There is a need for thorough knowledge of solid-state transformations in order to implement quality by design (QbD) methodology in drug development. The present study was aimed at gaining a mechanistic understanding of the dehydration of nitrofurantoin monohydrate II (NF-MH). The dehydration was stu
Dehydration kinetics of piroxicam monohydrate and relationship to lattice energy and structure
β Scribed by Agam R. Sheth; Deliang Zhou; Francis X. Muller; David J.W. Grant
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 328 KB
- Volume
- 93
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3549
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The dehydration kinetics of piroxicam monohydrate (PM) is analyzed by both model-free and model-fitting approaches. The conventional model-fitting approach assuming a fixed mechanism throughout the reaction is found to be too simplistic. The model-free approach allows for a change of mechanism and activation energy, E a , during the course of a reaction and is therefore more realistic. The complexity of the dehydration of PM is illustrated by the dependence of E a on both the heating conditions, isothermal or nonisothermal, and on the fraction of conversion, a (0 a 1). Under both isothermal and nonisothermal conditions, E a increases with a for 0 a 0.25, followed by an approximately constant value of E a during further dehydration. In the constant-E a region, isothermal dehydration follows the two-dimensional phase boundary model (R2), whereas nonisothermal dehydration follows a mechanism intermediate between twoand three-dimensional diffusion that cannot be described by any of the common models. Structural studies suggest that the complex hydrogen-bond pattern in PM is responsible for the observed dehydration behavior. Ab initio calculations provide an explanation for the changes in the molecular and crystal structures accompanying the reversible change in hydration state between anhydrous piroxicam Form I and PM. This work also demonstrates the utility of model-free analysis in describing complex dehydration kinetics.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES