posted on 2017-07-20, 00:00authored byQuentin Viel, Laurent Delbreilh, Gérard Coquerel, Samuel Petit, Eric Dargent
A dielectric relaxation
spectroscopy (DRS) study was performed
to investigate the molecular mobility of amorphous chiral diprophylline
(DPL). For this purpose, both racemic DPL and a single enantiomer
of DPL were considered. After fast cooling from the melt at very low
temperature (−140 °C), progressive heating below and above
the glass transition (<i>T</i><sub>g</sub> ≈ 37 °C)
induces two secondary relaxations (γ- and δ-) and primary
relaxations (α-) for both enantiomeric compositions. After chemical
purification of our samples by means of cooling recrystallization,
no γ-process could be detected by DRS. Hence, it was highlighted
that the molecular mobility in the glassy state is influenced by the
presence of theophylline (TPH), the main impurity in DPL samples.
We also proved that the dynamic behavior of a single enantiomer and
the racemic mixture of the same purified compound are quasi-identical.
This study demonstrates that the relative stability and the molecular
mobility of chiral amorphous drugs are strongly sensitive to chemical
purity.