Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
232223 The Journal of Supercritical Fluids 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present work aims to characterize the nature and intensity of the specific and non-specific solute–solvent interactions responsible for the different solvating behaviour of “CO2-expanded ethanol” and “CO2-expanded acetone” towards acetaminophen, an analgesic drug commercially known as paracetamol. The intermolecular interactions between acetaminophen and solvent molecules involved in these expanded media and its sensitivity to solvent composition changes, have been analyzed by high-pressure IR spectroscopy, LSER analysis, and theoretical ab initio calculations performed with acetaminophen–(ethanol)n and acetaminophen–(acetone)n complexes. It comes out that the distinct perturbation experienced by the cybotactic region of acetaminophen in “CO2-expanded ethanol” and “CO2-expanded acetone” when CO2 content increases is basically a consequence of the higher sensitivity to solvent composition changes of the dipole–dipole interactions, established between the acetaminophen carbonyl group and acetone solvent molecules, in relation to that of the hydrogen bond interactions existing between this group and ethanol solvent molecules.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
, , , , , ,