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      Applications of Supercritical Fluids to Pharmaceuticals: Controlled Drug Release Systems

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      Springer Netherlands

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          Pharmaceutical processing with supercritical carbon dioxide.

          Replacement of traditional solvents with "environmentally benign" carbon dioxide is receiving increased attention in pharmaceutical processing. Among the reported applications, particle formation with dense carbon dioxide and the "clean" synthesis of drug compounds using carbon dioxide as a reaction medium hold immense potential for large-scale application in the pharmaceutical industry. This paper provides an overview of these rapidly emerging technologies along with examples of the wide variety of relatively contaminant-free pharmaceutical compounds that have been processed via these technologies on a laboratory scale. Challenges facing successful implementation in practice include demonstration of continuous production and harvesting of particles with desired and reproducible product characteristics. Mathematical models aimed at a better fundamental understanding of the underlying thermophysical phenomena are essential for rational design and scale-up of these technologies.
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            Formation of microparticulate protein powder using a supercritical fluid antisolvent.

            Gas antisolvent (GAS) expansion of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and N,N-dimethylformamide (DMFA) solutions with supercritical carbon dioxide was used to produce biologically active powders of insulin. Powders with 90% of the particles smaller than 4 mum and 10% smaller than 1 mum were obtained under all conditions tested when the process was operated continuously, with small liquid droplets sprayed into a flowing supercritical continuum. Slow pressurization of the stagnant protein solution resulted in larger particles. In vivo tests on rats revealed no differences between the biological activity of processed and unprocessed insulin, GAS processing of organic solution appears to be a reliable and effective method for the production of dry, biologically active microparticulate powders of peptides and proteins. (c) 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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              Rapid expansion of supercritical fluid solutions: solute formation of powders, thin films, and fibers

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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2000
                : 291-306
                10.1007/978-94-011-3929-8_12
                5c658763-1985-4827-ae2e-e99bc4a0d98f
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