Chap 1
Chap 1
Phar3121
By Teshale E.
(B. Pharm, MSc)
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1. Introduction to pharmaceutical
analysis
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1.1 Definitions
Pharmaceutical analysis:
It is a science which deals with identification, characterization and
quantification of drugs in raw materials, dosage forms and biological
fluids or
– Does this formulation contain solely the active ingredient or are additional impurities
present?
– What is the stability of a drug in the formulation and hence the shelf–life of the
product?
– What are the physical constants like Pka value (s), solubilities, stability etc of a drug
substance under development?
– At what rate is the drug released from its formulation so that it can be absorbed by
the body.
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Scope (areas) of pharmaceutical (drug) analysis:
Pharmaceutical industry
In-process control
» Products control
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Pharmaceutical research labs
Advanced research
Process development
• Stability studies
Basic research
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1.2. Introduction to quality control and Quality
Assurance
• Quality:
o A measure of a product’s or service’s ability to satisfy the customer’s stated or
implied needs.
Steps taken during the generation of a product or service to ensure that it meets
requirements and that the product or service is reproducible.
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Quality assurance (QA): The sum total of the organized
arrangements made with the objective of ensuring that all materials are of
the quality required for their intended use and that quality systems are
maintained.
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• Quality control is also concerned with
and release procedures which insure that the necessary and relevant tests
no products released for sale or supply until their quality has been judged to
be satisfactory.
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Comparison of QA and QC
Quality assurance Quality control
• Process oriented • product oriented,
• Defect prevention • Defect identification
• Proactive measure • Reactive measure
• Responsibility of all staff • Responsibility of team
• Create the deliverables • Verify deliverables
• Defines standards and • Confirms standards are
methodologies followed
• Low Level Activity • High Level Activity
pharmaceutical QA II 10
The tests of quality control may belong to the following types:
Physico-chemical methods
Microbiological methods
Biological methods
It is better to use Total Quality Control (TQC or QA) rather than QC.
By TQC it means to include all those aspects which start with the
“Quality should be built into the product, and testing alone cannot be relied on
to ensure product quality”
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• There is a common theme to all quality systems whether used for
pharmaceutical production or not.
reconsidration)
– All operations that can effect quality must be described in written and approved
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– Equipment used must be fit for purpose (qualified/validated, calibrated and
maintained).
perform.
followed.
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Objectives of Quality Control
• Make sure that proper sampling and analytical test are done.
• Make sure that the finished products contain active ingredients complying with the
qualitative and quantitative composition and enclosed with in their proper container and
correctly labeled.
• Make sure that no batch of product is released to sale or supply prior to certified
• In conclusion, all quality systems are to do with people, materials, equipment, records
and procedures.
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1.2.1.QC procedures in pharmaceutical industries
The main areas of QC procedures include the various steps to ascertain that within
purity
product to be genuine
The tests for purity involve tests for the presence of impurity and fix the limits of
Some of the tests which may be run to ascertain the purity of substances are:
They are used when other tests of purity are not available,
They have limited value, but determine whether a substance is reasonably pure or not
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II. Determination of physico -chemical constants
This ensures whether the substances are reasonably free from other substances,
rotation and refractive index have reliable values which can reveal the purity of the
substances.
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III. Determinations using analytical techniques
o These techniques are very sensitive to control impurities in very minute conc
o They are most of the time utilized to assay active ingredients or finished product and
determine potency.
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IV. Miscellaneous(consisting of many d/t kinds) characteristics
Sulfated ash:
Loss on drying:
E.g. Aspirin: for 1g sample when dried (under reduced pressure over silica gel) for 5hrs.
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2. A drug should contain the same amount of active ingredients as
- weight variation
Stability is defined as the time from the date of manufacturing of the formulation
until its chemical or biological activity is not less than a pre-determined level of
the labeled potency and its physical characteristics have not changed appreciably.
a. Incompatibility:
c. Photochemical reactions
Light can cause degradation thus colored glass containers are used
“Hence these all factors should be controlled in the production process, raw material as
well as upon storage of the finished product as they do have influence on the shelf-life
as well”
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4. A drug should not contain undesirable impurities
substance.
remain with the API or developed during formulation or upon aging of the active
potency.
The presence of impurities even in small amount may influence efficacy and
Impurities created during formulation and with aging or that are related to the
formulated forms.
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According to ICH guidelines, impurities associated with APIs are
May arise during the manufacturing process and/or storage of the drug subs.
the following:
every API.
Eg. In paracetamol bulk, there is a limit test for p-aminophenol, which could be a
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ii. By-products: In the case of paracetamol bulk, diacetylated paracetamol is the by
product
.
different dosage forms or aging of API are common impurities in the medicines. Eg. The degradation
The presence of a ß-lactam ring as well as that of an α-amino group in the C6/C7 side chain plays
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iv. Reagents,ligands,and catalysts: These chemicals are less commonly found in
APIs.
“In general, an individual API may contain all of the above-mentioned types of
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B. Inorganic impurities: Inorganic impurities may also derive from the
They are normally known and identified and include the following:
are rare
Heavy metals - The main sources of heavy metals are the water used in the
processes and the reactors (if stainless steel reactors are used), where
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C. Solvent residues: are organic volatile chemicals used during the
however, efforts should be taken to the extent possible to meet the safety
data.
Depending on the possible risk to human health, residual solvents are divided
into 3 classes.
such as benzene (2 ppm limit) and CCl4 (4 ppm limit) have to be avoided.
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Class II solvents: Solvents to be limited, known non-genotoxic, animal
such as methylene chloride (600 ppm), methanol (3000 ppm), pyridine (200 ppm),
toluene (890 ppm), N,N-dimethylformamide (880 ppm), and acetonitrile (410 ppm).
acetic acid, acetone, isopropyl alcohol, butanol, ethanol, and ethyl acetate
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Impurities related to formulation
Apart from bulk drug-related impurities, the formulated form of API may contain
a) method related
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b) environmental related
Light-especially UV light –
Humidity-
For hygroscopic products, humidity is considered detrimental to both bulk powder and
formulated solid dosage forms. Aspirin and ranitidine are classical examples.
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c) dosage form factors related
In general, liquid dosage forms are very much susceptible to both degradation
In this regard,
water content,
pH of the solution/suspension,
critical factors.
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Formation of impurities on aging(irreversible biological change)
Most vitamins are very labile and on aging they cause a problem of
specifications.
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b) Functional group-related typical degradation
Oxidative degradation –
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Photolytic cleavage - Pharmaceutical products are exposed to light while being
Decarboxylation- Some dissolved carboxylic acids lose carbon dioxide from the
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1.3. Drug compendia(collection of
facts on a subject)
It is a collection of concise but detailed information about a drug.
Pharmacopeia
devices with descriptions of test methods, specifications for purity and strength
In some countries e.g. USA both the national pharmacopoeia and national
They should be safe( non toxic), not having any interference with
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The compendia (cont…)
(API):
– Description: Crystalline, amorphous, etc.
– Solubility
– Identification tests
– Physical constants
– Assay
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The compendia (cont…)
– Identification
– Disintegration
– Dissolution
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The compendia (cont…)
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The compendia (cont…)
These are secondary reference sources that are not subject to categories of
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The compendia (cont…)
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The compendia (cont…)
Components of pharmacopoeia
a) General notices:
General notices provide the overall guiding principles for using the monographs and general
EXAMPLES
Tolerances: e.g. Aspirin:-should have not less than 99.5% and not more than 100.5% of
Exactly: implies an error of 0.1% in the case of weighing or 0.05ml in a 50.0ml burette
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The compendia (cont…)
water bath' means a bath of boiling water, unless water at some other
Drying to constant weight: means that drying shall be continued until two
consecutive weighing do not differ by more than 0.5mg per gram and weighing
solution
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The compendia (cont…)
The container should not interact physically or chemically with the chemical
placed in it
– Light sensitive container: which does not transmit more than 18% of UV
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The compendia (cont…)
• Storage conditions
Cold: any TO not exceeding 8OC and usually between 2O and 8OC.
excessive heat.
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The compendia (cont…)
Reagents
Solvents
Expression of content
Temperature
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The compendia (cont…)
b) Monograph:
contain,
use.
following
1. Title : generic name, molecular structure, formula and weights are given,
2. Therapeutic category
assay
Dosage
materials
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The compendia (cont…)
General tests
Chemical tests and assays : - Identification tests, Limit tests and assays
- Vitamins assay
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The compendia (cont…)
Microbial tests
o Antibiotic assay
LIMIT TESTS
The substances that are used in pharmaceutical field should be almost pure
The total impurities should be in certain minimal range, i.e. there should be
In general, specification limit not more than 0.1% for any unspecified
Limit tests are designed to identify and control small quantities of impurity
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The compendia (cont…)
5. Manufacturing hazards
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The Law and pharmaceutical analysis
Law – is the body of principles that govern conduct and observance of which can be
enforced in courts.
FDA is an agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services and is
responsible for:
medical devices (human and animal) and radiation emitting devices (including non-
medical devices)
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The Law and pharmaceutical…….
Authorization and mandate
The FDA derives its authority and jurisdiction from various Congressional acts.
The main source of the FDA's authority is the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act.
The main purpose of the FDA is to protect citizens from products that are
inherently unsafe
Regulations may take several forms, including but not limited to outright ban,
Additionally, the FDA sets the standards under which individuals may be
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The Law and pharmaceutical…….
The Organization Components
• Currently, the FDA is divided into five major Centers, each with its own
origins and history:
CDER operations
The FDA is charged with the task of approving or rejecting drugs that
The FDA ensures that newly approved drugs have passed vigorous testing,
which includes:
animal testing
clinical trials of healthy individuals, and
The FDA also verifies safety, quality, efficacy, along with drug interactions,
and how various drugs may work depending on age and sex.
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The Law and pharmaceutical…….
Mission
To promote and protect public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and
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Scope of Control
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Institutions Controlled by EFDA
Manufacturers
Importers and/wholesalers
Exporters
Retail-outlets
Scientific offices,
Commission agents
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1.4. Analytical Errors and Validation of
Analytical procedures
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Errors in pharmaceutical analysis
and those by the new analytical methods are then treated as ‘errors’ in the
latest procedure
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
• These are errors that possess a definite value together with a reasonable
assignable cause;
for conveniently.
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
The most important errors belonging to this particular class are:
(a) Personal Errors : They are exclusively caused due to ‘personal equation’ of an analyst
involved.
(b) Instrumental Errors : These are invariably(never changed) caused due to faulty and
balances, UV spectrophotometers,
(c) Reagent Errors : The errors that are solely introduced by virtue of the individual
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
• They are usually manifested due to the minute variations which take place
• These errors are mostly random in nature and ultimately give rise to high as
• They can neither be corrected nor eliminated, and therefore, form the
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Random errors Systematic errors
Affect precision – repeatability or Produce bias – an overall deviation of a
reproducibility result from the true value
Cause replicate results to fall on either side Cause all results to be affected in one sense
of an accepted true value only, all too high or all too low
Can be estimated using replicate Cannot be detected simply by using
measurements replicate measurements
Can be minimised by good technique but Can be corrected, e.g. by using
not eliminated standard methods and materials
Caused by both humans and equipment Caused by both humans and equipment
pharmaceutical QA II 75
pharmaceutical QA II 76
Errors in pharmaceutical…
Corrections
balance, pH-meter and the like must be calibrated duly, before use so as to
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
• Thus, the weight of the component present in the unknown sample may be
necessity.
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Errors in pharmaceutical…
• Here, a small known quantity of the component under estimation is added to the
component present.
without the added component ultimately gives the recovery of the quantum
added component.
turbidimetry.
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1.5 Validation of Analytical
procedures
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Validation of Analytical procedures
expected.
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Validation of Analytical……
Precaution to be taken
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Validation of Analytical……
• The common parameters(a limit defining the scope of a process or activity)
that should be verified in method validation are:
Linearity
• The ICH defines the linearity of an analytical procedure as the ability (within a
given range) to obtain test results of variable data which are directly proportional
to the concentration (amount of analyte) in the sample.
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Validation of Analytical……
Range
amount of materials, but are not very sensitive in that they measure over
• Thus, some typed of detection have very wide dynamic range and other
may only function over a restriction range before linearity is lost. E.g. A
UV detector has a dynamic range of about 1x103 and for a particular cpd
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Validation of Analytical……
Accuracy
agreement between the values that are accepted either as conventional true
investigated.
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Validation of Analytical……
Precision
• it does not imply anything with respect to their relation to the ‘true value’
• Example : A sample of pure Peppermint Oil is known to contain 31.10 ± 0.03 per cent of
Menthone. The results obtained by two Analysts-1 and 2 are as stated below :
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Validation of Analytical……
Re
Repeatability
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Validation of Analytical……
Intermediate Precision.
Reproducibility.
other laboratories using the same homogeneous sample lot and the same
experimental design.
the most common approach is the direct method transfer from the
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Validation of Analytical……
Selectivity
many more cpds w/c exhibit UV absorption than fluorescence, thus fluorescence
• B/c selective methods are based on more complex principles than non selective
Robustness
• Refers to how resistance the precision and accuracy of an assay is to small variation in the
• Robust assays may not be capable of the highest precision or specificity but they are
regarded as fit for the purpose for w/c they are designed.
Sensitivity
• It indicates how responsive the method is to a small change in the conc of the analyte.
• It can be viewed as the slope on a response curve and may be a function of the method it
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1.6. Basic calculations in
pharmaceutical analysis
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1.6. Basic calculations……
Molarity
The molar concentration (Cx) of the solution of the chemical species X is the number of
moles of that species that is contained in one liter of the solution (not one liter of the
solvent).
The unit of molar concentration is molarity, M, which has the dimensions of mol L-1.
Cx= no mole solute = no m mole solute
no L solution no ml solution
One liter of one molar solution will consist of one mole of solute plus enough solvent to
make a final volume of one liter.
Example:
Calculate the molar concentration of ethanol in an aqueous solution that contains 2.30g of
C2H5OH (46.07 g/mol) in 3.50L of solution.
Describe the preparation of 2.00L of 0.108M Bacl2 from BaCl2.2 H2O (FW= 244.3g /mol )
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1.6. Basic calculations……
Normality
species. 95
1.6. Basic calculations……
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1.6. Basic calculations……
the cation or anion involved in the reaction; thus for the reaction
pairs that can be accepted by the metal or donated by the ligand. In the
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1.6. Basic calculations……
Example:
If there is a one liter solution that contains 78.32 grams H2 SO4 , the
number of equivalents is
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1.6. Basic calculations……
mass of soln
volume of solution
• volume soln ml
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1.6. Basic calculations……
aqueous reagents. E.g. 37% hydrochloric solution – this means the reagent contains
Example
What is the molarity of K+ in aqueous solution that contains 63.3 ppm of K3 Fe
(CN)6 (329.2 g/mol)?
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Dilution and Concentration of Liquids
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1.7. Physical and chemical
properties of drug molecules
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
• The physical properties of a drug molecules along with simple chemical derivatization
and degradation reaction play an important part in the development of analytical
methods.
• Drug molecules can be complex, containing multiple functional group that in combination
produce the overall properties of the drug
• Ka is the dissociation constant for the equilibrium, is known as Kw in the case of the
dissociation of water
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
• Since the conc. of water does not change appreciably as a result of ionization its
conc. Can be regarded as not having an effect on the equiblirium and it can be
omitted from the equation and this mean that in pure water:
• Strong acid is completely ionized in water and [H+] is equal to its Molarity e.g. 0.1M
HCl contains 0.1M H+ and has a pH of log [0.1]=1
• Weak acids are not completely ionized in aqueous so/n and are in equilibrium with
the undissociated acid, as is the case for water, w/c is a very weak acid.
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
• The dissociation constant Ka is given by the expression below:
• For instance in a 0.1M so/n of acetic acid (Ka=1.75 x 10-5) the equilibrium can be written
as follows:
• Since the dissociation of the acetic acid does not greatly change the conc. of the
unionized acid the above expression can be approximated to:
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
• If pKa is used as a measure of acidic or basic strength, for an acid the smaller the pKa
vallue the strongest the acid. For a base the largest the pKa value the stronger the base
• In the case of a base it is the protonated form of the base that act as a proton donor
Buffer solution
• A solution containing a weak acid/ base and its conjugate base/acid that is resistant to a
• Adding as little as 0.1 mL of concentrated HCl to a liter of H2O shifts the pH from 7.0 to
3.0. The same addition of HCl to a liter solution that is 0.1 M in both a weak acid and its
conjugate weak base, however, results in only a negligible change in pH
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
A mixture of acetic acid and sodium acetate is one example of an acid/base buffer
The relationship between the pH of an acid–base buffer and the relative amounts of
CH3COOH and CH3COO– is derived by taking the negative log of both sides of the
above equation and solving for the pH
Buffering occurs because of the logarithmic relationship between pH and the ratio of
the weak base and weak acid concentrations.
For example, if the equilibrium concentrations of CH3COOH and CH3COO– are equal,
the pH of the buffer is 4.76.
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
• A more useful relationship relates the buffer’s pH to the initial concentrations of weak
acid and weak base.
• A general buffer equation can be derived by considering the following reactions for a
weak acid, HA, and the salt of its conjugate weak base, NaA.
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
• Using hasselbach equation it is possible to determine degree of ionization of a
drug at a given pH. E.g. degree of ionization of acetic acid at pH of 4.76
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
Stability of drugs
Many drugs are quite stable but functional groups such as esters and lactam rings
w/c occur in some drugs are susceptible to hydrolysis and functional groups such as
catechols and phenols are quite readily oxidized.
The most common type of degradation w/c occur and formulated drugs obey zero or
first order kinetics
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1.7. Physical and chemical……
First order degradation
• This type of degradation would be typical of hydrolysis of a drug in so/n
• In first order kinetics the rate constant k has units h-1 or s-1 and the rate of the
reaction for a drug is governed by the expression
• From this expression by integration and rearrangement the following expression arises:
• The half life of the drug (the time taken for 50% of a sample drug to degrade, i.e. where
x is a/2) is thus given by the following expression
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The End
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