Chongprasert S, Knopp S A, Nail S L
Department of Industrial and Physical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, 1336 Robert E. Heine Building, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA.
J Pharm Sci. 2001 Nov;90(11):1720-8. doi: 10.1002/jps.1121.
The broad objective of this research was to better understand the physical chemistry of freeze drying of the system glycine/water, with emphasis on the role of polymorphism of glycine on freezing and freeze-drying behavior. Frozen solutions of glycine were characterized by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and by freeze-dry microscopy. Cooling rates ranged from 0.1 degrees C/min to quench-cooling by immersing samples in liquid nitrogen. During slow cooling, only a beta-glycine/ice eutectic mixture is formed, melting at -3.60 degrees C. For quench-frozen solutions, the low-temperature thermal behavior is more complex. A complex glass transition region is observed on the DSC thermogram, with midpoint temperatures at about -73 degrees C and -60 degrees C, as well as two separate crystallization exotherms. Use of very low heating rates in the DSC experiment allows resolution of four separate endotherms in the temperature range just below the melting of ice. The experimental data support the conclusion that these endotherms arise from melting of the beta-glycine/ice eutectic mixture at -3.6 degrees C, dissolution of crystals of alpha-glycine at -2.85 degrees C, and melting of the gamma-glycine/ice eutectic mixture at -2.70 degrees C. One of the endotherms could not be characterized because of inadequate resolution from the beta-glycine/ice eutectic melting endotherm. Freeze-dried solids were characterized by X-ray powder diffraction after annealing under conditions established by the DSC and freeze-dry microscopy experiments. Annealing at controlled temperatures in the melting region prior to recooling the system was useful not only in interpreting the complex DSC thermogram, but also in controlling the glycine polymorph resulting from freeze drying.
本研究的总体目标是更深入地了解甘氨酸/水体系冷冻干燥的物理化学过程,重点关注甘氨酸多晶型在冷冻和冷冻干燥行为中的作用。通过差示扫描量热法(DSC)和冷冻干燥显微镜对甘氨酸冷冻溶液进行表征。冷却速率范围从0.1℃/分钟到通过将样品浸入液氮进行骤冷。在缓慢冷却过程中,仅形成β-甘氨酸/冰共晶混合物,其熔点为-3.60℃。对于骤冷冷冻溶液,低温热行为更为复杂。在DSC热重曲线上观察到一个复杂的玻璃化转变区域,中点温度约为-73℃和-60℃,以及两个单独的结晶放热峰。在DSC实验中使用非常低的加热速率能够分辨出在略低于冰熔点的温度范围内的四个单独的吸热峰。实验数据支持以下结论:这些吸热峰分别来自-3.6℃时β-甘氨酸/冰共晶混合物的熔化、-2.85℃时α-甘氨酸晶体的溶解以及-2.70℃时γ-甘氨酸/冰共晶混合物的熔化。由于与β-甘氨酸/冰共晶熔化吸热峰的分辨率不足,其中一个吸热峰无法表征。在DSC和冷冻干燥显微镜实验确定的条件下退火后,通过X射线粉末衍射对冷冻干燥固体进行表征。在将体系重新冷却之前,在熔化区域的受控温度下进行退火不仅有助于解释复杂的DSC热重曲线,而且有助于控制冷冻干燥产生的甘氨酸多晶型。