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Microencapsulation methods
1. Microencapsulation methods
A-Physical methods :
1- Pan Coating :
- The pan coating process, widely used in
the pharmaceutical industry, is among the oldest industrial
procedures for forming small, coated particles or tablets.
- The particles are tumbled in a pan or other device while the
coating material is applied slowly.
- The pipe of the blower stretches into pot for an evenly heating
distribution while the coating pan is rotating.
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2. 2- Air suspension method :
- In the air suspension coating , the fine solid core materials are suspended by
a vertical current of air and sprayed with the wall material solution .
- After the evaporation of the solvent, a layer of the encapsulating material is
deposited onto the core material.
- The process can be repeated to achieve the desired film thickness.
- The size of the core particle for this technique is usually large
- Micro-encapsulation by air suspension is a technique that gives improved
control and flexibility compared to pan coating
Figure 1.1: Scheme showing microencapsulation by air suspension coating.
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3. 3- Spray Drying :
- In spray drying the liquid feed is atomized to
droplets and contacted with a hot gas which
causes the solvent of the droplets to
evaporate, leaving dried particles.
- The particles are subsequently separated
from the drying gas in a cyclone or a bag
filter.
- Spray drying is the most widely used
industrial process for particle formation and drying. It is extremely well suited to
the continuous production of dry solids as either powder, granulates or
agglomerates from liquid feeds. Feeds include solutions, emulsions and pumpable
suspensions.
- Spray drying is a versatile process and therefore it provides good control over the
final powder properties such as flowability, particle size, redissolution rate, bulk
density and mechanical strength.
4- Centrifugal Extrusion :
- The centrifugal extrusion process is a liquid co-
extrusion process utilising nozzles consisting of
concentric orifices located on the outer
circumference of a rotating cylinder.
- A liquid core material is pumped through the inner
orifice and a liquid wall material through the outer
orifice forming a co-extruded rod of core material
surrounded by the wall material.
- As the device rotates, the extruded rod breaks into droplets which form
capsules.
- The rotational speed affects the capsule size which can be a little as
150microns in diameter and the active ingredients can be encapsulated to up to
80% per weight.
- Typical wall materials include gelatin, alginate, carageenan, starch, cellulose
derivatives, gum arabic, fats and waxes or polyethylene glycol. Flavour oils for
example are easily encapsulated using this methodology.
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4. 5- Vibrational nozzle :
- Core-Shell encapsulation or Microgranulation (matrix-encapsulation) can be done
using a laminar flow through a nozzle and an additional vibration of the nozzle or
the liquid.
- The vibration has to be done in resonance of
the Rayleigh instability and leads to very uniform
droplets.
- The liquid can consists of any liquids with limited
viscosities (0-10,000 mPa·s have been shown to
work), e.g. solutions, emulsions, suspensions,
melts etc.
- The soldification can be done according to the
used gelation system with an internal gelation
(e.g. sol-gel processing, melt) or an external
(additional binder system, e.g. in a slurry).
- The process works very well for generating droplets between 100–5,000 µm (3.9–
200 mils), applications for smaller and larger droplets are known.
- The units are deployed in industries and research mostly with capacities of 1–
10,000 kg per hour (2–22,000 lb/h) at working temperatures of 20–1500 °C (68–
2732 °F) (room temperature up to molten silicon).
- Nozzles heads are available from one up to several hundred thousand are
available.
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5. B- Physico-chemical methods :
1- Coacervation :
there are two methods for coacervation are available, namely simple and complex
processes. The mechanism of microcapsule formation for both processes is identical,
except for the way in which the phase separation is carried out.
-In simple coacervation : a desolvation agent is added for phase separation.
whereas complex coacervation involves complexation between two oppositely charged
polymers.
The three basic steps in complex coacervation are:
(i) formation of three immiscible phases.
(ii) deposition of the coating.
(iii) rigidization of the coating.
First step : include formation of three immiscible phases; liquid manufacturing vehicle,
core material, coating material.
The core material is dispersed in a solution of the coating polymer.
The coating material phase, an immiscible polymer in liquid state is formed by
(i) changing temperature of polymer solution.
(ii) addition of salt.
(iii) addition of nonsolvent.
(iv) addition of incompatible polymer to the polymer solution.
(v) inducing polymer – polymer interaction.
Second step: includes deposition of liquid polymer upon the core material.
Finally : the prepared microcapsules are stabilized by crosslinking, desolvation or
thermal treatment.
figure 1: Schematic representation of the coacervation process. (a) Core material dispersion in solution of shell polymer; (b)
separation of coacervate from solution; (c) coating of core material by microdroplets of coacervate; (d) coalescence of
coacervate to form continuous shell around core particles.
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6. 3- supercritical carbon dioxide assisted microencapsulation :
- Compressed carbon dioxide in the liquid or supercritical state is attractive as a
solvent in microencapsulation processes.
.
- Carbon dioxide is non-toxic, non-flammable,
and inexpensive.
- The high volatility of carbon dioxide allows it
to be easily separated from polymeric
materials by lowering pressure.
- The supercritical fluid state is reached when
the temperature and pressure of a substance
are above its critical temperature and
pressure. For carbon dioxide, the critical
temperature is 31 °C
and the critical pressure is 74 bar. Phase diagram of CO2.
-Generally there are three steps in the impregnation :
First, the polymer materials are exposed to supercritical CO2 for a while;
then the solution of additives in CO2 is introduced and the solute is transferred
from CO2 to polymer
- Last, CO2 is released and the solute is trapped in the polymer material.
- When suspensions of polymer particles in water are exposed to supercritical CO2
with the presence of additives in water, the transport of the additive into polymer
particles can also be enhanced. After releasing CO2, additives can be trapped in
colloidal polymer particles.
Figure : Scheme showing the encapsulation of additives into polymer colloids with
the help of compressed CO2.
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7. 3-Sol-Gel Encapsulation :
- Sol-gel encapsulation allows trapping lipophylic components inside the spherical
shell of amorphous silicon dioxide .
- The process can be run, for example, in the oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion with an
active material solubilized in the silicon phases such as tetraethoxysilane (TEOS)
or tetramethoxysilane (TMOS).
- Hydrolysis of the silicon droplets and condensation of the hydrolyzed species to
silica occurs at the oil-water interface and leads to formation of the hard silica
shell.
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