Scientists from Harvard, Cambridge, MA, USA; EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland,
Yale, New Haven, CT, USA; and BASF, Ludwigshafen, Germany, developed a
process that makes amorphous nanoparticles with increased solubility.
This improves the efficient uptake of drugs, for example, in the human
body.
The team has developed a microfluidic nebulizer to create very small
nanoparticles from drugs that are first dissolved in a solvent and then
exposed to a stream of air with the speed of 600 m/s. The high-speed air
flow enables fast evaporation of the solvent, which leaves no time for
the molecules to arrange themselves in the form of a crystal. Molecules,
therefore, arrange themselves randomly in an amorphous structure and
are ten times easier to dissolve. This system offers good control over
the composition, structure and the size of particles.
The process can be applied to both organic and inorganic substances
making it attractive for numerous potential applications in
pharmacology, the food industry and crop protection.
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