The
mechanochemical preparation of silver sulfadiazine and dantrolene,
two marketed active pharmaceutical ingredients, was investigated by in situ Raman spectroscopy. For the first time, the mechanochemical
transformations involving highly fluorescent compounds could be studied in situ with a high-resolution Raman system combined with
a unique suitable Raman probe. Moreover, the kinetic features of the
mechanochemical process were examined by a mathematical model allowing
to describe the chemical changes under mechanical stress. This approach
is promising both to broaden the scope of Raman in situ investigations that would otherwise be impossible and for process
optimization at any scale.
The nucleobase adenine plays a pivotal role in the chemistry of life, but is also becoming increasingly interesting as a building block in the synthesis of functional solid materials.Although commercially available as a solid, adenine's solid-state chemistry has so far been neglected. In this comprehensive study it is shown that adenine is most often marketed as a mixture of two polymorphs, one previously known, and a new polymorph.Both polymorphs exhibit layered structures with different hydrogen-bonding patterns within layers. The crystal structure of the new polymorph was elucidated using synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction. Polymorph occurrence conditions, interconversion and the difference in their thermodynamic stability were established theoretically and experimentally revealing the polymorph with Z = 2 (known) as stable relative to the polymorph with Z = 1 (new). The adenine layers in both polymorphs are connected by weak interaction likely resulting in stacking faults which are manifested in anisotropic line broadening of their powder diffraction patterns. Analysis of a few commercial samples of adenine revealed them all to be a polymorph mixture, which could be inconvenient in experiments where properties of the solid material could be relevant.
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