Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1221989 | Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2010 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Two polymorphic forms of benfluorex hydrochloride, phases I and II, were isolated as monophasic polycrystalline samples, and structurally characterized using ab initio X-ray powder diffraction methods and a global optimization strategy (simulated annealing). Form I crystallizes in monoclinic system, space group P21/n, with Z = 4, a = 21.0719(10) Ã
, b = 7.0563(4) Ã
, c = 14.8684(7) Ã
, β = 116.998(3)°, V = 1969.8(2) Ã
3, while Form II crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pbca, with Z = 8, a = 33.8031(2) Ã
, b = 15.1451(8) Ã
, c = 7.6138(6) Ã
, VÂ =Â 3897.9(4)Â Ã
3. Crystals of Form I and Form II of benfluorex hydrochloride are based upon an ionic packing of protonated benfluorex molecules at the most basic site, the N1 atoms, and chloride anions. Form I shows the presence of μ-Cl ions, generating centrosymmetric dimers with a N2Cl2 moiety, while Form II contains antiparallel chains of C-Hâ¯O hydrogen-bonded molecules running along c axis. DSC and thermodiffractometric measurements showed that heating progressively Form II from ambient temperature to 160 °C causes a phase transition to the thermodynamically stable Form I, immediately followed by the sample melting, near 165 °C. Recrystallization directly to Form I is observed when the melt is cooled back to ambient temperature, with a significant hysteresis (this event being centered near 130 °C).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Elisabetta Maccaroni, Luciana Malpezzi, Walter Panzeri, Norberto Masciocchi,