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Insights into the dehydration behavior of thiamine hydrochloride (Vitamin B1) hydrates: Part I

โœ Scribed by Paroma Chakravarty; Robert T. Berendt; Eric J. Munson; Victor G. Young Jr.; Ramprakash Govindarajan; Raj Suryanarayanan


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
396 KB
Volume
99
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3549

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โœฆ Synopsis


Thiamine hydrochloride (Vitamin B(1), THCl) can exist as a nonstoichiometric hydrate (NSH) and as a hemihydrate (HH). NSH can contain up to approximately 1 molar equivalent of water and be dehydrated to an isomorphic desolvate (ID) with minimal change in lattice structure. Crystallographic and spectroscopic techniques were used to characterize the influence of structure and mobility on NSH dehydration. Dehydration was accompanied by lattice contraction, as noted by a decrease in the d-spacings. Dehydration also led to the development of surface cracks parallel to the (101*) and (102*) planes in the NSH single crystal, as observed by hot stage microscopy. Step-wise dehydration of NSH produced gradual shifts in XRPD and SSNMR peaks, indicating that NSH (with approximately 1 mole water) and ID represent the two extremes of a continuum in the hydration state. Variable temperature (13)C SSNMR studies showed that water molecules move rapidly at room temperature within the NSH crystal lattice, and the thiamine molecules transiently exist in distinct hydrated and dehydrated states. It is hypothesized that, despite the lack of continuous hydration channels in the NSH crystal lattice, cooperative deformation of the thiamine molecules allows a nondisruptive departure of water molecules from the lattice during dehydration.


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Insights into the dehydration behavior o
โœ Paroma Chakravarty; Robert T. Berendt; Eric J. Munson; Victor G. Young Jr; Rampr ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2010 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 309 KB

Thiamine hydrochloride (THCl) can exist as an anhydrate (AH) and as a hemihydrate (HH). AH sorbs water as a function of environmental water vapor pressure to form a nonstoichiometric hydrate (NSH). NSH dehydration is initiated at approximately 40 degrees C to yield AH, an isomorphic desolvate (ID) o