Hydration Patterns in Sodium Alginate Polymeric Matrix Tablets-The Result of Drug Substance Incorporation

Materials (Basel). 2021 Oct 29;14(21):6531. doi: 10.3390/ma14216531.

Abstract

The purpose was to show, using destructive/nondestructive methods, that the interplay between water, tablet structure, and composition determine the unique spatiotemporal hydration pattern of polymer-based matrices. The tablets containing a 1:1 w/w mixture of sodium alginate with salicylic acid (ALG/SA) or sodium salicylate (ALG/SNA) were studied using Karl Fischer titration, differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray microtomography, and magnetic resonance imaging. As the principal results, matrix specific features were detected, e.g., "locking" of the internal part of the matrix (ALG/SA); existence of lamellar region associated with detection of free/freezing water (ALG/SA); existence of water penetrating the matrix forming specific region preceding infiltration layer (ALG/SNA); switch in the onset temperature of endothermic water peak associated with an increase in the fraction of non-freezing water weight per dry matrix weight in the infiltration layer (ALG/SNA). The existence of complicated spatiotemporal hydration patterns influenced by matrix composition and molecular properties of constituents has been demonstrated.

Keywords: X-ray microtomography; drug solubility; hydrophilic matrix tablets; magnetic resonance imaging; mass transport; polymer dissolution; polymer hydration; sodium alginate; sustained release drug delivery; swelling.