Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2487267 | Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2008 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
The melt from the usual monoclinic phase (Phase I) of biclotymol (TfusIâ=â400.5â±â1.0 K, ÎfusHIâ=â36.6â±â0.9 kJâmolâ1) recrystallizes into another phase, Phase II, that melts at TfusIIâ=â373.8â±â0.2 K (ÎfusHIIâ=â28.8â±â1.0 kJâmolâ1). The transformation of Phase II into Phase I is found to be exothermic upon heating either as a direct process at 363 K or through a melting-recrystallization process (IIâââliquidâââI). The melting curves, obtained from differential thermal analyses at various pressures ranging from 0 to 85 MPa, diverge as the pressure increases ((dP/dT)fusIâ=â2.54â±â0.07 MPaâKâ1, (dP/dT)fusIIâ=â5.14â±â0.85 MPaâKâ1). A topological P-T diagram with no stable phase region for Phase II, and similar to the 4th case of the P-T state diagrams formerly published by Bakhuis Roozeboom, is drawn, thus illustrating the overall monotropic behavior of Phase II.
Keywords
Related Topics
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Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Drug Discovery
Authors
René Céolin, Josep-Lluis Tamarit, Maria Barrio, David O. López, Béatrice Nicolaï, Nestor Veglio, Marc-Antoine Perrin, Philippe Espeau,