Pharmaceutical Production: 20+ Comparison Questions

1. Difference between Wet Granulation vs Dry Granulation
Parameter Wet Granulation Dry Granulation
Process Uses liquid binder (water/ethanol) No liquid, uses compression
Equipment High shear mixer, fluid bed dryer Roller compactor, slugging press
Moisture-sensitive drugs Not suitable Ideal
Granule properties Spherical, good flow Irregular, moderate flow
Production time Longer (drying required) Shorter
Key Points: Wet granulation better for cohesive powders, dry granulation for moisture-sensitive APIs. Wet granules typically have better compressibility.

2. Fluid Bed Processor vs High Shear Mixer for Granulation
Aspect Fluid Bed Processor High Shear Mixer
Mixing principle Fluidization with air Mechanical shearing
Granule density Low to medium (porous) High (dense)
Granule size Small to medium (50-500μm) Medium to large (200-1000μm)
Drying In-situ drying Separate dryer needed
Thermal stress Lower Higher (friction heat)
Key Points: Fluid bed produces more porous granules better for fast dissolution. High shear yields denser granules with better flow.

3. Immediate Release vs Sustained Release Tablets
Feature Immediate Release Sustained Release
Release profile Rapid (15-60 min) Extended (8-24 hours)
Dosing frequency 3-4 times daily 1-2 times daily
Formulation complexity Simple Complex
Common technologies Direct compression, wet granulation Matrix systems, membrane control, osmotic pumps
PK profile Peak-trough fluctuations Steady state
Key Points: SR formulations reduce dosing frequency but require more extensive development and stability testing.

4. Sugar Coating vs Film Coating of Tablets
Parameter Sugar Coating Film Coating
Coating thickness Thick (50-150μm) Thin (20-50μm)
Weight increase 30-50% 2-5%
Process time Long (8-16 hours) Short (1-3 hours)
Equipment Standard coating pans Perforated pans, fluid bed
Moisture protection Good Limited
Key Points: Film coating is modern, faster, and allows for functional coatings. Sugar coating provides better taste masking.

5. Ointment vs Cream vs Gel
Characteristic Ointment Cream Gel
Base type Oleaginous Emulsion (O/W or W/O) Hydro-alcoholic or aqueous
Greasiness High Low to moderate None
Washability Poor Good Excellent
Drug release Occlusive, enhanced Moderate Fast
Typical use Dry lesions, protection Moist lesions, cosmetics Scalp, mucosal delivery
Key Points: Ointments provide occlusion, creams are cosmetically elegant, gels offer easy application and fast release.

6. Hard Gelatin Capsules vs Soft Gelatin Capsules
Aspect Hard Gelatin Capsules Soft Gelatin Capsules
Shell composition Gelatin + plasticizer Gelatin + plasticizer + glycerin
Content Powders, granules, pellets Liquids, pastes, suspensions
Manufacturing Two-piece filling One-piece encapsulation
Moisture sensitivity High Moderate
Oxygen permeability High Low
Key Points: Softgels better for liquid formulations and improved bioavailability. Hard capsules offer flexibility in formulation.

7. Laminar Flow vs Turbulent Flow in Mixing
Parameter Laminar Flow Turbulent Flow
Reynolds number Re < 2000 Re > 4000
Flow pattern Smooth, parallel layers Chaotic, eddies
Mixing mechanism Molecular diffusion Eddy diffusion
Power consumption P ∝ N (linear) P ∝ N³ (cubic)
Applications High viscosity fluids Low viscosity fluids
Key Points: Turbulent flow provides better mixing but requires more power. Laminar flow is energy efficient but slow mixing.

8. Spray Drying vs Freeze Drying (Lyophilization)
Factor Spray Drying Freeze Drying
Temperature High (100-200°C inlet) Low (-40 to 25°C)
Product form Fine powder Porous cake
Process time Seconds to minutes Hours to days
Cost Lower Higher
Heat-sensitive products Limited suitability Ideal
Key Points: Spray drying is economical for bulk products. Freeze drying preserves protein structure and activity.

9. Ball Mill vs Hammer Mill
Characteristic Ball Mill Hammer Mill
Principle Impact & attrition Impact & shearing
Product size Fine (< 100μm) Coarse to fine (1-1000μm)
Heat generation Low High
Wet milling Possible Limited
Contamination risk High (wear debris) Low
Key Points: Ball mills better for fine grinding, hammer mills more versatile. Ball mills can cause metallic contamination.

10. Newtonian vs Non-Newtonian Fluids
Property Newtonian Fluids Non-Newtonian Fluids
Viscosity Constant with shear rate Changes with shear rate
Examples Water, glycerol, dilute solutions Suspensions, emulsions, polymer solutions
Flow behavior τ = μγ̇ τ = Kγ̇ⁿ (power law)
n value n = 1 n ≠ 1
Mixing requirements Standard impellers High shear required
Key Points: Most pharmaceutical suspensions and emulsions are non-Newtonian (shear-thinning). This affects pumping and mixing design.

11. Direct Compression vs Wet Granulation for Tableting
Consideration Direct Compression Wet Granulation
Process steps Mixing → Compression Mixing → Granulation → Drying → Milling → Compression
Time Short Long
Cost Lower Higher
API sensitivity Moisture/heat sensitive OK Not suitable for moisture-sensitive
Content uniformity Critical for low dose Easier to achieve
Key Points: Direct compression preferred when possible due to simplicity. Wet granulation needed for poor flow/compressibility.

12. Autoclave vs Dry Heat Sterilization
Parameter Autoclave (Moist Heat) Dry Heat
Temperature/Time 121°C/15 min or 134°C/3 min 160°C/120 min or 180°C/30 min
Mechanism Protein denaturation Oxidation
Materials Stainless steel, glass, rubber Glass, metal, powders, oils
Penetration Excellent Poor
Depyrogenation No Yes (250°C/30 min)
Key Points: Autoclaving more efficient but can't depyrogenate. Dry heat used for heat-stable, moisture-sensitive items.

13. Solution vs Suspension vs Emulsion
Characteristic Solution Suspension Emulsion
Dispersion type Molecular Solid in liquid Liquid in liquid
Stability Thermodynamically stable Kinetically stable Kinetically stable
Particle size < 1 nm 0.5-50 μm 0.1-50 μm
Sedimentation No Yes (Stokes' law) Creaming
Formulation additives Solubilizers, cosolvents Suspending agents, wetting agents Emulsifiers, stabilizers
Key Points: Solutions offer best bioavailability but limited by solubility. Suspensions/emulsions need physical stabilization.

14. Batch Processing vs Continuous Manufacturing
Aspect Batch Processing Continuous Manufacturing
Operation mode Discrete batches Continuous flow
Equipment size Large Compact
Process time Days Hours
Quality control End-product testing Real-time monitoring (PAT)
Flexibility High (easy changeover) Low (dedicated lines)
Key Points: Continuous manufacturing offers better quality control through PAT but requires significant upfront investment.

15. MCC vs Lactose as Tablet Fillers
Property Microcrystalline Cellulose (MCC) Lactose
Source Wood pulp Milk whey
Compressibility Excellent (plastic deformation) Good (fragmentation)
Flowability Poor (needs glidant) Good
Moisture content 4-6% 0.5% (anhydrous)
Maillard reaction No Yes (with amines)
Key Points: MCC provides superior binding but poor flow. Lactose flows well but may cause browning with amine drugs.

16. O/W vs W/O Emulsions
Parameter Oil-in-Water (O/W) Water-in-Oil (W/O)
Continuous phase Water Oil
Conductivity Conductive Non-conductive
Dilution Dilutes with water Dilutes with oil
HLB requirement 8-18 3-8
Typical use Cosmetic creams, lotions Cold creams, ointments
Key Points: O/W emulsions feel less greasy, W/O provide better moisturization. HLB value determines emulsion type.

17. Coarse Dispersion vs Colloidal Dispersion
Characteristic Coarse Dispersion Colloidal Dispersion
Particle size > 1 μm 1 nm - 1 μm
Settling rate Fast (minutes-hours) Slow (days-months)
Tyndall effect No Yes
Brownian motion Negligible Significant
Filtration Filterable Passes through filters
Key Points: Colloidal systems have enhanced stability due to Brownian motion. Coarse dispersions need suspending agents.

18. Rapid Mixer Granulator vs Fluid Bed Granulator
Aspect Rapid Mixer Granulator Fluid Bed Granulator
Granule density High (1.2-1.4 g/cc) Low (0.6-0.9 g/cc)
Granule shape Dense, spherical Porous, irregular
Dissolution Slower Faster
Heat-sensitive drugs Risk of degradation Better (lower temp)
Scale-up Easy Complex
Key Points: RMG produces harder tablets, FBG better for heat-sensitive APIs and fast-dissolving formulations.

19. Enteric Coating vs Sustained Release Coating
Parameter Enteric Coating Sustained Release Coating
Purpose Protect from stomach acid Control release rate
pH sensitivity Dissolves at pH > 5.5 pH independent or dependent
Polymers used CAP, HPMCP, Eudragit L/S EC, HPMC, Eudragit RS/RL
Coating thickness Thin (10-30μm) Thicker (30-100μm)
Release mechanism pH-triggered dissolution Diffusion through membrane
Key Points: Enteric coatings prevent gastric irritation/degradation. SR coatings provide controlled drug delivery.

20. Top-Down vs Bottom-Up Nanoparticle Manufacturing
Approach Top-Down Bottom-Up
Process Size reduction of bulk material Assembly from molecular level
Examples Milling, homogenization Precipitation, self-assembly
Particle size control Difficult Good
Energy consumption High Low
Crystallinity Maintains crystallinity May produce amorphous
Key Points: Top-down is simpler but less controlled. Bottom-up offers better size control but more complex.

21. Hot Melt Extrusion vs Spray Drying for Amorphous Solid Dispersions
Factor Hot Melt Extrusion Spray Drying
Temperature High (above Tg) Moderate (solvent evaporation)
Residual solvent None Present (needs control)
Product form Rods, pellets Powder
Throughput High Moderate
Thermal degradation risk High Low
Key Points: HME is solvent-free but needs heat-stable drugs. Spray drying handles heat-sensitive drugs but needs solvent removal.
22. Sieve Analysis vs Laser Diffraction for Particle Size
Method Sieve Analysis Laser Diffraction
Size range 20 μm - 20 mm 0.1 μm - 3 mm
Principle Mechanical separation Light scattering
Time Slow (minutes-hours) Fast (seconds)
Dry vs Wet Dry only Both dry and wet
Shape sensitivity High (sieving depends on shape) Low (assumes spheres)
Key Points: Sieve analysis is traditional but slow. Laser diffraction is rapid and gives complete distribution.