Identifying and mapping surface amorphous domains

Undesirable amorphous material generation during formulation is implicated in a growing number of pharmaceutical problems. Due to the importance of interfacial properties in many drug delivery systems, it seems that surface amorphous material is particularly significant. Consequently, this study inv...

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Published inPharmaceutical research Vol. 22; no. 7; pp. 1195 - 1202
Main Authors Ward, Stuart, Perkins, Mark, Zhang, Jianxin, Roberts, Clive J, Madden, Claire E, Luk, Shen Y, Patel, Nikin, Ebbens, Stephen J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Springer Nature B.V 01.07.2005
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Summary:Undesirable amorphous material generation during formulation is implicated in a growing number of pharmaceutical problems. Due to the importance of interfacial properties in many drug delivery systems, it seems that surface amorphous material is particularly significant. Consequently, this study investigates a range of methods capable of detecting and mapping surface amorphous material. A micron-sized localized surface domain of amorphous sorbitol is generated using a novel localized heating method. The domain is subsequently investigated using atomic force microscopy (AFM) imaging, nanomechanical measurements, and Raman microscopy 3-D profiling. AFM phase and height images reveal nanoscale-order variations within both crystalline and amorphous sorbitol domains. Nanomechanical measurements are able to quantitatively distinguish the amorphous and crystalline domains through local Young's modulus measurements. Raman microscopy also distinguishes the amorphous and crystalline sorbitol through variations in peak width. This is shown to allow mapping of the 3-D distribution of the amorphous phase and is hence complementary to the more surface sensitive AFM measurements. AFM and Raman microscopy map the distribution of amorphous material at the surface of a sorbitol crystal with submicron spatial resolution, demonstrating surface analysis methods for characterizing semicrystalline solids generated during pharmaceutical processing.
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ISSN:0724-8741
1573-904X
DOI:10.1007/s11095-005-6027-4