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1.
Mol Pharm ; 20(1): 561-571, 2023 01 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36524757

RESUMEN

Pharmaceutical salts are ubiquitously present in the market given their benefits in optimizing the critical properties of an active pharmaceutical ingredient (API). Achieving these benefits requires careful selection and understanding of the salt form of choice. Stability is especially critical here, as salts are susceptible to disproportionation. Several studies have shown the impact of moisture on disproportionation, with more focus on external humidity (moisture coming from outside the system). This work, on the other hand, is systematically designed to study the impact of moisture generated in situ (moisture produced within the system). To that end, an in-house developed compound 1 was selected as our salt API, and its disproportionation was studied in blends (binary and prototype) with hydrated model excipient─trisodium phosphate dodecahydrate (TSPD). TSPD possesses 12 water molecules, which could get released when triggered with enough energy (confirmed by thermogravimetric analysis and humidity studies). As a control for this study, similar blends were prepared with anhydrous trisodium phosphate (TSP), which has comparable properties to TSPD but lacks water. Overall, significant disproportionation was observed in TSPD blends exposed to 40 °C or 70 °C in a closed system; while no disproportionation was observed when the system was left open due to the escape of the moisture generated in situ. The API also remained intact for the blends with anhydrous TSP, as expected. Meanwhile, stressing at 40 °C/75%RH condition resulted in significant disproportionation for both TSPD and TSP blends due to the exposure to external humidity. Hydrated excipients are normally used in drug development, and this work stresses the need for probing the impact from within the system when such excipients are utilized with salt API. This will help fully unravel the overall effect of moisture on the drug, which is relevant downstream when selecting processing conditions, packaging, and so forth.


Asunto(s)
Excipientes , Sales (Química) , Solubilidad , Cloruro de Sodio , Agua , Humedad , Estabilidad de Medicamentos
2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(21): 25134-25147, 2023 May 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35766151

RESUMEN

It was recently reported that the most popular electron-accepting units introduced to π-conjugated oligomers studied for organic photovoltaic applications are susceptible to unwanted and even destructive photochemical reactions. The consequences of Z/E photoisomerization of the popular 2-(1,1-dicyanomethylene)rhodanine (RCN) unit on the optical and morphological properties of a homologous series of RCN-functionalized oligothiophenes are studied here. Oligomers consisting of one, two, or three thiophene units were studied as pure Z isomers and with E isomer compositions of 25, 53, and 45%, respectively, for Z/E mixtures. Solutions of Z isomers and Z/E mixtures were characterized by UV-vis and photoluminescence spectroscopy, wherein changes to optical properties were evaluated on the basis of E isomer content. X-ray diffraction of thin-film Z/E mixtures reveals crystalline domains of both Z and E forms after thermal annealing for mono- and bithiophene oligomers, with greater interplanar spacing for E crystalline domains than the Z counterparts along the substrate normal direction. The surface morphology viewed by atomic force microscopy also shows fiberlike structures for the E form with a much larger aspect ratio than for the Z domains in the bithiophene oligomer. Optical characterization reveals drastic changes in the solid state upon introduction of the E form for the mono- and bithiophene derivatives, whereas subtle consequences are noted for the terthiophene analogue. Most notably, a 132 nm redshift in maximum absorption occurs for the bithiophene oligomer films containing 53% E isomer compared to the pure Z counterpart. Finally, although solid-state photoisomerization experiments find no evidence of Z → E isomerization in polycrystalline Z films, E → Z isomerization is observed and becomes more restrictive in films with higher crystallinity (i.e., after thermal annealing). This structure-property study, which elucidates the consequences of the RCN configuration on solid-state packing and optical properties, is expected to guide the development of more efficient and stable organic optoelectronic devices.

3.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(30): 4711-4714, 2022 Apr 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35293405

RESUMEN

Microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED) has established its complementary role alongside X-ray diffraction in crystal structure elucidation. Unfortunately, kinematical refinement of MicroED data lacks the differentiation power to assign the absolute structure solely based on the measured intensities. Here we report a method for absolute configuration determination via MicroED by employing salt formation with chiral counterions.


Asunto(s)
Electrones , Microscopía por Crioelectrón/métodos , Microscopía Electrónica de Transmisión , Polvos , Difracción de Rayos X
4.
Chem Sci ; 11(37): 10190-10197, 2020 Sep 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34094283

RESUMEN

π-Conjugated oligomers functionalized with the popular dicyanorhodanine (RCN) electron acceptor are shown to be susceptible to photo-induced Z/E isomerization. The stereochemistry of two model RCN-functionalized thiophenes is confirmed by single crystal X-ray analysis and 2D NMR, and shown to be the thermodynamically stable Z form. Relative energies, Z/E configurations, and conformational preferences are modelled using density functional theory (DFT). The photophysical properties of the model compounds are explored experimentally and computationally; the Z and E isomers display similar absorption profiles with significant spectral overlap and are inseparable upon irradiation to a photostationary state. The well-behaved photoisomerization process is routinely observable by thin-layer chromatography, UV-vis, and NMR, and the photochemical behavior of the two RCN-functionalized thiophenes is characterized under varying wavelengths of irradiation. Ultraviolet (254 nm) irradiation results in photostationary state compositions of 56/44 and 69/31 Z-isomer/E-isomer for substrates functionalized with one thiophene and two thiophenes, respectively. Ambient laboratory lighting results in excess of 10 percent E-isomer for each species in solution, an important consideration for processing such materials, particularly for organic photovoltaic applications. In addition, a photoswitching experiment is conducted to demonstrate the reversible nature of the photoreaction, where little evidence of fatigue is observed over numerous switching cycles. Overall, this work showcases an approach to characterize the stereochemistry and photochemical behavior of dicyanorhodanine-functionalized thiophenes, widely used components of functional molecules and materials.

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