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Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Effervescent Dosage Manufacturing
src: www.gea.com

Effervescent or carbon tablets are tablets which are designed to dissolve in water, and release carbon dioxide.In the 17th and 18th centuries, scientists began uncovering the chemical make-up and physiological benefits of various salts such as Glauber's salt and Epsom salts. These salts were found in mineral springs, which, since the Roman Empire, had been used as health spas, where people would go to bathe in, and drink, mineral-rich waters for their health. These developments led to attempts to replicate the salt mixtures found in these naturally occurring mineral waters using off-the-shelf ingredients. Mixing these kinds of salts -- especially carbonates and tartrates -- with flavorings like lemon into an effervescent compound with citric or tartaric acid proved especially popular and set off a craze for the new "fruit salts".Effervescent tablets have been used as products of the pharmaceutical and dietary industries for over two centuries.

Effervescent tablets are products of compression of component ingredients in the form of powders into a dense mass, which is packaged in blister pack, or with a hermetically sealed package with incorporated desiccant in the cap. To use them, they are dropped into water to make a solution.

Cleaning tablets may be added to laundry or filled tubs of water, depending on the package directions.

The powdered ingredients are also packaged and sold as effervescent powders or may be granulated and sold as effervescent granules. Generally powdered ingredients are first granularized before being made into tablets.

Effervescent medicinal beverages date back to the late 1800s and originally arose to mask the taste of bitter waters taken as curatives, during the water cure craze of that era.


Video Effervescent tablet



Ingredients

There are several categories of active ingredients in effervescent preparations:

  1. Those that are difficult to digest or disruptive to the stomach or esophagus
  2. Those that are pH-sensitive, such as amino acids and antibiotics.
  3. Those requiring a large dose.
  4. Those that are susceptible to light, oxygen, or moisture.

Maps Effervescent tablet



References

  •  Baynes, T.S., ed. (1878), "Baden (2.)", Encyclopædia Britannica, 3 (9th ed.), New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, pp. 226-227 
  •  Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), "Baden (Germany)", Encyclopædia Britannica, 3 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 184 
  • "Baden-Baden", Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 2015, retrieved 8 October 2015 .

Source of article : Wikipedia