
Pharmaceutical technology is obviously an interdisciplinary branch of engineering. Modern pharmaceutical technology cannot advance without the applications of general science and engineering principles. There is a need for pharmaceutical scientists to proactively borrow from science and engineering and other interdisciplinary fields to solve challenging formulation and processing problems for solid dosage forms. The objective of this short course is to introduce current science and engineering principles of relevance to pharmaceutical applications. The target audience for the short course includes all levels of scientists from industry, academia and government involved in a diverse range of focus groups involved in formulation and manufacturing activities. The short course will last one day and will involve interdisciplinary experts from both academia and industry.
Bradley Clark, Ph.D.
Solvay
Jian-Xin Li, Ph.D.
FMC BioPolymer
Powder and Liquid Mixing
O. Trass, Ph.D.
University of Toronto
Application of Rheology in Pharmaceutical Processes
Brian Carlin, Ph.D.
FMC
Application of Particulate Materials/Powder Metallurgy Principles in Tableting
Randall German, Ph.D.
Pennsylvania State University
Application of Nondestructive Tests to Manufacturing Processes and Quality Control
G. Johnson, Ph.D.
University of California, Berkeley
Optimization of Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Processes Using Engineering Principles
Fernando Muzzio, Ph.D.
Rutgers University
Simulation and Modeling for Scale-up Predictability
Teresa Carvajal, Ph.D.
Purdue University
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