Cocrystallization is a technique for improving the physical properties of active pharmaceutical ingredients. However, cocrystals can transform into more stable polymorphs as well as dissociate to original materials. Therefore, an analytical technique is required to determine the polymorphic transformation quickly and accurately in tablets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA rapid and nondestructive analytical technique is critical for the analysis of cyclodextrin inclusion complexes in solid dosage forms. This study proposed a newly developed low-frequency Raman spectroscopy as a candidate technique for the analysis of cyclodextrin inclusion complexes. In this study, we selected a typical series of five crystalline cyclodextrin inclusion complexes and reported the usefulness of Raman spectroscopy for analyzing these inclusion complexes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCombination tablets containing multiple active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) are expected to improve patient convenience by decreasing the number of tablets to be taken; thus, numerous formulations containing multiple APIs have recently been developed. To allow for dose adjustments based on patient conditions, many tablets have a bisection line to allow equal division of tablets. However, there have been no investigations regarding content uniformity among divided combination tablets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo enable the continuous production of cocrystal-containing pharmaceutical tablets, guaranteeing the cocrystal content of the final pharmaceutical tablets in the solid state is critical. This study demonstrates the quantification of caffeine-glutaric acid cocrystals in model tablets using transmission low-frequency Raman spectroscopy. Although distinguishing between cocrystals and raw materials using conventional Raman spectroscopy is difficult, the use of low-frequency Raman spectroscopy enables the discrimination of cocrystals and raw materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCocrystallization is an attractive and promising technology that can improve the physical properties of formulations of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). We have developed a "nano-spot method" that can evaluate the crystalline form on the nanogram scale. In this study, the following studies were performed to obtain versatile and comprehensive improvements to the nano-spot method: modification of the sample solution, application of solvent vapor exposure to attempt the precipitation of various states of crystals, and adoption of low-frequency Raman spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to quantify polymorphs of active pharmaceutical ingredients in pharmaceutical tablets using a novel transmission low-frequency Raman spectroscopy method. We developed a novel transmission geometry for low-frequency Raman spectroscopy and compared quantitative ability in transmission mode versus backscattering mode using chemometrics. We prepared two series of tablets, (1) containing different weight-based contents of carbamazepine form III and (2) including different ratios of carbamazepine polymorphs (forms I/III).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo-dimensional correlation analysis was applied to the time-dependent evolution of Raman spectra during the isothermal crystallization of bioplastic, poly[(R)-3-hydroxybutyrate- co-(R)-3-hydroxyhexanoate] or PHBHx copolymer. Simultaneous Raman measurement of both carbonyl stretching and low-frequency crystalline lattice mode regions made it possible to carry out the highly informative hetero-mode correlation analysis. The crystallization process of PHBHx involves: (1) the early nucleation stage; (2) the primary growth of well-ordered crystals of PHBHx; and (3) the secondary crystal growth phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymorph detection, identification, and quantitation in crystalline materials are of great importance to the pharmaceutical industry. Vibrational spectroscopic techniques used for this purpose include Fourier transform mid-infrared (FT-MIR) spectroscopy, Fourier transform near-infrared (FT-NIR) spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and terahertz (THz) and far-infrared (FIR) spectroscopy. Typically, the fundamental molecular vibrations accessed using high-frequency Raman and MIR spectroscopy or the overtone and combination of bands in the NIR spectra are used to monitor the solid-state forms of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe size of infrared camera systems can be reduced by collecting low-resolution images in parallel with multiple narrow-aperture lenses rather than collecting a single high-resolution image with one wide-aperture lens. We describe an infrared imaging system that uses a three-by-three lenslet array with an optical system length of 2.3 mm and achieves Rayleigh criteria resolution comparable with a conventional single-lens system with an optical system length of 26 mm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBend loss effects can be a significant concern in the design and performance of diffused, buried waveguide devices. Since diffused, buried waveguides typically do not have analytical mode solutions, the bend mode must be expressed as an expansion of straight waveguide modes. For the case of buried ion-exchanged waveguides, the bend loss is affected by bend radius, the duration of the ion exchange and burial processes, as well as the size of the mask opening used to create the waveguides and applied field during burial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDigital information in optical data storage systems can be encoded in the intensity, in the polarization state, or in the phase of a carrier laser beam. Intensity modulation is achieved at the surface of the storage medium either through destructive interference from surface-relief features (e.g.
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