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1.
Purpose. To determine the viscosity and the frequency-dependent shear modulus of supercooled indomethacin as a function of temperature near and above its glass transition temperature and from these data to obtain a quantitative measure of its molecular mobility in the amorphous state. Methods. Viscoelastic measurements were carried with a controlled strain rheometer in the frequency domain, at 9 temperatures from 44° to 90°C. Results. The viscosity of supercooled indomethacin shows a strong non-Arrhenius temperature dependence over the temperature range studied, indicative of a fragile amorphous material. Application of the viscosity data to the VTF equation indicates a viscosity of 4.5 × 1010 Pa.s at the calorimetric Tg of 41°C, and a T0 of –17°C. From the complex shear modulus and the Cole-Davidson equation the shear relaxation behaviour is found to be non-exponential, and the shear relaxation time at Tg is found to be approximately 100 sec. Conclusions. Supercooled indomethacin near and above its Tg exhibits significant molecular mobility, with relaxation times similar to the timescales covered in the handling and storage of pharmaceutical products.  相似文献   

2.
Purpose. To measure the molecular mobility of amorphous pharmaceutical solids below their glass transition temperatures (Tg), using indomethacin, poly (vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVP) and sucrose as model compounds. Methods. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to measure enthalpic relaxation of the amorphous samples after storage at temperatures 16-47 K below Tg for various time periods. The measured enthalpy changes were used to calculate molecular relaxation time parameters. Analogous changes in specimen dimensions were measured for PVP films using thermomechanical analysis. Results. For all the model materials it was necessary to cool to at least 50 K below the experimental Tg before the molecular motions detected by DSC could be considered to be negligible over the lifetime of a typical pharmaceutical product. In each case the temperature dependence of the molecular motions below Tg was less than that typically reported above Tg and was rapidly changing. Conclusions. In the temperature range studied the model amorphous solids were in a transition zone between regions of very high molecular mobility above Tg and very low molecular mobility much further below Tg. In general glassy pharmaceutical solids should be expected to experience significant molecular mobility at temperatures up to fifty degrees below their glass transition temperature.  相似文献   

3.
Purpose. The purpose of this study was to estimate the activation energy at the glass transition temperature (and the fragility index) of amorphous indomethacin from the influence of heating rate on the features of the relaxation peaks obtained by thermally stimulated depolarization currents (TSDC) and to compare the obtained results with those obtained by other procedures based on TSDC data. Methods. The glass transition temperature region of amorphous indomethacin was characterized at different heating rates by TSDC in a way similar to that used to determine the kinetics of the glass transition relaxation by differential scanning calorimetry. The features of a thermal sampled TSDC peak, namely the temperature location and the intensity, depend on the heating rate. Results. The activation energy for structural relaxation (directly related to glass fragility) was estimated from the heating rate dependence of the TSDC peak location, T m, and of the maximum intensity of the TSDC peak, I(T m). Conclusions. The methods for determining the activation energy for structural relaxation and fragility of indomethacin from TSDC data obtained with different heating rates were compared with other procedures previously proposed. TSDC, which is not a very familiar technique in the community of pharmaceutical scientists, proved to be a very convenient technique to study molecular mobility and to determine the fragility index in glass-forming systems. The value of 60 appears as a reasonable value of the fragility index of indomethacin.  相似文献   

4.
Purpose Predicting onsets of crystallization at temperatures below T g, from data above T g, would require that the correlation between crystallization onset and mobility is same above and below T g, and the techniques being used to measure mobility above and below T g are measuring essentially the same kind of mobility. The aim of this work is to determine if the relaxation times obtained using different techniques (DSC, TAM) below T g correlate with relaxation time obtained above T g using dielectric spectroscopy.Methods Model compounds for this work were chosen based on their varied ΔH f, ΔC p(T g) and H-bonding in crystalline state vs. amorphous state. Relaxation times above T g were determined by the simultaneous fit of real and imaginary permittivity to the Cole-Davidson model. Tau and beta below T g were determined using isothermal microcalorimetry (TAM) or MDSC. MDSC was used to calculate Kauzmann temperature and strength of the glass using established relationships.Results Indomethacin, nifedipine and flopropione showed Arrhenius temperature dependence throughout the entire temperature range and extrapolation of τ β measured above T g by dielectric relaxation agreed with τ β measured below T g by TAM/MDSC. Ketoconazole, however, showed the expected VTF behavior. For at least two compounds compared (indomethacin and ketoconazole), relaxation times measured by TAM and MDSC did not agree, with TAM giving significantly lower values of τ β , but TAM and MDSC relaxation times appeared to extrapolate to a common value at T g.Conclusions It was found that, for all cases studied, relaxation time constants determined above and below T g did appear to extrapolate to the same value around T g indicating that molecular mobility measured above and below T g using different techniques is highly correlated.  相似文献   

5.
Tong  Ping  Zografi  George 《Pharmaceutical research》1999,16(8):1186-1192
Purpose. Having previously studied the amorphous properties of indomethacin (IN) as a model compound for drugs rendered amorphous during processing, we report on the formation and characterization of its sodium salt in the amorphous state and a comparison between the two systems. Methods. Sodium indomethacin (SI) was subjected to lyophilization from aqueous solution, rapid precipitation from methanol solution, and dehydration followed by grinding to produce, in each case, a completely amorphous form. The amorphous form of SI was analyzed using DSC, XRD, thermomicroscopy and FTIR. The method of scanning rate dependence of the glass transition temperature, Tg, was used to estimate the fragility of the SI system. Enthalpy relaxation experiments were carried out to probe the molecular mobility of the SI system below Tg. Results. The amorphous form of SI formed by different methods had a Tg equal to 121°C at a scanning rate of 20°C/min. This compares with a Tgfor indomethacin of 45°C. Estimation of fragility by the scanning rate dependence of Tg indicates no significant differences in fragility between ionized and unionized forms. Enthalpy relaxation measurements reveal very similar relaxation patterns between the two systems at the same degree of supercooling relative to their respective Tg values. Conclusions. The amorphous form of SI made by various methods has a Tg that is about 75°C greater than that of IN, most likely because of the greater density and hence lower free volume of SI. Yet, the change of molecular mobility as a function of temperature relative to Tgis not very different between the ionized and unionized systems.  相似文献   

6.
Purpose To develop a calorimetry-based model for estimating the time-dependence of molecular mobility during the isothermal relaxation of amorphous organic compounds below their glass transition temperature (T g).Methods The time-dependent enthalpy relaxation times of amorphous sorbitol, indomethacin, trehalose and sucrose were estimated based on the nonlinear Adam‐Gibbs equation. Fragility was determined from the scanning rate dependence of T g. Time evolution of the fictive temperature was determined from T g, the heat capacity of the amorphous and crystalline forms, and from the enthalpy relaxation data.Results Relaxation time changes significantly upon annealing for all compounds studied. The magnitude of the increase in relaxation time does not depend on any one parameter but on four parameters: T g, fragility, and the crystal–liquid and glass–liquid heat capacity differences. The obtained mobility data for indomethacin and sucrose, both stored at T g−16 K, correlated much better with their different crystallization tendencies than did the Kohlrausch‐Williams‐Watts (KWW) equation.Conclusions The observed changes in relaxation time help explain and address the limitations of the KWW approach. Due consideration of the time-dependence of molecular mobility upon storage is a key element for improving the understanding necessary for stabilizing amorphous formulations.  相似文献   

7.
Given a good correlation between onsets of crystallization and mobility above T(g), one might be able to predict crystallization onsets at a temperature of interest far below T(g) from this correlation and measurement of mobility at a temperature below T(g). Such predictions require that: (a) correlation between crystallization onset and mobility is the same above and below T(g), and (b) techniques used to measure mobility above and below T(g) measure the same kind of mobility [(b) demonstrated previously using dielectric and calorimetric techniques]. The objective of present work is to determine whether crystallization onset times couple with relaxation times determined above T(g), and if so to verify predictions made below T(g) (from data above T(g)) with experimental data. Model compounds were indomethacin, ketoconazole, flopropione, nifedipine, and felodipine. Onsets of crystallization measured above T(g) were coupled with dielectric mobility for indomethacin, felodipine, and flopropione. Prediction of crystallization onset times for temperatures below T(g) matched well with experimental data for indomethacin (25 degrees C, 35 degrees C: Predicted 473, 95 h; Experimental: 624 +/- 158, 139 +/- 49 h) and flopropione (35 degrees C, 40 degrees C; Predicted 115, 58 h; Experimental: 96 +/- 30, 59 +/- 10 h). The data suggests that coupling between crystallization onsets and molecular mobility at temperatures above T(g) may be exploited to develop stability testing protocol for crystallization from amorphous state.  相似文献   

8.
Stability of the amorphous state has been linked to molecular mobility of the matrix; however different techniques may capture different mobility substates. Our previous work suggested that two calorimetric techniques, Isothermal Microcalorimetry (TAM) and MDSC, measured different aspects of mobility with TAM measuring, in part, some faster modes of relaxation in addition to the modes mobilized at T(g). The aim of this work is to compare the relaxation times obtained using Thermally Stimulated Depolarization Current Spectroscopy (TSDC) with calorimetric mobility measured below T(g) and to determine if all measures of relaxation times below T(g) are consistent with relaxation times obtained above T(g) using Dielectric Spectroscopy (DRS). Model compounds were indomethacin, ketoconazole, nifedipine, flopropione, felodipine. For all compounds, relaxation times obtained using Thermal Windowing-TSDC technique below T(g) correlated well with relaxation times (tau) obtained above T(g) by DRS. At any given temperature below T(g), relaxation times measured depended upon the technique used and were in the following order TSDC < TAM < MDSC (tau). TSDC captures some faster relaxations not measured by calorimetric techniques, and therefore, different techniques give different measures of relaxation times below T(g). This information is important in understanding the relationships between mobility in the glassy solid and pharmaceutical stability.  相似文献   

9.
Purpose. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the molecular mobility of amorphous indomethacin and salicin in the relaxed glassy state based on spin-lattice relaxation times (T1c) and to clarify the effects of molecular mobility on their physical stability.Methods. Pulverized glassy amorphous indomethacin and salicin samples were completely relaxed, and the T1c values were investigated using solid-state 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) at temperatures below the glass transition temperature (Tg). All NMR spectra were obtained using the T1c measurement method combined with variable-amplitude cross-polarization, the Torchia method, and total sideband suppression method.Results. The T1c value of amorphous indomethacin indicated that 73% of carbons were in a state of monodispersive relaxation, suggesting that the amorphous state was relatively homogeneous and restricted, particularly in backbone carbons. On the other hand, 92% of carbons of amorphous salicin exhibited both fast and slow biphasic relaxation. Individual structures of the salicin molecules behaved heterogeneously, and thus the entire molecule showed relatively fast local as well as slow mobility.Conclusions. At temperatures below Tg, amorphous salicin had relatively greater molecular mobility than amorphous indomethacin. This difference in the molecular mobility of the two compounds is correlated with their crystallization behavior. Solid-state 13C NMR provides valuable information on the physical stability of amorphous pharmaceuticals.  相似文献   

10.
Purpose. The ability of TSDC to characterize further amorphous materials beyond that possible with DSC was presented in part I (16) of this work. The purpose of part II presented here is to detect and quantitatively characterize time-scales of molecular motions (relaxation times) in amorphous solids at and below the glass transition temperature, to determine distributions of relaxation times associated with different modes of molecular mobility and their temperature dependence, and to determine experimentally the impact upon these parameters of combining the drug with excipients (i.e., solid dispersions at different drug to polymer ratios). The knowledge gleaned may be applied toward a more realistic correlation with physical stability of an amorphous drug within a formulation during storage. Methods. Preparation of amorphous drug and its solid dispersions with PVPK-30 was described in part I (16). Molecular mobility and dynamics of glass transition for these systems were studied using TSDC in the thermal windowing mode. Results. Relaxation maps and thermodynamic activation parameters show the effect of formulating the drug in a solid dispersion on converting the system (drug alone) from one with a wide distribution of motional processes extending over a wide temperature range at and below Tg to one that is homogeneous with very few modes of motion (20% dispersion) that becomes increasingly less homogeneous as the drug load increases (40% dispersion). This is confirmed by the high activation enthalpy (due to extensive intra- and intermolecular interactions) as well as high activation entropy (due to higher extent of freedom) for the drug alone vs. a close to an ideal system (lower enthalpy), with less extent of freedom (low entropy) especially for the 20% dispersion. The polymer PVPK-30 exhibited two distinct modes of motion, one with higher values of activation enthalpies and entropy corresponding to -relaxations, the other with lower values corresponding to -relaxations characterized by local noncooperative motional processes. Conclusions. Using thermal windowing, a distribution of temperature-dependent relaxation times encountered in real systems was obtained as opposed to a single average value routinely acquired by other techniques. Relevant kinetic parameters were obtained and used in mechanistically delineating the effects on molecular mobility of temperature and incorporating the drug in a polymer. This allows for appropriate choices to be made regarding drug loading, storage temperature, and type of polymer that would realistically correlate to physical stability.  相似文献   

11.
Purpose. To show that thermally stimulated depolarization currents (TSDC), which is a dielectric experimental technique relatively unknown in the pharmaceutical scientists community, is a powerful technique to study molecular mobility in pharmaceutical solids, below their glass transition temperature (Tg). Indomethacin (Tg = 42°C) is used as a model compound. Methods. TSDC is used to isolate the individual modes of motion present in indomethacin, in the temperature range between –165°C and +60°C. From the experimental output of the TSDC experiments, the kinetic parameters associated with the different relaxational modes of motion were obtained, which allowed a detailed characterization of the distribution of relaxation times of the complex relaxations observed in indomethacin. Results. Two different relaxational processes were detected and characterized: the glass transition relaxation, or -process, and a sub-Tg relaxation, or secondary process. The lower temperature secondary process presents a very low intensity, a very low activation energy, and a very low degree of cooperativity. The fragility index (Angell's scale) of indomethacin obtained from TSDC data is m = 64, which can be compared with other values reported in the literature and obtained from other experimental techniques. Conclusions. TSDC data indicate that indomethacin is a relatively strong glass former (fragility similar to glycerol but lower than sorbitol, trehalose, and sucrose). The high-resolution power of the TSDC technique is illustrated by the fact that it detected and characterized the secondary relaxation in indomethacin, which was not possible by other techniques.  相似文献   

12.
Purpose. To measure solid-state features of amorphous molecular dispersions of indomethacin and various molecular weight grades of poly(vinylpyrrolidone), PVP, and poly(vinylpyrrolidone-co-vinylacetate), PVP/VA, in relation to isothermal crystallization of indomethacin at 30°C Methods. The glass transition temperatures (Tg) of molecular dispersions were measured using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). FT-IR spectroscopy was used to investigate possible differences in interactions between indomethacin and polymer in the various dispersions. The enthalpy relaxation of 5% w/w and 30% w/w polymer dispersions was determined following various aging times. Quantitative isothermal crystallization studies were carried out with pure indomethacin and 5% w/w polymers in drug as physical mixtures and molecular dispersions. Results. All coprecipitated mixtures exhibited a single glass transition temperature. All polymers interacted with indomethacin in the solid state through hydrogen bonding and in the process eliminated the hydrogen bonding associated with the carboxylic acid dimers of indomethacin. Molecular mobility at 16.5°C below Tg was reduced relative to indomethacin alone, at the 5% w/w and 30% w/w polymer level. No crystallization of indomethacin at 30°C was observed in any of the 5% w/w polymer molecular dispersions over a period of 20 weeks. Indomethacin alone and in physical mixtures with various polymers completely crystallized to the form at this level within 2 weeks. Conclusions. The major basis for crystal inhibition of indomethacin at 30°C at the 5% w/w polymer level in molecular dispersions is not related to polymer molecular weight and to the glass transition temperature, and is more likely related to the ability to hydrogen bond with indomethacin and to inhibit the formation of carboxylic acid dimers that are required for nucleation and growth to the crystal form of indomethacin.  相似文献   

13.
Purpose. The purpose of this study was to compare the structural relaxation and molecular mobility of amorphous celecoxib (CEL) with that of CEL amorphous mixtures consisting of various excipients and to study the effect of different excipients on the relaxation of high-energy amorphous systems. Methods. The measurement of glass transition temperatures (Tg) and enthalpy relaxation were performed using differential scanning calorimetry. The interactions between drug and excipients and the absence of crystalline forms were further confirmed by conducting Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic and X-ray powder diffraction studies on same samples. Results. All samples exhibited a single Tg value. Polymers had a prominent effect on the lowering of the relaxation rate in amorphous CEL. The lowering of the rate of relaxation was directly dependent on the concentration and type of polymer used. The total enthalpy required for relaxation was same, although additives affected the rate of relaxation. Conclusions. In absence of any specific interactions during Fourier transform infrared studies, it was concluded that the antiplasticizing activity of polymers is responsible for the stabilization of CEL amorphous systems. Glassy amorphous dispersions of CEL exhibited a complex type of relaxation pattern, which failed to fit in Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts equation with respect to calculation of relaxation time constants.  相似文献   

14.
Purpose. To better understand the nature of drug-excipient interactions we have studied the phase behavior of amorphous binary and ternary mixtures of citric acid, indomethacin and PVP, as model systems. Methods. We have prepared amorphous mixtures by co-melting or coprecipitation from solvents, and have measured glass transition temperatures with differential scanning calorimetry. Results. Citric acid and indomethacin in the amorphous state are miscible up to 0.25 weight fraction of citric acid, equivalent to about 2 moles of citric acid and 3 moles of indomethacin. Phase separation, as reflected by two Tg values, occurs without crystallization leading to a saturated citric acid-indomethacin amorphous phase and one essentially containing only citric acid. PVP-citric acid and PVP-indomethacin form non-ideal miscible systems at all compositions. A ternary system containing 0.3 weight fraction of PVP produces a completely miscible system at all citric acid-indomethacin compositions. The use of 0.2 weight fraction of PVP, however, only produces miscibility up to a weight fraction of 0.4 citric acid relative to indomethacin. The two phases above this point appear to contain citric acid in PVP and citric acid in indomethacin, respectively. Conclusions. Two components of an amorphous solid mixture containing citric acid and indomethacin with limited solid state miscibility can be solublized as an amorphous solid phase by the addition of moderate levels of PVP.  相似文献   

15.
The objective of the present work is to determine if crystallization onset observed for an amorphous solid correlate with relaxation time at temperatures above and below the calorimetric glass transition (T(g)). Crystallization onset of spray-dried and freeze-dried amorphous sucrose were measured calorimetrically. Relaxation times measured in two temperature ranges by different techniques (isothermal calorimetry, dielectric spectroscopy) followed the expected modified Vogel-Tammann-Fulcher (VTF) behavior when extrapolated to a temperature near T(g). However, the change in slope was more conspicuous for freeze-dried sucrose, indicating that amorphous materials generated using different techniques differ in their mobilities for temperatures below T(g). Dielectric relaxation time values obtained above T(g) were well correlated to onset of crystallization. The model predicted 21 days for crystallization onset for spray-dried samples stored 7 K below T(g), compared to the experimentally observed crystallization onset of 17 days. Onset times versus temperature for freeze-dried sucrose, however, show a change in slope on approaching T(g), with the onsets somewhat decoupling from measured mobility for temperatures below T(g). Molecular mobility in amorphous materials at temperatures both above and below T(g) can be correlated to macroscopic physical change such as crystallization, but prediction of crystallization onset from relaxation time is only qualitatively correct at temperatures well below T(g).  相似文献   

16.
Purpose. To compare the enthalpy relaxation of amorphous sucrose and co-lyophilized sucrose-additive mixtures near the calorimetric glass transition temperature, so as to measure the effects of additives on the molecular mobility of sucrose. Methods. Amorphous sucrose and sucrose-additive mixtures, containing poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP), poly(vinylpyrrolidone-co-vinyl-acetate) (PVP/VA) dextran or trehalose, were prepared by lyophilization. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to determine the area of the enthalpy recovery endotherm following aging times of up to 750 hours for the various systems. This technique was also used to compare the enthalpy relaxation of a physical mixture of amorphous sucrose and PVP. Results. Relative to sucrose alone, the enthalpy relaxation of co-lyophilized sucrose-additive mixtures was reduced when aged for the same length of time at a comparable degree of undercooling in the order: dextran PVP > PVP/VA > trehalose. Calculated estimates of the total enthalpy change required for sucrose and the mixtures to relax to an equilibrium supercooled liquid state (H) were essentially the same and were in agreement with enthalpy changes measured at longer aging times (750 hours). Conclusions. The observed decrease in the enthalpy relaxation of the mixtures relative to sucrose alone indicates that the mobility of sucrose is reduced by the presence of additives having a Tg that is greater than that of sucrose. Comparison with a physically mixed amorphous system revealed no such effects on sucrose. The formation of a molecular dispersion of sucrose with a second component, present at a level as low as 10%, thus reduces the mobility of sucrose below Tg, most likely due to the coupling of the molecular motions of sucrose to those of the additive through molecular interactions.  相似文献   

17.
During the development of new pharmaceutical products based on drug substances in their amorphous form, the molecular mobility of an amorphous active ingredient was characterized in detail within a very broad time-temperature range. The relation between the isothermal crystallization kinetics and the dynamics of this amorphous substance was investigated. First, dynamic dielectric spectroscopy (DDS) and the thermostimulated current (TSC) techniques were used to analyze the molecular mobility of the amorphous drug substance over a wide frequency and temperature range (the drug substance is referred to as SSR in this text and was chosen as a model glass-forming system). Two relaxation processes, corresponding to different molecular motions, were identified. The beta(a)-relaxation process, associated with intramolecular oscillation of small dipolar groups, followed Arrhenius temperature behavior over the entire time-temperature domain that was studied. However, the main alpha(a)-relaxation process, assigned to the dielectric manifestation of the dynamic glass transition of the amorphous phase, was described by Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann (VFT) and Arrhenius behavior above and below the glass transition temperature (T(g)) respectively. The physical meaning of these complex dynamics is explained in the context of the Adam and Gibbs (AG) model, by the temperature dependence of the size of cooperatively rearranging regions (CRR) that govern the time scale of delocalized molecular motions. The distinction between the molecular mobility and the structural relaxation of amorphous systems below T(g) is discussed. This work shows that the complementary nature of both DDS and TSC techniques is essential to directly analyze the intramolecular and molecular motions of disordered phases over a wide time-temperature range above and below the T(g). Second, real-time dielectric measurements were carried out to determine the isothermal crystallization kinetics of the SSR amorphous drug. Whatever the crystalline form obtained over time in the crystallization process, the decrease of the dielectric response of amorphous phase, which is characteristic of the isothermal crystallization, was studied to monitor the time dependence of the degree of crystallinity. The characteristic crystallization time, derived from Kohlrausch-Williams-Watt (KWW)-Avrami analyses performed at different temperatures, followed an Arrhenius temperature dependence. Behaviors specific to the molecular mobility of the amorphous drug substance were compared with the characteristic crystallization time. It was concluded that the crystal growth process of the SSR drug seems to be controlled by the intramolecular motions involving the beta(a)-relaxation mode and not by the molecular motions responsible for the alpha(a)-relaxation mode in the range of temperatures >T(g). Subsequent studies will focus on the crystallization process of the SSR drug in the glassy state (T < T(g)).  相似文献   

18.
PURPOSE: AG-041R is characterized to be stable in amorphous state and difficult to crystallize at normal period of time. In order to investigate the molecular mobility in microscopically, the spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) of AG-041R was investigated by solid-state CP/MAS 13C NMR at temperature below and above glass transition temperature (Tg). METHOD: CP/MAS measurement and T1 measurement were performed by means of 13C NMR, where the measurement temperatures were 60, 70, 80, 100, and 110 degrees C. The spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) of AG-041R was calculated from the relaxation curves. RESULTS: From the analysis of T1 of amorphous AG-041R, it was clarified that all of the carbons did not start moving drastically at Tg and there were some groups of carbon in terms of temperature dependency of T1. One is a type, such as the carbons in benzene ring: their T1 was drastically changed at Tg. On the other hand, T1 of carbonyl carbons gradually decreased, and above Tg their T1 was still higher than that of the other carbons. There was no significant change of T1 in the methyl carbons around Tg. From the study of IR and 1H NMR in solution, the inter- and intramolecular hydrogen bondings between NH and C=O were found in AG-041R. Due to hydrogen bonding, the inter- and/or intramolecular interaction is considered to retain even at supercooled liquid state. CONCLUSION: The structure that contributes glass transition is the main skeleton structure, such as benzene ring, while small group, like methyl, start to move at lower temperature than Tg. On the other hand, for the carbons, such as carbonyl, their structure was restricted by inter- and/or intramolecular interaction, therefore, their molecular mobility was significantly low above Tg.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this investigation was i) to study the effect of physical aging on crystallization and water vapor sorption behavior of amorphous anhydrous trehalose prepared by freeze-drying, and ii) to determine the effects of water sorption on the relaxation state of the aged material. METHODS: Freeze-dried trehalose was aged at 100 dgrees C for varying time periods to obtain samples with different degrees of relaxation. The glass transition temperature (Tg) and enthalpic relaxation were determined by differential scanning calorimetry, and the rate and extent of water uptake at different relative humidity values were quantified using an automated vapor sorption balance. RESULTS: Annealing below the Tg caused nucleation in the amorphous trehalose samples, which decreased the crystallization onset temperature on subsequent heating. However, no crystallization was observed below the Tg even after prolonged annealing. Physical aging caused a decrease in the rate and extent of water vapor sorption at low relative humidity values. Moreover, the water sorption removed the effects of physical aging, thus effectively causing enthalpic recovery in the aged samples. This recovery occurred gradually in the glassy phase and was not associated with a glass to rubber transition. We believe this aging reversal to be due to volume expansion during water sorption in the amorphous structure. CONCLUSIONS: Thermal history of amorphous materials is a crucial determinant of their physical properties. Aging of amorphous trehalose led to nucleation below the Tg, and decrease in rate and extent of water sorption. Sorption of water resulted in irreversible changes in the relaxation state of the aged material.  相似文献   

20.
Purpose. The use of modulated differential scanning calorimetry (MDSC) as a novel means of characterising the glass transition of amorphous drugs has been investigated, using the protease inhibitor saquinavir as a model compound. In particular, the effects of measuring variables (temperature cycling, scanning period, heating mode) have been examined. Methods. Saquinavir samples of known moisture content were examined using a TA Instruments 2920 MDSC at a heating rate of 2°C/min and an amplitude of ± 0.159°C with a period of 30 seconds. These conditions were used to examine the effects of cycling between - 50°C and 150°C. A range of periods between 20 and 50 seconds were then studied. Isothermal measurements were carried out between 85°C and 120°C using an amplitude of ± 0.159°C with a period of 30 seconds. Results. MDSC showed the glass transition of saquinavir (0.98 ± 0.05%w/w moisture content) in isolation from the relaxation endotherm to give an apparent glass transition temperature of 107.0° C ± 0.4C. Subsequent temperature cycling gave reproducible glass transition temperatures of approximately 105°C for both cooling and heating cycles. The enthalpic relaxation peak observed in the initial heating cycle had an additional contribution from a Tg 'shift' effect brought about by the difference in response to the glass transition of the total and reversing heat flow signals. Isothermal studies yield a glass transition at 105.9°C ± 0.1°C. Conclusions. MDSC has been shown to be capable of separating the glass transition of saquinavir from the relaxation endotherm, thereby facilitating measurement of this parameter without the need for temperature cycling. However, the Tg 'shift' effect and the number of modulations through the transition should be taken into account to avoid drawing erroneous conclusions from the experimental data. MDSC has been shown to be an effective method of characterising the glass transition of an amorphous drug, allowing the separate characterisation of the Tg and endothermic relaxation in the first heating cycle.  相似文献   

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