화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biomacromolecules, Vol.19, No.11, 4430-4441, 2018
Rheology of Cellulose Ether Excipients Designed for Hot Melt Extrusion
A new family of cellulosic ether polymeric excipients has been recently engineered for fabrication of amorphous solid dispersions of active pharmaceutical ingredients via hot-melt extrusion (HME). These hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose excipients enable plasticizer-free melt processing at much lower temperatures (135-160 degrees C) due to their substantially reduced glass transition temperatures (T-g = 98-110 degrees C). The novel amorphous cellulose ethers were found to be rheologically solidlike well above their glass transition (T-g + 70 degrees C). We demonstrate that in the pharmaceutically relevant HME processing temperature range these polymers behave similarly to yield-stress fluids and flow only when the applied stress exceeds a critical stress value. This critical stress value (0.50 +/- 0.05 MPa, 150 degrees C) is surprisingly high but is easily achieved under typical HME conditions. The origin of their yield-stress fluidlike behavior is hypothesized to arise from hydrogen bonds of the HPMC materials that act as physical cross-links and do not relax within the measured temperature and time window unless the applied stress exceeds the critical stress value. Support for this hypothesis arises from infrared spectroscopic estimates of the free and bound hydrogen bond levels at end-use temperatures.