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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Wall collision and drug-carrier detachment in dry powder inhalers: Using DEM to devise a sub-scale model for CFD calculations

Alessio AlexiadisMartin SommerfeldMostapha Ariane

subject

Work (thermodynamics)Materials sciencebusiness.industryGeneral Chemical Engineering02 engineering and technologyMechanicsComputational fluid dynamics021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyRotation030226 pharmacology & pharmacyDiscrete element method03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineFluid dynamicsParticle0210 nano-technologyDispersion (chemistry)businessScale model

description

Abstract In this work, the Discrete Element Method (DEM) is used to simulate the dispersion process of Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (API) after a wall collision in dry powders inhaler used for lung delivery. Any fluid dynamic effects are neglected in this analysis at the moment. A three-dimensional model is implemented with one carrier particle (diameter 100 μm) and 882 drug particles (diameter 5 μm). The effect of the impact velocity (varied between 1 and 20 m s−1), angle of impact (between 5° and 90°) and the carrier rotation (±100,000 rad s−1) are investigated for both elastic and sticky walls. The dispersion process shows a preferential area of drug detachment located in the southern hemisphere of the carrier. The angle of impact with the highest dispersion is 90° for the velocities over 9 m s−1 and between 30° and 45° for lower velocities. The rotation of the carrier before the impact, on the other hand, for velocities higher than 7 m s−1, plays a little role on the dispersion performance. The DEM results are finally “distilled” into a simplified analytic model that could be introduced as a sub-scale model in Euler/Lagrange CFD calculations linking fluid dynamics with the detachment probability of APIs in the inhaler.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.powtec.2018.04.051