1. Ch 2. Capsules
Berhanemeskel W.G, Asst. Prof.
Department of Pharmaceutics
School of Pharmacy
College of Medicine and Health Sciences
University of Gondar
May 2009
1
2. Empty capsules
• Empty capsules are sold by sizes
• The ones most commonly employed for human
use range from size 0, the largest to size 5, the
smallest
• Capsule changes dimensions to some extent
with varied moisture content and conditions
encountered before use
• The amount filled in capsule may vary according
to the degree of pressure used in filling the
capsules
2
3. Filling capacity of empty capsules
Capsule size Volume (mL) Fill weight* (g)
000 1.37 1.096
00 0.95 0.760
0 0.68 0.544
1 0.50 0.400
2 0.37 0.296
3 0.30 0.240
4 0.21 0.168
5 0.13 0.104
Table: Capsule Size and Corresponding Volume or Weight of Fill
Source : Adapted from http://capsugel.onlinemore.info/download/BAS192-2002.pdf .
* Assumes a powder density of 0.8 g/cm 3 .
3
4. Basic Components of Capsule
filling equipments
• Hopper for empty capsules
• Hopper of powder
• Rectifier- orient cap-body
• Transport segment- transport the rectified
capsules
• Capsule separation (vacuum device)
• Filling system- dosing stations/nozzles
• Closing station
• Ejection station
• Collection stations- accepted and rejected once
4
5. Capsule fill weight Determination
• Example
1. Formulation- 350mg
Tapped density-0.75gm/ml
– Capsule size ??
– Amount of diluent required?
2. Formulation- 0.5gm
Tapped density- 0.8gm/ml
– Capsule size ??
– Amount of diluent required?
5
6. Capsule Filling Machine
1. Hand Operated
2. Semi-automatic
3. Fully automatic
– Most employs
• Pistons or filler dosator machines
• Tamping pins-filler dosing disc machine
6
7. Semi-Automatic Machines
• Semi-automatic machines, which require an
operator to be in attendance at all times, were
once the workhorses of the capsule filling
industry.
• Today, they are more likely to be employed
when smaller batch sizes are required, such as
production of early phase clinical supplies.
• Quoted production capacities for powder filing
range from 6000-8000 capsules/hour up to as
high as 15,000 capsules/hour, depending on the
capsule size.
7
8. Fully Automatic Machines
• Most modern automatic filling machines employ
pistons or tamping pins that lightly compress the
powder into plugs (sometimes referred to as
“slugs”), and eject the plugs into the empty
capsule bodies.
• The compression forces are low, often in the
range of 50–150N, up to about 100-fold less
than that employed in typical tablet compression.
• There are two main types of these fillers:
– dosator machines and
– Dosing disc machines.
8
11. NB
• During filling powders have dust problem (avoided by
making compartment) and de-mixing
• For potent medicaments- addition of diluents and
lubricant
• For high dose/low potency- addition of flow promoter/
glidant and lubricant
• To increase bioavailability
– Addition of surfactants
– For potent drugs
• Soluble drug in insolubel diluents
• Insoluble drug in soluble diluents mixture
• Filling Semisolids
– It is a recent innovation
• Adv.- dust free environment, control release system and increase
solubility of the drug
11
12. Quality control/In process
control
• Weight variation
• Dissolution test
• Disintegration test
• Content uniformity
• Bulk Powder Level (Under fill): inspection
device
• X-ray
• Passing the filled capsule to charged plate
12
14. Finishing process
• Finished capsules from all filling
equipment require some sort of dusting
and or polishing operation before the
remaining operations of inspection;
bottling and labeling are completed
• Dusting or polishing operations vary
according to:
– The type of filling equipment used
– The type of powder used for filling and
– The individual desires for the finished
appearance of the completed capsules
14
15. • The following are the methods most
commonly used based on desired output,
formulation, required final appearance and
so on.
1. Pan polishing
2. Cloth dusting
3. Brushing
15
16. Pan polishing
It can be used to dust and polish capsules
A polyurethane or cheese cloth liner is
placed in the pan and the liner is used to
trap the removed dust as well as to impart
gloss to the capsules.
16
17. Cloth dusting
• The bulk filled capsules are rubbed with a
cloth that may or may not be impregnated
with an inert oil
• It is hand operation
– Can handle reasonable volume
– Positive method for removal of resistant
materials
– Imparts some what improved gloss to the
capsules
17
18. Brushing
Capsules are fed under rotating soft brushes
which serve to remove the dust from the
capsule shell
This operation must be accompanied by a
vacuuming for dust removal
Limitation
– Some materials are extremely difficult to
remove by brushing
– May cause scratches or deformation of the
capsules
18
20. Special techniques
• Some special techniques that may be applied to the
capsules as a dosage form include the following:
1. Imprinting
2. Special purpose capsules: there could be special treatment
• to retard the solubility of active ingredients
• To delay absorption
• To provide enteric properties
3. Separation of incompatible materials
• Two phase fill in the capsule:
– one phase consists of either a soft capsule, a smaller hard capsule, a pill or a
suitable coated tablet.
– Second phase is powder fill in usual manner
4. Filling of conventional two piece gelatin capsules
with liquids (oils) and semisolids
• The fills are either thermosetting (filled warm) or thixotropic
20
21. 2.2. Soft Gelatin Capsules
Soft gelatin capsules are hermetically sealed
one - piece capsules containing a liquid or a
semisolid fill.
Contents to be filled:
– liquids,
– suspensions,
– pasty materials,
– dry powders and even preformed granules,
– pellets, tablets.
They may be manufactured to be oblong, oval or
round in shape.
21
23. The advantages of soft gelatin capsules
pharmaceutically elegant
easily swallowed by the patient
The pharmaceutical applications of soft gelatin
capsules are
as an oral dosage form
as a suppository dosage form for rectal or vaginal
use
as a specialty package in tube form, for human and
veterinary single dose application of topical,
ophthalmic, and otic preparations, and rectal
ointments.
In cosmetics industry used as special package for
breath fresheners, perfumes, bath oils, suntan oils
and various skin creams
23
24. The components of soft gelatin capsules
Gelatin
Plasticizer- glycerin or
polyhydric alcohol
(sorbitol and
propylene glycol)
water/moisture
Preservative
Colorant
Markings
Opaquants
Flavors may be
added and up to 5%
sucrose may be
included for its
sweetness and to
produce a chewable
shell.
24
25. SGC Methods of Manufacture
Types of Machines
1. The plate process (using a set of molds)
2. Rotary die process (1933, R. P. Scherer)
3. The reciprocating die process (1949, Norton company)
4. The Accogel machine (1949, Cyanamid company)
5. Dripping method
The production capacity of each machines is
determined by:
Die size (no. of die pockets)
Speed of the machine
Physical characteristics of the material to be
capsulated
25
26. The plate process
The plates contain die pockets.
Placing a warm sheet of gelatin on the bottom
plate
Pouring the liquid-containing medications
Placing the second sheet of gelatin
Putting the top plate of the mold into place
Pressing the mold to form, fill, and seal the
capsules simultaneously
Removing and washing the capsule
Today, this equipment can no longer be
purchased.
26
27. The rotary die process
It is more efficient and productive
Liquid gelatin is formed into two ribbons
The two ribbons are brought together
Metered fill material is injected between
the ribbons
These pockets of fill-containing gelatin are
sealed
27
29. Rotary die soft capsule
machine The dies for production of soft
capsule
29
30. The reciprocating die process
It is similar to the rotary process in that
ribbons of gelatin are formed and used to
encapsulate the fill, but it differs in the
actual encapsulating process.
A set of vertical dies continually open and
close to form rows of pockets in the gelatin
ribbons.
These pockets are filled with the medication
and are sealed, shaped, and cut out of the
film.
The capsules fall into refrigerated tanks which
prevent the capsules from adhering to one
another.
30
31. Control tests of SGCs
• Seal thickness determination
• Total or shell moisture tests
• Capsule fragility or rupture tests
• Determination of freezing and high temp.
effects
• Weight variation
• Content uniformity
• Disintegration test
• Dissolution test
31
32. 2.3. Micro-encapsulation
• It is a means of applying relatively thin coatings to
small particles of solids or droplets of liquids and
dispersions
• Micro-encapsulation provides:
– The means of converting liquids to solids
– Altering colloidal and surface properties
– Environmental protection
– Controlling the release characteristics or availability of
coated materials
• The uniqueness of micro-encapsulation is:
– The smallness of the coated particles
– Their subsequent use and adaptation to a wide variety
of dosage forms and product applications
32
33. • Applications of micro-encapsulation
– Sustained release or prolonged action medications
– Taste masked chewable tablets, powders and
suspensions
– Single layer tablets containing chemically
incompatible ingredients
• Problems
– Incomplete or discontinuous coating
– Inadequate stability or shelf life of sensitive
pharmaceuticals
– Non reproducible and unstable release characteristics
of coated products
– Economic limitation 33
34. Fundamental considerations
• The realization of the potential that micro-
encapsulation offers involves a basic
understanding of the general properties of
microcapsules such as:
– The nature of the core and coating materials
– The stability and release characteristics of the coated
materials and
– The micro-encapsulation methods
34
35. Core material
• It is defined as the specific material to
be coated, can be
–liquid- dispersed or dissolved
materials
–solid in nature-mixtures of active
ingredient, stabilizer, diluents, excipient
and release rate retardants or
accelerators.
35
36. Properties of some microencapsulated core
materials and application of encapsulation
Core material
Characteristic
property
Purpose of
encapsulation
Final
product form
Aspirin
Slightly water
soluble solid
• Taste masking
• sustained release,
• reduced gastric
irritation,
• separation of
incompatibilities
Tablet or
capsule
Potassium
chloride
High water
soluble solid
• Reduced gastric
irritation
Capsule
Menthol/methyl
salicylate
camphor mixture
Volatile solution
• Reduction of
volatility
• Sustained release
Lotion
36
37. Coating materials
• The coating materials should be:
– Capable of forming a film that is cohesive with the core material
– Be chemically compatible and non-reactive with the core
material
– Provide the desired coating properties
• Strength
• Flexibility
• Impermeability
• Optical properties
• Stability
• Types of coating materials
– Water soluble resins
– Water insoluble resins
– Waxes and liquids
– Enteric resins
37
38. Methodology
• It includes
– Air suspension
– Coacervation- phase separation
– Spray drying
– Congealing
– Pan coating
– Solvent evaporation techniques
– Vacuum deposition
– Polymerization techniques
NB:The last two are not applicable in pharmaceutical
preparation
38
39. Physical nature of the core materials and the particle
size range applicable to each process
Methods Applicable core
materials
Approx. particle size
(m)
Air suspension Solids 35-5000
Coacervation Solids and liquids 2-5000
Pan coating Solids 6-5000
Solvent evaporation Solids and liquids 5-5000
Spray drying and
congealing
Solids and liquids 600
39