Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8513178 | Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The present study has 2 aims. First, the method of spectral reflectance was used to measure evaporation rates of thin (â¼25-300 μm) films of neat liquid volatile organic chemicals exposed to a well-regulated wind speed u. Gas-phase evaporation mass transfer coefficient (kevap) measurements of 10 chemicals, 9 of which were measured at similar u, are predicted (slope of log-log data = 1.01; intercept = 0.08; R2 = 0.996) by a previously proposed mass transfer correlation. For one chemical, isoamyl alcohol, the dependence of kevap on u0.52 was measured, in support of the predicted exponent value of ½. Second, measured kevap of nicotine was used as an input in analytical models based on diffusion theory to estimate the absorbed fraction (Fabs) of a small dose (5 μL/cm2) applied to human epidermis in vitro. The measured Fabs was 0.062 ± 0.023. Model-estimated values are 0.066 and 0.115. Spectral reflectance is a precise method of measuring kevap of liquid chemicals, and the data are well described by a simple gas-phase mass transfer coefficient. For nicotine under the single exposure condition measured herein, Fabs is well-predicted from a theoretical model that requires knowledge of kevap, maximal dermal flux, and membrane lag time.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Drug Discovery
Authors
H. Frederick Frasch, Larry Lee, Ana M. Barbero,