RESUMEN
A digital filter based on non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) enables blind deconvolution of temporal information from large data sets, simultaneously recovering both photon arrival times and the instrument impulse response function (IRF). In general, the measured digital signals produced by modern analytical instrumentation are convolved by the corresponding IRFs, which can complicate quantitative analyses. Common examples include photon counting (PC), chromatography, super resolution imaging, fluorescence imaging, and mass spectrometry. Scintillation counting, in particular, provides a signal-to-noise advantage in measurements of low intensity signals, but has a limited dynamic range due to pulse overlap. This limitation can complicate the interpretation of data by masking temporal and amplitude information on the underlying detected signal. Typical methods for deconvolution of the photon events require advanced knowledge of the IRF, which is not generally trivial to obtain. In this work, a sliding window approach was developed to perform NMF one pixel at a time on short segments of large (e.g., 25 million point) data sets. Using random initial guesses for the IRF, the NMF filter simultaneously recovered both the deconvolved photon arrival times and the IRF. Applying the NMF filter to the analysis of triboluminescence (TL) data traces of active pharmaceutical ingredients enabled discrimination between different hypothesized physical origins of the signal.
RESUMEN
Triboluminescence (TL) is shown to enable selective detection of trace crystallinity within nominally amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs). ASDs are increasingly used for the preparation of pharmaceutical formulations, the physical stability of which can be negatively impacted by trace crystallinity introduced during manufacturing or storage. In the present study, TL measurements of a model ASD consisting of griseofulvin in polyethylene glycol produced limits of detection of 140 ppm. Separate studies of the particle size dependence of sucrose crystals and the dependence on polymorphism in clopidogrel bisulfate particles are both consistent with a mechanism for TL closely linked to the piezoelectric response of the crystalline fraction. Whereas disordered polymeric materials cannot support piezoelectric activity, molecular crystals produced from homochiral molecules adopt crystal structures that are overwhelmingly symmetry-allowed for piezoelectricity. Consequently, TL may provide a broadly applicable and simple experimental route for sensitive detection of trace crystallinity within nominally amorphous materials.