scholarly journals Spontaneous Emulsification Via Phase Inversion At Ambient Temperature For Stable N-Octane–Aerosol-OT/Water Microemulsions

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristina Simonova ◽  
Akihide Hibara ◽  
Tatiana Samarina ◽  
Mikhail Proskurnin
Processes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. 617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nor Azrini Nadiha Azmi ◽  
Amal A. M. Elgharbawy ◽  
Shiva Rezaei Motlagh ◽  
Nurhusna Samsudin ◽  
Hamzah Mohd. Salleh

Nanotechnology, particularly nanoemulsions (NEs), have gained increasing interest from researchers throughout the years. The small-sized droplet with a high surface area makes NEs important in many industries. In this review article, the components, properties, formation, and applications are summarized. The advantages and disadvantages are also described in this article. The formation of the nanosized emulsion can be divided into two types: high and low energy methods. In high energy methods, high-pressure homogenization, microfluidization, and ultrasonic emulsification are described thoroughly. Spontaneous emulsification, phase inversion temperature (PIT), phase inversion composition (PIC), and the less known D-phase emulsification (DPE) methods are emphasized in low energy methods. The applications of NEs are described in three main areas which are food, cosmetics, and drug delivery.


Author(s):  
Neha Joshi ◽  
Vijay Juyal ◽  
Himanshu Joshi ◽  
Shweta Dang

Aims: To understand about the nanoemulsion types and the process formation of spontaneous emulsification method by phase inversion. Then to test the different combinations of Oil, Surfactants and Co-surfactants for formation of suitable nanoemulsions for phenytoin drug loading. Study Design: Spontaneous emulsification method by phase inversion used to form the nanoemulsions. Place and Duration of Study: Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kumaun University, Nainital, Uttarakhand, India. Methodology: Phenytoin is a widely used drug in anticonvulsants class for epilepsy which comes under BCS Class II of drug category. Phenytoin has high permeability property but it also shows low solubility property which makes it difficult to absorb from GI tract hence make a poor penetration into the brain to target disease in the CNS. To overcome the situation of poor delivery of phenytoin, the requirement of nanoparticulate drug delivery as an innovative and effective drug delivery system from nose to brain raised. The objective of our study was to find the best combination of oil and Smix (surfactant and co-surfactant mixture) to form o/w (Oil in Water) nanoemulsions suitable for loading phenytoin drug using spontaneous emulsification method for brain targeting. Results: Based on different compositions of oil (sunflower), surfactants (Tween-20), and co-surfactants (Transcutol P), forty-five test mixtures were made, water titration technique was employed for preparing the pseudo-ternary-phase diagrams. On the basis of these phase diagrams twenty-five phenytoin loaded nanoemulsions were formulated and further examined. After physicochemical characterization of these formulations the viscosity, pH, RI and % transmittance was found (6.149 ± 0.084 to 9.114 ± 0.027), (6.546 ± 0.018 to 6.656 ± 0.017), (1.395 ± 0.003 to 1.41 ± 0.005) and (94.53 ± 1.4% to 95.58 ± 1.2%) respectively. The release rate of phenytoin was found very satisfactory i.e., 98.51 ± 0.25 % to 99.82 ± 0.28 % after 24 hrs. The four formulations showed best release rate had further taken for particle size analysis. The particle size analysis showed that all the properties were in the desired range i.e., droplet size (18.9 to 21.9), zeta potential (-12.4 to -28.8), PDI (0.334 to 0.363). The study shows that the phenytoin loaded nanoemulsion is possible to make by water titration method and shall have a good drug release rate. Conclusion: The nanoemulsion formulations passed through stress testing had also showed good release rate of phenytoin. Also, the other parameters like viscosity, pH, RI and percentage transmittance were in a quit satisfactory range to proceed further with these formulations. The particle size analysis confirms the formation of nanoemultions which had very good drug release rates.


Langmuir ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 16 (24) ◽  
pp. 9233-9241 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taisei Nishimi ◽  
Clarence A. Miller

Author(s):  
S.W. French ◽  
N.C. Benson ◽  
C. Davis-Scibienski

Previous SEM studies of liver cytoskeletal elements have encountered technical difficulties such as variable metal coating and heat damage which occurs during metal deposition. The majority of studies involving evaluation of the cell cytoskeleton have been limited to cells which could be isolated, maintained in culture as a monolayer and thus easily extracted. Detergent extraction of excised tissue by immersion has often been unsatisfactory beyond the depth of several cells. These disadvantages have been avoided in the present study. Whole C3H mouse livers were perfused in situ with 0.5% Triton X-100 in a modified Jahn's buffer including protease inhibitors. Perfusion was continued for 1 to 2 hours at ambient temperature. The liver was then perfused with a 2% buffered gluteraldehyde solution. Liver samples including spontaneous tumors were then maintained in buffered gluteraldehyde for 2 hours. Samples were processed for SEM and TEM using the modified thicarbohydrazide procedure of Malich and Wilson, cryofractured, and critical point dried (CPD). Some samples were mechanically fractured after CPD.


Author(s):  
S. Mahajan

The evolution of dislocation channels in irradiated metals during deformation can be envisaged to occur in three stages: (i) formation of embryonic cluster free regions, (ii) growth of these regions into microscopically observable channels and (iii) termination of their growth due to the accumulation of dislocation damage. The first two stages are particularly intriguing, and we have attempted to follow the early stages of channel formation in polycrystalline molybdenum, irradiated to 5×1019 n. cm−2 (E > 1 Mev) at the reactor ambient temperature (∼ 60°C), using transmission electron microscopy. The irradiated samples were strained, at room temperature, up to the macroscopic yield point.Figure 1 illustrates the early stages of channel formation. The observations suggest that the cluster free regions, such as A, B and C, form in isolated packets, which could subsequently link-up to evolve a channel.


Author(s):  
Robert C. Rau

Previous work has shown that post-irradiation annealing, at temperatures near 1100°C, produces resolvable dislocation loops in tungsten irradiated to fast (E > 1 MeV) neutron fluences of about 4 x 1019 n/cm2 or greater. To crystallographically characterize these loops, tilting experiments were carried out in the electron microscope on a polycrystalline specimen which had been irradiated to 1.5 × 1021 n/cm2 at reactor ambient temperature (∼ 70°C), and subseouently annealed for 315 hours at 1100°C. This treatment produced large loops averaging 1000 Å in diameter, as shown in the micrographs of Fig. 1. The orientation of this grain was near (001), and tilting was carried out about axes near [100], [10] and [110].


Author(s):  
J. J. Laidler

The presence of three-dimensional voids in quenched metals has long been suspected, and voids have indeed been observed directly in a number of metals. These include aluminum, platinum, and copper, silver and gold. Attempts at the production of observable quenched-in defects in nickel have been generally unsuccessful, so the present work was initiated in order to establish the conditions under which such defects may be formed.Electron beam zone-melted polycrystalline nickel foils, 99.997% pure, were quenched from 1420°C in an evacuated chamber into a bath containing a silicone diffusion pump fluid . The pressure in the chamber at the quenching temperature was less than 10-5 Torr . With an oil quench such as this, the cooling rate is approximately 5,000°C/second above 400°C; below 400°C, the cooling curve has a long tail. Therefore, the quenched specimens are aged in place for several seconds at a temperature which continuously approaches the ambient temperature of the system.


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