Solubility of Pharmaceuticals
and Their Salts As a Function of pH
Posted on 2013-02-20 - 00:00
In this work, the solubilities of lidocaine, thiabendazole,
and terfenadine and their salts were measured and modeled as a function
of pH. The aqueous solubilities of lidocaine and thiabendazole were
measured in the pH range between 0.5 and 9.8 using hydrochloric acid
or phosphoric acid. The solubility was modeled using the ePC-SAFT
equation of state. The model parameters of the nonionized pharmaceuticals
were determined from their solubilities in pure organic solvents (acetone,
ethanol, 2-propanol, n-hexane, n-heptane, and toluene), which were also measured. Depending on the
pH value, the ionization of the pharmaceutical and the identity of
the pH-changing agent were considered during the modeling. The charge
of the ionized pharmaceutical was explicitly taken into account. All
other model parameters were deduced from those of the nonionized pharmaceutical.
Furthermore, the precipitation of the pharmaceutical salt upon a pH
change was described by its solubility product. The latter was fitted
to one experimental data point at a low pH value at which the pharmaceutical
salt precipitated. Using this information, the solubility at any pH
and the influence of ionization resulting in an increase in solubility
with decreasing pH were nearly in agreement with the experimental
data.
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Cassens, Jan; Prudic, Anke; Ruether, Feelly; Sadowski, Gabriele (2016). Solubility of Pharmaceuticals
and Their Salts As a Function of pH. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/ie302064h