TY - JOUR
T1 - Sulfamerazine
T2 - Understanding the influence of slip planes in the polymorphic phase transformation through x-ray crystallographic studies and ab initio lattice dynamics
AU - Pallipurath, Anuradha R.
AU - Skelton, Jonathan M.
AU - Warren, Mark R.
AU - Kamali, Naghmeh
AU - McArdle, Patrick
AU - Erxleben, Andrea
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2015/10/5
Y1 - 2015/10/5
N2 - Understanding the polymorphism exhibited by organic active-pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), in particular the relationships between crystal structure and the thermodynamics of polymorph stability, is vital for the production of more stable drugs and better therapeutics, and for the economics of the pharmaceutical industry in general. In this article, we report a detailed study of the structure-property relationships among the polymorphs of the model API, Sulfamerazine. Detailed experimental characterization using synchrotron radiation is complemented by computational modeling of the lattice dynamics and mechanical properties, in order to study the origin of differences in millability and to investigate the thermodynamics of the phase equilibria. Good agreement is observed between the simulated phonon spectra and mid-infrared and Raman spectra. The presence of slip planes, which are found to give rise to low-frequency lattice vibrations, explains the higher millability of Form I compared to Form II. Energy/volume curves for the three polymorphs, together with the temperature dependence of the thermodynamic free energy computed from the phonon frequencies, explains why Form II converts to Form I at high temperature, whereas Form III is a rare polymorph that is difficult to isolate. The combined experimental and theoretical approach employed here should be generally applicable to the study of other systems that exhibit polymorphism.
AB - Understanding the polymorphism exhibited by organic active-pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), in particular the relationships between crystal structure and the thermodynamics of polymorph stability, is vital for the production of more stable drugs and better therapeutics, and for the economics of the pharmaceutical industry in general. In this article, we report a detailed study of the structure-property relationships among the polymorphs of the model API, Sulfamerazine. Detailed experimental characterization using synchrotron radiation is complemented by computational modeling of the lattice dynamics and mechanical properties, in order to study the origin of differences in millability and to investigate the thermodynamics of the phase equilibria. Good agreement is observed between the simulated phonon spectra and mid-infrared and Raman spectra. The presence of slip planes, which are found to give rise to low-frequency lattice vibrations, explains the higher millability of Form I compared to Form II. Energy/volume curves for the three polymorphs, together with the temperature dependence of the thermodynamic free energy computed from the phonon frequencies, explains why Form II converts to Form I at high temperature, whereas Form III is a rare polymorph that is difficult to isolate. The combined experimental and theoretical approach employed here should be generally applicable to the study of other systems that exhibit polymorphism.
KW - Lattice dynamics
KW - Phase transitions
KW - Polymorphism
KW - Slip planes
KW - Sulfamerazine
KW - Synchrotron X-ray diffraction
KW - Thermal expansion
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84986617376
U2 - 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.5b00504
DO - 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.5b00504
M3 - Article
SN - 1543-8384
VL - 12
SP - 3735
EP - 3748
JO - Molecular Pharmaceutics
JF - Molecular Pharmaceutics
IS - 10
ER -