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DRYING
 


Syllabus
Definition, purpose of drying, theory of drying, loss on drying, moisture content and equilibrium moisture content. Classification of dryers. Study of tray, rotary, vacuum, fluidized bed, freeze, spray and flash dryers.
 


Questions
1.      Classify dryers with examples. (2000)                                                                                                                 [3]
2.      Describe the construction, operation and applications of Fluidized bed dryer.        (2000)                                   [10]
3.      Mention the applications of freeze drying in pharmacy. (2000)                                                                                   [3]
4.      Explain working and application of spray dryer. How can spray-dryer be used for encapsulation in pharmaceutical industries? (1999)                                                                                                                                                        [5]
5.      How much moisture is to be removed from 20 kgwt material form 15% to 5% moisture content. The moisture contents are expressed in dry weight basis. (1999)                                                                                                       [6]
6.      Fluidized bed dryer(1999)                                                                                                                                    [4]
7.      Sketch a typical drying rate curve for a porous solid bed. Explain the nature of the curve. What is the utility of this curve?            (1998)                                                                                                                                                    [6]
8.      What is the principle of freeze-drying? Explain the different methods of accomplishing freeze drying of pharmaceuticals. Mention specific application. (1998)                                                                                                               [6]
9.      How much moisture is to be removed from 10 kg of wet material from 18% to 5% moisture content, the moisture contents are expressed in dry basis. (1998)                                                                                                                  [4]
10.    With a neat sketch describe the operational principle and construction details of a fluidized bed dryer. [1997]  [12]
11.    Successive granulation and drying bed granulation. [1997]                                                                                  [4]
12.    How do rotary dryers work? Explain the term equilibrium moisture content. [1996]                                                   [16]
13.    Merits of fluidized bed drying [1995]                                                                                                                  [4]
14.    Falling rate periods of drying       [1995]                                                                                                              [4]
15.    Define drying. Outline its application in the field of Pharmacy. Classify the dryers on the basis of heat transfer. Discuss in detail ‘spray drying’. [1994]                                                                                                                        [16]
 


DEFINITION
Drying is defined as the removal of liquid from a solid by thermal method.
When large amount of liquid is evaporated from a solution /suspension / slurry the process is called ‘evaporation’. The final product is a concentrated liquid / slurry.
When very small amount of liquid is evaporated from solids the process is called ‘drying’. The final product is a ‘dried solid’.

PURPOSE OF DRYING
1.      Drying is most commonly used in pharmaceutical industries in the preparation of granules, which can be packed in bulk or compressed into tablets or filled in capsules.
2.      Drying is required for processing of materials like, drying of aluminium hydroxide, spray drying of lactose and preparation of powdered extracts.
3.      Drying is used to reduce the bulk weight that lowers the transportation and storage costs of that material.
4.      Drugs obtained from plant and animal sources, when dried, becomes more friable. Thus drying helps in size reduction of natural drugs.
5.      Animal and vegetable drugs are preserved against mold growth in dried condition.
6.      Dried products often are less more stable than moist ones as in the case of  effervescent salts, aspirin, hygroscopic powders, ascorbic acids and penicillin.

SOME DEFINITIONS
Moisture content (MC)

Loss on drying (LOD)




THEORY OF DRYING

A typical drying cycle shows the following phases:

Phase-I:                               Initial adjustment period
Phase-II:               Constant rate period
Phase-III:             First falling rate period
Phase-IV:             Second falling rate period

The rate of drying of a sample can be determined by suspending the wet material on a scale or balance in a drying cabinet and measuring the weight of the sample as it dries as a function of time.

Phase-I: Initial adjustment period
A wet material when kept for drying it begins to absorb the heat and the temperature of the material increases. At the same time, the moisture begins to evaporate and thus cools the drying solid. After a period of initial adjustment, the rates of heating and cooling become equal and the temperature of the drying material reaches the wet-bulb temperature of the drying air.

Phase-II: Constant rate period
During this period there is continuous liquid film over the surface of the solid. Evaporation from the film (at wet bulb temperature) proceeds at a constant rate and the film is continuously replaced by the underlying moisture. As long as the delivery of water from the interior of the material is sufficient to keep the surface completely wet, the drying rate remains constant.
Drying rate at this phase is given by:
where,          = Rate of drying in
               A            = Area exposed to drying
               td, tw       = Dry bulb and wet bulb temperature of  the drying air respectively
r                 = Bulk density of solid
L             = Thickness of solid bed
l                 = Latent heat of vaporization of water
hc            = Convection heat transfer coefficient

Phase-III: First falling rate period
Due to dry spots on the surface, the area of constant mass transfer decreases and the heat transferred to the dry spots will be utilized to raise the temperature of the material to the dry bulb temperature. Thus as the number of dry spots increase, heat transfer and mass transfer rates fall which is called the first falling rate period. The point from which Phase-II starts is called critical point (B). Moisture content at which this point appears is called critical moisture content (CMC).

Phase-IV: Second falling rate period
In this period the capillaries are empty, no film is present on the surface. The moisture movement takes place only by diffusion. In this phase the rate of drying falls and it is lesser than first falling rate. The starting of second falling rate period is called second critical point (C).
At the end the drying rate becomes zero. The moisture content at this point is called Equilibrium Moisture Content (EMC). EMC may be defined as the moisture content of the solid when drying limit has attained by use of air at a given temperature (dry bulb) and humidity of air. EMC depends on the nature of the material, temperature and humidity.


Utility of drying curve
1.      From the drying curve the time for drying a batch of material in a certain dryer can be estimated.
2.      The size of a particular dryer can be determined for drying a substance from one moisture level to the desired moisture content.

CLASSIFICATION OF DRYERS

Classification based on solid handling

Classification based on heat transfer mechanism
A.     Convection dryers
(a) Tray or shelf dryers            (b) Tunnel dryers                             (c) Rotary dryers                              (d) Fluidized bed dryers
B.     Conduction dryers
(a) Vacuum oven                      (b) Freeze dryers
C.     Radiant heat dryers
(a) Infra-red dryers


TRAY DRYER / TRUCK DRYER / SHELF DRYER / CABINET DRYER / COMPARTMENT DRYER
Construction
It consists of a small cabinet or a large compartment in which trays containing wet materials are placed. The compartment wall is insulated to reduce heat loss.
§  In tray dryers the trays are directly placed inside the cabinet.
§  The truck dryer the trays are loaded on to the trucks (shelves on wheel) and then the trucks are introduced inside the heating cabinet.
The bottom of the trays are either perforated or having wire-mesh bottom.
§  The material is heated by hot air circulated by means of fans that removes the humid air from the cabinet.
The trays containing the load remain in the dryer until drying is complete, after which they are withdrawn, emptied and recharged for drying the next batch.
Energy sources: Dry air can be heated either by electricity or steam.

Applications
§  Drying of crude drugs, chemicals, powders, tablet granules etc.
§  It is a batch process and materials can be handled separately.

ROTARY DRYERS
Construction

It is a cylindrical shell (10 m length) mounted with a slight slope so that the material will move through the shell as it is slowly rotated at about 10 rpm. To improve contact the shell contains baffles or flights, which lift the solids and spill the particles through the air stream.
The hot air flows counter current to the flow off material.
Application
It is used for continuous drying on a large scale of any powdered or granular solid.

FLUIDIZED BED DRYER
Principle
Let us consider a situation where a bed of granules is placed over a perforated bottom container and hot air is flown from bottom through the bed. The pressure drop (DP) across the bed and the air velocity (V) are measured. If the air velocity is gradually increased and DP is plotted against V then the following curve is observed.
§  Point A: When the air velocity is very low flow takes place between the particles without causing any disturbance.
§  Point B: When the velocity is increased to a certain value the frictional drag on the particles become equal the force of gravity of the particle.
§  Point C: Rearrangement of the particles occurs to offer least resistance.
§  Point D: Eventually the particles are suspended in the air and can move, DP decreases slightly because of greater porosity.
§  Further increase in the air velocity causes the particles to separate and move freely, and the bed is fully fluidized. Any additional increase in velocity separate the particles further, i.e. the bed expands, without appreciable change in DP until E.
§  In the D-E region the air flows through the bed in the form of bubbles – the term boiling bed is generally used for this stage.
§  Above point E the solid particles entrain into the gaseous phase and the particles float in the gas.

Construction
Two types of fluidized bed dryers are there
(i)     vertical fluidized bed dryer – for batch process
(ii)   horizontal fluidized dryer – for continuous process
The dryer consists of:
(a)    Air handler: This is a source of dry and hot air. It is also attached by means of heating and dehumidifying air, if necessary.
(b)   Plenum: It consists of a screen or plate to distribute the incoming air as it enters the dryer.
(c)    Product container: This container holds the product that is to be dried.
(d)   Expansion chamber: This chamber is situated above the product container and holds the suspended material.
(e)    Filter: The upper part of the expansion chamber has bag filters. It prevents fines from escaping into the atmosphere or collecting on the blades that pulls the air through the dryer.
Applications
1. Wet granulation:
(a)    Fluidized bed dryers are used to dry the previously prepared wet granules.
(b)   Powders are agglomerated in the drying chamber by spraying liquid binder over it, while the hot air dries the agglomerates to form dry granules.
2. Coating of tablets
The fluidized bed dryer can be used for coating granules also. This technique is called Wurster technique. Three basic designs are employed
               (a) top spray        (b) bottom spray                (c) tangential spray
In fluidized condition the powder is coated by coating solution sprayed from the nozzles. As the particles are coated they become heavier. When the mass developed becomes higher than the drag force given by the fixed air velocity the particles no longer floats. They fall back, which is then collected as product.

Advantages
1.      Efficient heat and mass transfer facilitate high drying rates. Heating time of thermolabile materials is minimized.
2.      Individual particles of the bed get dried in the fluidized state. So, most of the drying will be at constant rate and the falling rate period is very short.
3.      Temperature can be controlled uniformly.
4.      A free-flowing product is obtained.
5.      Since the bed is not static, free movement of individual particles eliminates the risk of soluble materials migrating.
6.      Short time yields a high output from a small floor space.

Disadvantages
1.      Turbulence of fluidized state may produce fine particles due to attrition.
2.      Fine particles lead to segregation, so they must be collected by bag filters.
3.      Static charges may be produced due to vigorous movement of particles in hot dry air.

VACUUM DRYER
Conduction is used as the principle method of heat transfer in dryers that are operated under vacuum. Convection cannot take place when air is nearly absent.
Construction
It is a jacketed vessel through which steam or hot water is passed. The vessel can be closed airtight. The oven is connected through a condenser and receiver to a vacuum pump. The supports of the shelves form part of the jacket, giving a larger area for heat conduction. Materials to be dried are kept in a tray and placed on the shelves. Hot water or steam is passed through the jacket, a vacuum pump is connected to the chamber.
 Advantages:
1.      Drying takes place at low temperature, so thermolabile materials can be dried.
2.      It reduces the risk of oxidation during drying.
3.      It produces porous and friable granules. [N.B. Because under vacuum the vapor forms bubbles and in this condition the material is dried.]
4.      The solvent can be recovered from the condenser.

Disadvantages
1.      Heat coefficients are low. Most of the heating takes place by conduction, some is from radiation  from the wall of the jacket around. So the drying rate is slow.
2.      Labor and running costs are high.

Applications:
1.      To dry a thermolabile material like Penicillin.
2.      To produce porous form such as dry extract.
3.      To recover the solvent, for example to recover ethanol from ethanol extractives.
FREEZE DRYER
Principle
The temperature and pressure of the material is reduced below the triple point of solvent to be dried. Under these conditions, any heat transferred is used as latent heat and the ice sublimes directly to vapor state (without formation of liquid state).
Triple point of pure water is 4579 mm of Hg and 0.00990C. Pharmaceutical products remain in solution. In this case the pressure and temperature below which water evaporates directly from ice to vapor state is called eutectic point. In freeze dryer the pressure and temperature is maintained well below the eutectic point. Generally it is carried out at –100C to –400C, and at pressure of 2000 to 100 mm Hg.
Construction
Freeze dryer consists of
1.      a chamber for vacuum drying:             
Two types of chambers are there, one for batch type and another for continuous type operation.
2.      a vacuum source:                    
Vacuum is achieved either by vacuum pump or by steam ejector or a combination of two.
3.      a heat source:                          
Heat is provided by conduction or radiation.
4.      a vapor removal system:        
For removal of water vapor condensers, desiccants, pumps or scrapper blades are employed.
Stages of freeze drying process
(a) Preparation and pretreatment:
Protein solutions take 8 to 10 times longer period than pure water. Therefore, in such cases, it is desirable to concentrate the solution under normal vacuum tray dryer.
(b) Pre-freezing
The aqueous solutions to be dried are packed in vials, ampoules or bottles. They are then cooled to solidify the water. Cooling can be done by using cold-shelves (–500C), alcohol baths (–500C) or liquid nitrogen bath (–1950C).
§  Thinner the layer of frozen material higher is the drying rate. The usual thickness is kept at 0.5 to 0.75 inches.
§  Low freezing rates produces larger crystals of ice. Sublimation of water from this material leaves large pores. So freezing rate is generally maintained at 3 to 250C/min resulted in a product having pore size of 1 to 45 mm.
(c) Primary drying (Sublimation of ice under vacuum)
A vacuum of 0.5 bar is applied on the frozen materials. The temperature is increased to 300C within 2 hours. Then the temperature is kept constant. During this stage around 98 to 99% water is removed from the materials.
(d) Secondary drying  (Removal of residual moisture under high vacuum)
Temperature is maintained at 300C continuously and vacuum is lowered to a pressure of 0.07 bar. The rate of drying is very low it takes 10 to 20 hours to dry 1% moisture.
(e) Packing
Inert gas is introduced inside the dryer to break the vacuum. Then the vials and ampoules are sealed within the dryer to reduce the contact of atmospheric gases.
Advantages
1.      Drying takes place at a very low temperature, so that the enzyme action is inhibited, and decomposition (e.g. hydrolysis) is minimized.
2.      The solution is frozen, so that the final dry product is a network of solid occupying the same volume as the original solution. Thus there is no case-hardening and the product is light and porous.
3.      The dried products are readily re-dissolved or re-suspended by the addition of water prior to use (this procedure is termed as reconstitution).
4.      The solutions do not concentrate during drying (like in other drying methods). Hence salts do not concentrate and denature the proteins present in the same solution.
5.      Under high vacuum there is no contact with air, and oxidation is minimized.

Disadvantage
1.      It produces a very hygroscopic product, hence should be sealed in the final package within the dryer.
2.      The process is very slow.
3.      The instruments are very costly.

Applications:
1.      Maintenance and preservation of microbial culture.
2.      Solution of penicillin can be stored at 0 – 20C and used within two-three days, but if freeze dried then it is stable for several months.
3.      To produce fibrin foam [N.B. Fibrinogen is dissolved in sodium chloride injection and whipped into a foam that is then clotted by addition of human thrombin. The foam is then freeze dried].
4.      To prepare gelatin sponge [N.B. A solution of gelatin containing traces of formaldehyde is foamed, freeze dried, sterilized and used as surgical dressing.]
5.      Used to dry sera, blood products, certain enzymes, plant extracts, diagnostics, mammalian tissues useful in skin and bone graft surgery.

SPRAY DRYING

In spray dryer the liquid is sprayed in small droplets by atomizer in a drying chamber so that each droplet dries to a solid particle. The feed may either be solution, suspension or paste.
Construction and working
The spray drying process involves four basic stages:

(A) Atomization of feed into spray
               When a feed is atomized into small droplet its specific surface area increases many folds. So drying takes place at a very fast rate. The instrument that produces small droplets is called atomizer. Atomizers are classified as follows on the mechanisms involved in breaking the bulk of the liquid.
(a)   Centrifugal atomizer
e.g. Rotary atomizer. In rotary atomizer the liquid is distributed centrally on a wheel disc or cup that is rotated at high speed. Due to centrifugal force the liquid gets high velocity in the radial direction. The liquid is extended as a thin film over the disc. Then the liquid films disintegrate to produce fine droplets.
Use: Used for slurries or pastes having thermolabile, abrasive, corrosive or high viscous properties.
(b)   Pressure atomizer
e.g. Centrifugal pressure nozzle. The liquid is fed through a nozzle under pressure. The feed is issued from the nozzle as a thin film that readily disintegrates into a spray. The feed rotates inside the nozzle so that a cone shaped spray pattern is obtained.
Use: Used to obtain coarse particles.
(c)    Pneumatic atomizer
e.g. Two fluid Nozzle atomizer. It involves impact of liquid with a high velocity gas or air. The high velocity gas creates a high frictional force over the liquid surfaces leading to disintegration of liquid into droplets. The stream of gas is rotated inside the nozzle and may come in contact with the liquid wither within the nozzle or after emerging of liquid from the nozzle.
Use: Feed of high viscosity feed produce coarse and less uniform product. Feed of low viscosity produces smaller size particles and more uniform particles.



(B) Spray-Air contact
The spray and hot air can flow in two ways: (i) co-current flow, (ii) in counter-current flow.
In co-current flow the spray and the hot air is passed in the same direction. Here fresh droplets come in contact with the hottest air. Solvent evaporates and the droplet temperature falls to wet bulb temperature. So heat labile materials can be dried.
In counter-current flow the spray and hot air flows in opposite directions. Here the dried product comes in contact with the hottest air hence this type of flow is suitable for thermostable materials.

(C) Droplet drying
               Heat is transferred to droplets by convection from air. The moisture from the interior migrates to the surface and evaporation takes place from the surface. The air temperature is so high that migration of moisture from the interior of the droplet cannot provide the moisture necessary to keep the surface wet. So the surface becomes dried quickly and the moisture in the interior produces vapor that expands the droplets. The final product depends on the nature of the surface layer:
Layer is porous and rigid                               ®           No change
Layer is less porous and rigid        ®           Broken particles
Layer is non-porous and plastic    ®           Expanded hollow particles

(D) Separation and recovery of dried products
Majority of dried product falls to the base of the chamber where primary separation takes place. The particles entrained in the air is recovered by any one of the separation equipment like cyclone separator, bag filters, electrostatic precipitators or wet scrubbers.

Applications
1.  For drying pharmaceutical products three types of spray dryers are used:
(i)     Standard open cycle type: Used from drying infusions, extracts, adrenaline etc. Air is used for drying.
(ii)   Aseptic open cycle type: Used to dry antibiotics, vitamins, destrans, hormones, enzymes etc. in aseptic condition. The air is made sterile by passing through HEPA filter.
(iii) Closed cycle type: This type is commonly used to remove organic solvent by using nitrogen instead of air. This type is used for inflammable solvents, for drying toxic substances and for complete recovery of solvent.
2. For spray congealing: In this process solid drug particles are suspended in molten waxes (or congealing polymers) and sprayed in a chamber containing cool air. The droplets of wax congeal around the drug particles. Thus the taste of unpalatable drugs can be masked and sustained release products can be produced.
3. Spray coating: Solid drug particles are suspended in a coating solution (containing polymer) and the slurry is sprayed in a drying chamber. The solvent of the coating solution evaporates leaving a coating on the solid drug particles. Liquids can also be coated by this method. An emulsion is prepared with the liquid drug as internal phase and coating solution as the external phase. The emulsion is sprayed in the drying chamber. Solvent is evaporated from the external phase leaving a coating over the dispersed liquid drug.

FLASH DRYERS
Principle
The wet solid mass is suspended in a finely divided state in a high-temperature (3000 to 6000 ft/min), high temperature (3000F to 13000F) air stream. The resultant attrition exposes new surface for rapid drying. This process is called flash drying because the drying time is extremely short.
The dried product is collected by a cyclone separator, followed by a bag filter or wet scrubber.





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