A stability-indicating reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatographic method was developed for the detection of nefopam hydrochloride and its degradation products under accelerated degradation conditions. The degradation kinetics of nefopam hydrochloride in aqueous solutions over a pH range
Degradation kinetics of phentolamine hydrochloride in solution
โ Scribed by Da-Peng Wang; Yu-Hsing Tu; Loyd V. Allen Jr.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 512 KB
- Volume
- 77
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
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โฆ Synopsis
The degradation kinetics of phentolamine hydrochloride in aqueous solution over a pH range of 1.2 to 7.2 and its stability in propylene glycol- or polyethylene glycol 400-based solutions were investigated. The observed rate constants were shown to follow apparent first-order kinetics in all cases. The pKa determination for phentolamine hydrochloride was found to be 9.55 +/- 0.10 (n = 5) at 25 +/- 0.2 degrees C. This indicated the protonated form of phentolamine occurs in the pH range of this study. The pH-rate profile indicated a pH-independent region (pH 3.1-4.9) exists with a minimum rate around pH 2.1. The catalytic effect of acetate and phosphate buffer species is ordinary. The catalytic rate constants imposed by acetic acid, acetate ion, dihydrogen phosphate ion, and monohydrogen phosphate ion were determined to be 0.018, 0.362, 0.036, and 1.470 L mol-1 h-1, respectively. The salt effect in acetate and phosphate buffers followed the modified Debye-Huckel equation quite well. The ZAZB value obtained from the experiment closely predicts the charges of the reacting species. The apparent energy of activation was determined to be 19.72 kcal/mol for degradation of phentolamine hydrochloride in pH 3.1, 0.1 M acetate buffer solution at constant ionic strength (mu = 0.5). Irradiation with 254 nm UV light at 25 +/- 0.2 degrees C showed a ninefold increase in the degradation rate compared with the light-protected control. Propylene glycol had little or no effect on the degradation of phentolamine hydrochloride at 90 +/- 0.2 degrees C; however, polyethylene glycol 400 had a definite effect.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The degradation kinetics of metronidazole in aqueous solutions of pH 3.1 to 9.9 under accelerated storage conditions were studied. The stability of metronidazole in solutions containing propylene glycol or polyethylene glycol 400 was also investigated. The reaction order for metronidazole in these a