Publication Type Journal Article
Title Kinetics and Mechanism of the Thermal Dehydration of a Robust and Yet Metastable Hemihydrate of 4-Hydroxynicotinic Acid
Authors Abhinav Joseph Carlos E. S. Bernardes A. Viana M.Fatima M.Piedade M. E. M. Piedade
Groups MET BioMol
Journal CRYSTAL GROWTH \& DESIGN
Year 2015
Month July
Volume 15
Number 7
Pages 3511-3524
Abstract Hydrates are the most common type of solvates and certainly the most important ones for industries such as pharmaceuticals which strongly rely on the development, production, and marketing of organic molecular solids. A recent study indicated that, in contrast with thermodynamic predictions, a new hemihydrate of 4-hydroxynicotinic acid (4HNA center dot 0.5H(2)O) did not undergo facile spontaneous dehydration at ambient temperature and pressure. The origin of this robustness and the mechanism of dehydration were investigated in this work, through a combined approach which involved kinetic studies by thermogravimetry (TGA), crystal packing analysis based on X-ray diffraction data, and microscopic observations by hot stage microscopy (HSM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The TGA results indicated that the resilience of 4HNA center dot 0.5H(2)O to water loss is indeed of kinetic origin, c.f., due to a significant activation energy, Ea, which increased from 85 kJ.mol(-1) to 133 kJ.mol(-1) with the increase in particle size. This Ea range is compatible with the fact that four moderately strong hydrogen bonds (typically 20-30 kJ.mol(-1) each) must be broken to remove water from the crystal lattice. The dehydration kinetics conforms to the Avrami-Erofeev A2 model, which assumes a nucleation and growth mechanism. Support for a nucleation and growth mechanism was also provided by the HSM, SEM, and AFM observations. These observations further suggested that the reaction involves one-dimensional nucleation, which is rarely observed. Finally, a statistical analysis of Arrhenius plots for samples with different particle sizes revealed an isokinetic relationship between the activation parameters. This is consistent with the fact that the dehydration mechanism is independent of the sample particle size.
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.5b00594
ISBN
Publisher AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Book Title
ISSN 1528-7483
EISSN 1528-7505
Conference Name
Bibtex ID ISI:000357435800053
Observations
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