Continuous coating of pellets
09597294 ยท 2017-03-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01J2/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C5/0216
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C13/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A23G3/26
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B05B13/0257
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C5/022
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C19/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C9/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
A61K9/50
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B01J2/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05B13/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C13/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C19/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B05C5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A continuous dosage form coating apparatus uses vibrational impulses to maintain a dosage forms in a fluid state to expose them to a coating material atomized by spraying.
Claims
1. A process for continuously coating pellets comprising: feeding pellets continuously into a linearly elongated trough, said trough having a concave trough bottom wall extending laterally from a first longitudinal side edge to an opposite second longitudinal side edge, said pellets being introduced into the trough at a first location along the length of the trough, and thereby maintaining a bed of pellets continuously moving longitudinally in the trough; directing a spray of liquefied pellet coating material toward the bed of pellets in the trough at least at one intermediate location along the length of the trough; causing reciprocating rotational vibration of the trough about a pivot axis parallel to the direction of elongation of the trough but laterally offset from a longitudinal centerline of the trough, said centerline being positioned above a location on said concave trough bottom midway between said first and second longitudinal side edges by applying impulse components to the trough as moments about said pivot axis, said reciprocating rotational vibration having sufficient intensity substantially to fluidize the bed of pellets disposed in said trough, thereby causing the pellets in said bed to circulate, substantially continuously and in the same direction, in a loop-shaped path transverse to the direction of elongation of the trough, as they move longitudinally in the trough, so that substantially all of the pellets are exposed to the spray at times during their travel along the trough; and collecting coated pellets discharged over a weir in the trough at a discharge location longitudinally spaced from the first location, the at least one intermediate location at which the spray is directed toward the bed of pellets being between the first location and the discharge location.
2. The process of claim 1, in which said pivot axis is a stationary pivot axis.
3. The process of claim 1, in which the liquefied pellet coating material is sprayed toward the bed of pellets in the trough by a spray nozzle located at a sufficient distance from the pellets that the coating material reaches the pellets in a partially dried condition such that solvent in the coating material does not damage the pellets.
4. The process of claim 1, in which the bed of pellets is moved along the trough over at least one additional weir in the trough, the additional weir being spaced longitudinally from the weir at the discharge location.
5. The process of claim 1, in which the bed of pellets is moved along the trough over a series of longitudinally spaced weirs in the trough in addition to the weir at the discharge location.
6. The process of claim 1, in which air is caused to flow through the bed of pellets while the spray of liquefied pellet coating material is directed toward the bed of pellets.
7. The process of claim 1, in which the bed of pellets is moved along the trough over at least one hollow weir in the trough, spaced longitudinally from the weir at the discharge location, and in which air is caused to flow through the bed of pellets and outwardly from the trough through an array of openings in the hollow weir while the spray of liquefied coating material is directed toward the bed of pellets.
8. The process of claim 1, in which a condition of the coating process is monitored, and, in response to the monitored condition, at least one operating parameter is adjusted automatically in response to the monitored condition, the operating parameter being from the group consisting of the rate at which the pellets to be coated are fed to the trough, air temperature, air flow, vibration amplitude, vibration intensity, vibration frequency, vibration direction, liquefied coating material spray rate and spray pressure.
9. The process of claim 8, in which air is caused to flow through the bed of pellets while the spray of liquefied pellet coating material is directed toward the bed of pellets.
10. The process of claim 1, in which the outlet end of the elongated trough is lower than the inlet end, whereby the trough is tilted downward in the direction of travel of pellets in the trough, and in which, in the feeding of pellets continuously into the trough at said first location, pellets are fed at a rate that maintains the surface of the bed of pellets substantially parallel to the direction of elongation of the trough.
11. The process of claim 1, in which the vibration of the trough is carried out at a frequency in the range from 500 to 3500 Hz.
12. The process of claim 1, in which said pivot axis extends alongside the trough.
13. The process of claim 1, in which said pivot axis extends alongside the trough on one side of the trough, and said impulse components are applied to the trough through an arm structure extending from the opposite side of trough and away from the trough.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(9) The term pellets, as used herein, includes solid, or at least externally solid, orally delivered pharmaceutical dosage forms, vitamins, candies, chewing gum, breath mints, animal feed, and the like. Usually, all of the pellets being coated by the method and apparatus described herein will be of substantially the same size and composition.
(10) The coating apparatus of
(11) The feeder section 10 can be any of a variety of mechanisms suitable for delivering pellets to be coated to a desired location continuously at a defined average rate. In
(12) Pellets drop through the chute 20 into an elongated, vibrating, trough 24, at a location preferably adjacent one end of the trough, which will be referred to as a trough inlet. In
(13) The upper edge of the weir 28 can be horizontal, or slanted, and need not be straight. However, regardless of the shape of its upper edge, the weir establishes a maximum level for the bed 34 of pellets in the trough. As will be described, the pellets in the bed are substantially fluidized, that is, made readily flowable, by the vibration of the trough. Thus, as pellets are fed at a given rate to the inlet of the trough, the bed slowly moves toward the outlet, and pellets are discharged from the outlet at substantially the same rate. As vibration takes place, the upper surface of the fluidized bed of pellets will ordinarily be disposed at an angle in the range of about 10 to 20 degrees from the horizontal, depending on various factors such as the magnitude of the vibrations, air flow though the bed, the properties of the pellets, etc. However, in some cases, the surface of the bed can reach an angle of 45 degrees or more.
(14) The trough 24 is flexibly supported on a frame 38 by a set of resilient supports (not shown in
(15) The trough is connected by a set of arms 42, 44, 46 and 48, to a bar 50, which extends longitudinally along the trough on the side opposite to the side on which the trough is pivoted. The bar 50 is mounted on the frame by springs 52, and connected to an energy-imparting source 54, which applies rapidly repeated mechanical impulses to the bar. In the apparatus shown, the impulses are applied vertically upward to the bar. However the impulses can be applied in any direction other than directly toward the pivot axis of the trough, so that the impulses are applied as moments about the pivot axis.
(16) The repeated impulses must have sufficient intensity to fluidize the bed of pellets in the trough, and at the same time cause rotation of the bed of pellets so that pellets circulate continuously from the lower portions of the bed to the surface, and then back to the lower portions of the bed. The impulses must therefore be sufficient to overcome the effect of gravity on the pellet bed, taking into account also the effect of any air flowing upward or downward through the bed. The movement of the bar 50 will ordinarily be in the range of 0.1 to 5 mm. The intensity of the impulses, of course, depends not only on their amplitude, i.e., the range of movement of the bar 50, but also on the rate of movement of the bar, i.e., the slopes of the leading and trailing edges of each impulse when the amplitude of movement of the bar is plotted against time. The rotation and fluidization of the pellet bed are influenced not only by the intensity of the impulses, but also by the frequency at which the impulses are applied, the frequency being preferably in the range from about 500 to 3500 Hz.
(17) The energy-imparting source 54 can be any of a variety of mechanisms for producing mechanical vibrations, such as electric motors having eccentric weights mounted on their shafts, linear devices such as electromagnetic vibrators, servomotors, etc. The energy imparting source can be composed of plural energy-imparting units, if appropriately synchronized. Servomotors are preferable because they are easily controlled.
(18) Preferably, one or more parameters of the impulse components, such as intensity, amplitude, direction, or frequency is adjustable, and suitable adjusting means can be included as part of the energy-imparting source. The adjusting means can be, for example, an electrical motor speed control, a source of electrical pulses for operating an electromagnetic vibrator, or any of a wide variety of equivalent adjusting devices. In the case of adjustment of direction, the adjusting means can be, for example, a mechanism for moving the energy-imparting source itself or its output shaft or arm, or a mechanism for adjusting the relative amplitudes of impulses delivered by two or more sources coupled together in order to adjust the direction of a resultant impulse. The adjusting means can be adjusted manually, or automatically, with or without feedback from one or more sensors used to monitor conditions of the coating operation such as coating thickness, pellet feed rate, and the like.
(19) On the inside of the trough, a smooth mirror finish, that is, a finish having an average surface roughness Ra of less than about 0.05 m, should be avoided because, for some tablets, it will not exhibit sufficient friction to achieve reliable tablet bed rotation. For the coating apparatus of the invention, good results can be achieved for a broad variety of tablets, using a trough having an average surface roughness, Ra, in the range from approximately 0.2 m to 0.8 m.
(20) Spray nozzles 56 and 58 are mounted on the frame and arranged to direct fan-shaped spray patterns of liquefied coating material downward toward the bed of pellets in the trough at intermediate locations between the inlet 26 and the outlet 30. The fan-shaped spray patterns are preferably relatively wide in the direction of the trough and relatively narrow in the direction of the width of the trough.
(21) The coating material can be any of a variety of known coating materials. In the case of pharmaceutical tablets, for example, the coating material can be a combination of a polymer such as polyvinylpyrollidone (PVP) or hydroxypropylcellulose (HPC), together with a pigment and an opacifier such as titanium dioxide (TiO.sub.2), in a suitable vehicle such as water or an organic solvent, which partially evaporates as the spray approaches the bed of pellets.
(22) Various devices can be used to monitor the condition of the coating applied to the pellets. In
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(24) The trough 62 is a vibrating trough, supported on a set of arms similar to arms 42-48 in
(25) An array of air passages 72 is formed in the trough. The passages are smaller than the pellets in the pellet bed 74 in the trough, and situated so that most of the openings are below the top of the bed.
(26) The trough is provided with a pair of flanges 76 and 78, which extend longitudinally along its upper edges. Elastomeric sealing strips 80 and 82 are clamped between the respective flanges and clamping strips 84 and 86, and extend between flanges of upper and lower enclosures 88 and 90.
(27) An upper enclosure 88 has an air passage 92, and the lower enclosure 90 has an air passage 94. The pellet bed 74 is fluidized as a result of vibrations imparted to the trough through the arms including arm 64, which vibrates up and down about an axis at the location of elastomeric bar 68 in the directions indicated by the double-ended arrow 96. The motion of the trough substantially fluidizes the bed of pellets, and causes the pellets to circulate in a rotating path as indicated by arrow 98. In the embodiment shown in
(28) The flow of air through the bed of pellets provides for more uniform distribution and drying of the coating material, and reduces the loss of particles of the spray from the spray nozzles, e.g., nozzle 102, to the atmosphere. Although in the embodiment shown, the flow of air through the pellet bed is maintained by drawing air outward from the lower plenum by a blower 100, as an alternative, air can be forced into the upper plenum through passage 92. In some instances it may be desirable to maintain an upward flow of air, i.e., a flow of air into the pellet bed in the trough through the holes 72. In that case, blower 100 can be arranged to blow air into the lower plenum through passage 94, or a blower can be used to draw air outward from the upper plenum through passage 92. In any of these embodiments, the temperature and humidity of the air flowing through the bed of pellets can be controlled in order to maintain proper coating conditions.
(29) Although it is preferred to have both an upper air plenum and a lower air plenum, advantages of air flow through the pellet bed can also be realized in a coating apparatus having only an upper air plenum, or only a lower air plenum. Moreover, although it is desirable, but not absolutely essential, to provide airlocks for feeding pellets to, and discharging pellets from, the trough in the case in which an upper air plenum is used, airlocks are entirely unnecessary in the case of a coating apparatus having only a lower plenum.
(30) As shown schematically in
(31) As the trough is vibrated, the weir maintains the top of the fluidized pellet bed substantially at a fixed position so that the center of the top of the pellet bed remains at a constant height H, measured from the bottom of the trough. As mentioned previously, while vibration takes place, the top of the bed will ordinarily be at an angle in the range of about 10 to 20 degrees from horizontal. However, depending on the intensity and direction and frequency of the vibrations of the trough, the pattern of circulation of the pellets in the trough, and other factors such as air flow and the nature of the pellets, the top of the bed can be disposed at an angle outside the 10 to 20 degree range.
(32) As shown in
(33) In the case of an arcuate trough, the vertical distance D from the center of the top surface of the bed and the arc extension 108 is given by the formula D=W.sup.2/4H. Thus, parts of the nozzle assembly can be at a distance greater than D from the center of the top of the pellet bed, that is, beyond the arcuate extension of the inner wall of the trough.
(34) The trough 110 shown in
(35) One or more intermediate weirs can also be made hollow and provide with an array of holes for passage of air into or out of a trough. For example, as shown in
(36) In the control system depicted in
(37) Other monitoring features and controls can be utilized. For example, the signal from the monitor 130 can be used to control the vibration rate or intensity, or spray velocity, in addition to, or as an alternative to, controlling the pellet feed rate. The temperature and/or humidity of the exhaust air can also be monitored and used to control operating parameters or combinations thereof, including air temperature, humidity, spray velocity, as well as pellet feed rate, and trough vibration rate or intensity. As shown in
(38) Although satisfactory results can be achieved with the trough of the coating apparatus disposed horizontally, by tilting the trough downward in the direction of travel of the pellets along the trough, so that the outlet end of the trough is lower than the inlet end, the depth of the tablet bed can be made more nearly uniform along the length of the trough thereby reducing the maximum depth of the bed. As shown in
(39) Various other modifications can be made to the apparatus and method described above. For example, although the trough can be open as shown in
(40) Whereas the continuous coating apparatus described above comprises a linear trough, various alternative configurations are possible. For example, the trough can have a toroidal configuration similar to that of the vibration mill described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,100,088, granted on Aug. 6, 1963 to H. L. Podmore et al. and incorporated herein by reference. In that case, as described by Podmore et al. the impulses imparted to the toroidal container by an eccentric weight on a centrally located motor will cause circulating movement of pellets in the container as they travel along the length of the trough. Another example is a configuration in which the coating apparatus is composed of a series of vibrating troughs, located one above another, and arranged so that pellets are fed from an upper trough to a next trough, and the pellet beds travel in alternating directions in the respective troughs. Still other trough configurations, such as an arcuate configuration, or a helical configuration as in U.S. Pat. No. 5,067,431, granted on Nov. 26, 1991 to Charles E. Heitmiller, can also be utilized.
(41) The above modifications, and numerous other modifications, can be made to the invention described without departing from its scope, as defined by the following claims.