and devices for non-contact mechanical property determination and coat thicknesses of drug tablets.
(44) A first method described in this disclosure is to detect, monitor and characterize a drug tablet during compaction by means of transmitting and receiving acoustic waves into the powder core, as it is formed in a press (compactor), via transducers embedded in the compactor die and punches. Subsequent production decisions (e.g. rejection or continuation of the tablet in the manufacturing process) on the tablet can be made based on the processing of the acoustic signals. The main advantage of this method is that it provides an early warning on the mechanical and geometric state of a tablet during compaction to the operator before a number of other processing operations are applied.
(45) The objective of this method is to characterize and to monitor the mechanical (physical) and geometric state of the powder core in the die during compaction in a real-time manner. The characterization and detection/monitoring system consists of a plurality of transducers that generate and receive high frequency acoustic wave fields as well as electronic instrumentation and signal processing software.
(46) This method detects, monitors and characterizes a drug tablet during compaction by means of transmitting and receiving acoustic waves into the powder core, as it is formed in a press (compactor), via transducers embedded in the compactor die and punches as illustrated in
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(48) Typical instrumentation in such a monitoring and characterization system consists of a pulser/receiver unit, a digitizing oscilloscope (or a sampling board) and a computer (Not shown). Signal processing software is needed to extract the acoustic wave properties of the powder core during compaction such as travel times, reflection and transmission coefficients, and dispersion curves. See references by Morse et al. and Krautkramer et al. cited below. A product of the method is a computer program product or an article of manufacture for use in a computer system having an operating system for use with an apparatus for detecting, monitoring or characterizing a drug tablet during compaction the computer program product having: a computer usable medium having computer readable program code means embodied in the medium for detecting, monitoring or characterizing a drug tablet during compaction, wherein the detecting, monitoring or characterizing includes transmitting acoustic waves into the powder core while the tablet is being formed; receiving acoustic waves from the powder core while the tablet is being formed; measuring data received from the received acoustic waves; calculating the data; and presenting the data.
(49) Typical dwell times of the tablets in the die is on the order of a few milliseconds (ms) (1 ms=10-3 second). For instance, the specified minimum and maximum dwell times for a Presster compaction simulator (Metropolitan Computing Corporation, NJ) are listed as 5.8 ms and 230 ms in the specification list for the Presster compaction simulator.
(50) The travel time of an acoustic field in a tablet with typical dimensions (1-10 mm) is on the order of a few microseconds. Pulse repetition rates of pulser/receiver units can be as high as a few 10s of kHz. In other words, a commercially available pulser receiver unit can generate high frequency pulses with intervals as low as 0.1 ms (at a pulse repetition rate of 10 kHz). The time-scales of these two processes (e.g. ms for the compaction and s for acoustic wave propagation) clearly indicate that the number of pulses transmitted and received in the powder core can be sufficiently high (on the order of 10) and the compaction process can be monitored via acoustic waves.
(51) A second non-contact method described in this disclosure is to detect, monitor and characterize a drug tablet mechanical characteristics and coating thickness.
(52) Set-Up and Configurations
(53) An experimental setup utilized for non-contact mechanical property determination of drug tablets is illustrated in
(54) Boundary conditions due to mounting techniques of a tablet have been found to play an important role in the accuracy and sensitivity of transient response measurements. An ideal tablet holding configuration must not interfere with the acoustic field exciting the vibrational motion of the tablet, while holding the tablet firmly with a minimal contact area. In an exemplary embodiment, a vacuum wand is utilized for holding the tablet. The main advantages of the vacuum wand include the firmness of grip, minimal contact surface area with the tablet, and rapidity of the handling apparatus. In experiments of the vacuum wand, a servo-motor controlled vacuum control unit is employed to automatically control suction power. As illustrated in
(55) Procedure for Determining Resonance Frequencies
(56) Sample tablets with the average mass of 200 mg and with the characteristic dimensions of 5.79 mm width, 11.45 mm length, 3.33 mm thickness and a coating thickness of 102.3 m were employed in the experimental apparatus as shown in
(57) A computer program product is used with the computer for determining mechanical characteristics and coating thickness of a tablet the computer program product. The computer program product is a computer usable medium having computer readable program code means embodied in the medium for determining the mechanical characteristics and coating thickness and includes exciting the tablet with an acoustic field; acquiring reflected signals from the tablet; digitizing the reflected signals; extracting mechanical characteristics and coating thickness from the resonance frequencies within a certain bandwidth and performing an iterative process to determine the mechanical characteristics and coating thickness of the tablet.
(58) Contact Measurements
(59) For verification purposes, the Young's modulus of a sample tablet core (core) is obtained using contact time-of-flight ultrasonic measurements. The mass densities of the core (.sub.core) and the coating material (.sub.coat) of the sample tablet are calculated from direct mass measurements of tablets with various coating thicknesses for known tablet geometry. Property predictions based on contact measurements are used for determining initial mechanical properties and for confirming (non-contact) experimentally obtained mechanical properties. In of determining the Young's modulus of the core material (E.sub.core) of the sample tablet, a direct measurement ultrasonic method (pulse-echo mode) is employed. In this test, short ultrasonic pulses are generated by a piezoelectric transducer with a central frequency to transmit through the tablet. The ultrasonic pulse is reflected from the back side of the tablet and returned to the measurement surface via the shortest possible path. The reflected waveforms are captured by the same transducer and digitized in the oscilloscope, as illustrated in
(60) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Convergence (%): Mechanical
Finite Element Study for Tablet Spectral Properties
(61) The spectral properties of a tablet are related to its mechanical properties (e.g. Young's moduli (E.sub.core, E.sub.coat), Poisson's ratios (.sub.core, .sub.coat) and material mass densities (.sub.core, .sub.coat) of the core and the coating layer) as well as its geometry (e.g. shape and dimensions of the core and the coating layer). Using a finite element algorithm, such as the Lanczos method, the spectral properties of the tablet (e.g. a set of resonance frequencies and corresponding mode shapes) can be obtained provided that the mechanical properties and geometry of the tablet are available. However, the extraction of the tablet mechanical properties from its measured resonance frequencies requires the use of an iterative computational procedure such as Newton's method as well as a method to compute its resonance frequencies.
(62) In the finite element study employed to compute natural frequencies of the tablets, a three-dimensional mesh for the tablet is modeled as homogenous and isotropic elastic solid consisting of a core and a coating layer for numerical predictions of the tablet resonance frequencies. The top, front and side views illustrating outer dimensions and cross-sectional area of the coated sample tablet with a coating thickness of 120.3 m used in the finite element analysis are depicted in
(63) Experimental Resonance Frequency Measurements
(64) Resonance frequencies of the tablet are obtained by applying the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) algorithm on the acquired waveforms under air-coupled excitation. The frequency range of the measurements is limited to 105 kHz because 150 kHz due to the bandwidth of the transducer employed in the experiments (See
(65) Sensitivity Analysis for Extracting Tablet Mechanical Properties
(66) In order to extract the mechanical property parameters (E.sub.core, E.sub.coat, .sub.core, .sub.coat, .sub.core, .sub.coat) of sample tablets from their resonance frequencies, an iterative procedure based on Newton's method is adopted. From a finite element study, it is observed that shifts in resonance frequencies are nearly linear with the reasonable changes in the mechanical properties, and no intersection of modes is realized within 20% variation of the initial (estimate) mechanical properties. If modes traverse, the corresponding resonance frequencies will not coincide with their ordered mode shapes and all mode shapes and related resonance frequencies must be verified before continuing the inversion process.
(67) The sensitivity analysis is based on the assumption that there is a well-defined relationship between a change in certain parameters of interest and other parameters of interest. In this type of analysis for mechanical properties, a series of either numerical or actual tests are conducted in which the (mechanical) parameters are altered to approximate these relationships between changes in the (mechanical) parameters, and corresponding changes in the natural frequencies. The result of such a study is sensitivity coefficients that can be used to approximate the assumed relationship. From these sensitivity coefficients, the actual mechanical properties can approximately be extracted within ranges of parameters.
(68) In the mechanical property extraction, a set of initial (estimate) mechanical property vector is chosen
(69) where
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(71) j is the mode number, p=
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(73) Using [S.sub.].sub.k, the change in mechanical properties vector due to a shift {
{
(74) where
(75) A flow chart for this iterative process is depicted in
(76) After extracting the mechanical properties for each tablet, the finite element method is employed to determine the corresponding resonance frequencies
(77) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Convergence (%):
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(79) The sensitivity order of resonance frequencies regarding changes in mechanical properties from most to least sensitive are; E.sub.core, .sub.core, E.sub.coat, .sub.coat, .sub.core and .sub.coat (See
(80) Multi-Component Tablets
(81) Turning to
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(84) The transducer 1604 can be in wired or wireless communication 1608 with a vibroacoustic excitation and receiver unit 1610 (for receiving commands from or delivering acquired data to the vibroacoustic excitation and receiver unit 1610), which can be in wired or wireless communication 1608 with a digitizing oscilloscope 1612 and a computer with specialized vibroacoustic analysis software unit 1614 (which can be configured/programmed to direct the other components of the system to perform the in-die monitoring and/or characterizing of multi-component tablets in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention). Stated differently, the computer/software unit 1614 can be used for signal processing of the acquired data from the vibroacoustic excitation and receiver unit 1610 for vibroacoustic modal analysis.
(85) The wireless communication/transmission can be over a network (not shown), which can be any suitable wired or wireless network capable of transmitting communication, including but not limited to a telephone network, Internet, Intranet, local area network, Ethernet, online communication, offline communications, wireless communications and/or similar communications means. Further, the data can be encrypted if needed based on the sensitivity of the data or the location the die/punch simulator 1602 or the computer/software unit 1614, for example. Each of the components of the vibroacoustic excitation and detection system 1600 can be located in the same room, in different rooms in the same building, and/or in a completely different building and location from each other.
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(87) Vibrational analysis (e.g. resonance (natural) frequencies, mode shapes, etc.) in addition to wave propagation analysis (e.g. Time-of-flight, dispersion properties of waves, etc.) is performed on the data collected by each vibroacoustic excitation and detection system 1600 and 1700 with respect to the subject multi-component tablets (materials and geometries). In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the vibrational properties of a tablet (or multi-component tablet) solid dosage are taken advantage of. In brief, the resonance (natural) frequencies and mode shapes of a vibrating tablet (or multi-component tablet) solid dosage depends on its mechanical properties and their distribution inside the body (such as mass density, Young's modulus, Poisson's ratio, etc.) as well as geometric characteristics (e.g. shape, dimensions, layer thicknesses, geometric irregularities etc.). Consequently, in principle, these properties and characteristics can be extracted for a tablet (or multi-component tablet) and/or their sample-to-sample variations can be monitored when its resonance (natural) frequencies and mode shapes are experimentally available. Moreover, as material defects (e.g. degradation, faulty starting materials, moisture levels, etc.) and geometric irregularities (e.g. cracks, delamination, interfacial loss-of-bonding, shape and dimensions imperfections) in a tablet (or multi-component tablet) change its resonance (natural) frequencies and mode shapes, depending upon the extent of the defects and irregularities. Based on the experimental measurements of such shifts, the quality of solid dosage can be monitored, and defect states in tablets can be determined.
(88) Various well-published generic computational techniques, as should be understood by those of skill in the art, are available to be used for the actual numerical extractions of the resonance frequencies and mode shapes of a solid body from experimental data.
(89) Stiction and Tooling Material Modifications on Punch and Die Surfaces During Compaction
(90) Embodiments of the present invention can also include a novel non-contact method and system for detecting and monitoring stiction and tooling material modifications (such as pitting) on the surfaces and bodies of punches and dies during compaction (which can be done in real time) based on acoustic/ultrasonic waves. The monitoring/detecting can be wireless, be performed in real time, and non-invasive.
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(92) The transducer 1804 can be in wired or wireless communication 1808 with a ultrasonic pulser/receiver unit 1805 (for receiving commands from or delivering acquired data to the ultrasonic pulser/receiver unit 1805), which can be in wired or wireless communication 1608 with a transmitter 1809. The transmitter 1809 can be in wired or wireless communication 1608 (radio waves are shown) with a receiver 1811 to transmit the acquired data to the receiver 1811. The receiver 1811 can be in wired or wireless communication with a digitizing oscilloscope 1812, which can be in wired or wireless communication 1808 with a computer with specialized vibroacoustic analysis software unit 1814 (which can be configured/programmed to direct the other components of the system to perform the detecting and monitoring stiction and tooling material modifications on the surfaces and bodies of punches and dies in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention). The transmitter 1809 and the receiver 1811 do not need to be separate devices; they can be parts of the ultrasonic pulser/receiver 1805 and the digitizing oscilloscope respectively.
(93) As noted elsewhere herein, the wireless communication/transmission can be over a network (not shown), which can be any suitable wired or wireless network capable of transmitting communication, including but not limited to a telephone network, Internet, Intranet, local area network, Ethernet, online communication, offline communications, wireless communications and/or similar communications means. Further, the data can be encrypted if needed based on the sensitivity of the data or the location the die 1802 or the computer/software unit 1814, for example. Each of the components of the system 1800 can be located in the same room, in different rooms in the same building, and/or in a completely different building and location from each other.
(94) In stiction monitoring and characterization/detection in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, the practical interest is in the modification to the surfaces while in die/punch material modification, changes in the materials properties in the material body as well as surfaces are of interest. In the disclosed system 1800, surface and body changes are detected by processing the acoustic/ultrasonic waveforms (data) generated and acquired with an embedded transducer(s) 1804. The transducer 1804 is excited by a pulser/receiver unit 1805 as shown in
(95) In this disclosure, a system 1800 and a method are detailed for the objective of real-time monitoring of the die/punch 1802/1801/1803 sets during compaction operations. The waveforms are obtained several times during each cycle of the compaction operation, and are preferably transmitted wirelessly 1808 to a local computer 1814 for analysis and/or transmission to another user via the Internet and/or another network. See
(96) Any of the analyses described herein, including but not limited to vibrational analysis (e.g. resonance (natural) frequencies, mode shapes, etc.) and wave propagation analysis can be performed to determine stiction and tooling material modifications on the surfaces and bodies of punches and dies, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.
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(100) Vibroacoustic Condition Monitoring of and/or Fault Diagnostics in Solid Form Compaction Presses
(101) Embodiments of the present invention can also include a novel method and system for vibroacoustic condition monitoring of and/or fault diagnostics in solid dosage compaction presses. The monitoring/fault diagnostics can be wireless, be performed in real time, and non-invasive (aspects of which can be similar to the monitoring systems and methods described above).
(102) As noted herein, a compaction press is an essential piece of machinery for pharmaceutical, nutraceutical, cosmetics, metal and ceramic parts, powder and various other manufacturers for compacting powder/granular material into a solid form. A typical compaction press takes powder and granular material as raw (starting material), transfers it into compaction dies where two punches (upper and lower) compact the material into a solid form under impulsive loading conditions (in a short period of time), and collects the end product (solid forms) in a container. The upper punch is driven into the power bed in the die with a cam driven by a motor. The lower punch is again driven by a cam and is used for ejecting the solid form from the die into the presses solid form handling system, leading the compacted products in an external container. During its operation, a compaction press generates vibrational and acoustic signals due to a vast array of interactions between its components and parts, such as punches and dies, rollers, bearings, drive shafts, and motors.
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(104) The receiving stations 2211 and 2212 can be part of the same or separate device, and can be in wired or wireless communication with a computer with a memory and specialized acoustic sensor and accelerometer analysis software 2214 (which can be configured/programmed to direct the other components of the system to perform the monitoring of and/or fault diagnostics in solid dosage compaction presses in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention). The computer with a memory and specialized acoustic sensor and accelerometer analysis software 2214 can be configured and or programmed to receive information/data from the receiving stations 2211 and 2212 regarding parts/components of interest of a solid dosage compaction press (or a plurality of solid dosage compaction presses), to analyze this data and determine a condition (working, not working, within specification, out of specification, etc.) and wear states of the parts/components, and to transmit (wired, and preferably wirelessly) this information over the Internet to a decision maker(s) 2216.
(105) The mounting and positioning locations of the acoustic sensors 2208 multiaxis accelerometers 2212 can be determined according to the goals of the condition monitoring and fault diagnostics that need to be performed per a decision maker 2216. The decision maker 2216 monitoring the state of the components and parts of the compaction press 2202 onsite or off-site can determine the required actions. If the actions are implemented by tuning the control parameters of the compaction press 2202, for example, the decision maker 2216 can transmit the required instructions to the compaction press central control unit 2217. If the actions involves the hardware modification (tuning, parts replacement, alignment, etc.), the decision maker can dispatche technicians, engineers, purchasing personnel, etc. to take corrective action. The data can also be shared with supply chain management within a company.
(106) With the disclosed method and system, the condition and wear states of the components and parts of a compaction press 2202 can monitored by acquiring such vibrational and acoustic signals using the accelerometers 2212 and wide-spectrum acoustic sensors 2208, wirelessly transmitting the signals and related information to a remote control station (monitoring computer 2214) in real-time, and signal-processing the signals by the monitoring and fault diagnostics software program 2214 to determine condition and fault level/state of various parts and components of the compaction press. The process data can be used for preventive maintenance and remote process monitoring.
(107) As noted elsewhere herein, the wireless communication/transmission can be over a network (not shown), which can be any suitable wired or wireless network capable of transmitting communication, including but not limited to a telephone network, Internet, Intranet, local area network, Ethernet, online communication, offline communications, wireless communications and/or similar communications means. Further, the data can be encrypted if needed based on the sensitivity of the data or the location the compaction press 2202 and/or the computer/software unit 2214, for example. Each of the components of the system 2200 can be located in the same room, in different rooms in the same building, and/or in a completely different building and location from each other.
(108) In this disclosure, a system 2200 and a method are detailed for the objective of real-time monitoring of the compaction press 2202. The accelerometer and acoustic sensor measurements can be obtained once to many times during each cycle of the compaction operation, and are preferably transmitted wirelessly to the receiving stations and/or directly to a local computer 2014 for analysis and/or transmission to another user via the Internet and/or another network. The analysis software 2014 that implements the disclosed method produces real-time data on the state of the compaction press. Such data and its processing can be used for determining various operational actions by the analysis software and/or the decision maker, such as process control (e.g. changes to the compaction press parameters) replacement of tools, scheduling inspections, maintenance planning, and preventive maintenance tasks.
(109) Any of the analyses described herein, including but not limited to vibrational analysis (e.g. resonance (natural) frequencies, mode shapes, etc.) and wave propagation analysis can be performed to condition monitor the and/or perform fault diagnostics in solid dosage compaction presses, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.
CONCLUSIONS AND REMARKS
(110) In the present disclosure, a non-destructive/non-contact testing platform for determining the mechanical properties of drug tablets has been described. A computational procedure for extracting mechanical property parameters from measured resonance frequencies of tablets is developed and implemented. The effectiveness of the procedure for extracting the mechanical properties (Young's modulus, Poisson's ratio and mass density) of a core and coating layer of tablets from a set of experimentally obtained resonance frequencies is demonstrated. A main conclusion is that mechanical properties can be extracted utilizing the discussed experimental methodology and the iterative computational procedure based on subsets of the resonance frequencies of the tablet. Acquired experimental resonance frequencies agree quantitatively well with the finite element-based resonance frequencies corresponding to the extracted mechanical properties. Analysis also revealed that resonance frequencies of a sample tablet are most sensitive to changes in E.sub.core, and least sensitive to changes in .sub.coat.
(111) The principal applications of the methods and apparatuses disclosed include (i) real-time quality and mechanical integrity of tablet during compaction, (ii) real-time characterization of tablet property determination during compaction, and (iii) specialized defect detection and characterization methods of drug tablets.
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(113) Further, the disclosed in-die/out-of-die monitoring and/or characterizing of multi-component tablets approach is for determining the mechanical (physical), interfacial bonding and geometric (size, wall/core thicknesses, core eccentricity, and so on) quality of such multi-component products by acquiring and processing multi-component products' responses to acoustic and vibrational excitations. These mechanical (physical), interfacial, and geometric properties affect the modal structure of the tablet. In this disclosed approach, the variations in the modal response (resonance frequencies and mode shapes) are related to the mechanical (physical), interfacial, and geometric properties using analytical/computational and statistical methods, as disclosed herein. The disclosed method and system for in-die/out-of-die monitoring and/or characterizing of multi-component tablets can be adopted for inline/online monitoring and characterization of such tablet products as well as post-production quality monitoring and characterization applications when the product is still in the production and/or in the post-production phase.
(114) The illustrative embodiments and modifications thereto described hereinabove are merely exemplary. It is understood that other modifications to the illustrative embodiments will readily occur to persons of ordinary skill in the art. All such modifications and variations are deemed to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention as will be defined by the accompanying claims.