The School of Pharmacy, University of London, 29-39 Brunswick Square, London WC1N 1AX, UK.
J Pharm Biomed Anal. 2010 Nov 2;53(3):366-70. doi: 10.1016/j.jpba.2010.04.017. Epub 2010 Apr 20.
Form III is the most unstable polymorph of paracetamol discovered and has not been fully characterized. Its instability in air means that it must be formed in situ in whichever instrument is used for analysis and even its melting point is the subject of discussion, because it undergoes a solid-solid conversion to form II when heated. The recent development of rapid-heat differential scanning calorimetry (RHDSC), which offers heating rates up to 2000 degrees C/min, provides a new opportunity to characterize unstable polymorphs because of the likelihood that form changes can be inhibited at higher heating rates. Hence the specific aim of this work was to use RHDSC to isolate and characterize paracetamol form III. Form III was prepared from the glass by holding isothermally at 113 degrees C for 2 min. Upon heating at slow scan rates (up to 300 degrees C min(-1)) a solid-solid transition to form II at ca. 120 degrees C was seen, followed by melting of form II at 156 degrees C. At heating rates of 400 degrees C min(-1) and higher, the solid-solid transition was absent and two endotherms were observed; the form II melt at 156 degrees C and a new, lower temperature endotherm at 143 degrees C. We ascribe the transition at 143 degrees C to the melting of form III. The form II melt was present in all experiments, irrespective of heating rate; thus we presume the paracetamol crystallizes to a mixture of forms II and III during preparation, indicative again of the unstable nature of form III. Experiments conducted with a crystal growth modifier (hydroxypropylmethylcellulose, HPMC) showed that increasing the HPMC molecular mass, or increasing the HPMC:paracetamol ratio, resulted in a concomitant increase in the form III peak, relative to the form II peak, which supports the hypothesis that the sample coexisted in both forms prior to crystallization.
III 型是已发现的最不稳定的对乙酰氨基酚多晶型物,尚未得到充分表征。它在空气中的不稳定性意味着它必须在用于分析的任何仪器中就地形成,甚至它的熔点也是讨论的主题,因为它在加热时会发生固相-固相转化,形成 II 型。最近发展的快速加热差示扫描量热法(RHDSC)提供了一个新的机会来表征不稳定的多晶型物,因为在较高的加热速率下,可能会抑制形态变化。因此,这项工作的具体目标是使用 RHDSC 分离和表征对乙酰氨基酚 III 型。通过在 113°C 下恒温 2 分钟从玻璃中制备 III 型。在缓慢扫描速率(高达 300°C min(-1))下加热时,在约 120°C 看到固相-固相向 II 型的转变,随后 II 型在 156°C 熔融。在 400°C min(-1)及更高的加热速率下,固相-固相转变不存在,观察到两个吸热峰;在 156°C 时 II 型熔融和一个新的较低温度吸热峰在 143°C。我们将 143°C 的转变归因于 III 型的熔融。在所有实验中都存在 II 型熔融,无论加热速率如何;因此,我们推测在制备过程中对乙酰氨基酚结晶为 II 型和 III 型的混合物,再次表明 III 型的不稳定性质。用晶体生长调节剂(羟丙基甲基纤维素,HPMC)进行的实验表明,随着 HPMC 分子量的增加或 HPMC:对乙酰氨基酚比例的增加,相对于 II 型峰,III 型峰的相对强度增加,这支持了样品在结晶前以两种形式共存的假说。