“Stabilization”
of Amorphous Ketoprofen
in Thin Films
Posted on 2025-01-03 - 19:06
It
has been shown that depositing ketoprofen as thin films on glass
substrates has a stabilizing effect on the amorphous state of ketoprofen.
Polyethylene glycol (M = 6000 g/mol) was mixed with
ketoprofen in a wide range of concentrations. Amorphous thin films
were prepared by spin coating and subjected to storage conditions
with different levels of relative humidity. The films were characterized
by specular X-ray diffraction and atomic force microscopy to assess
their stability in dry to wet atmospheres. In a dry atmosphere, the
amorphous films remained stable for up to 4 months, although ketoprofen
possesses a glass transition temperature of −6 °C. However,
when subjected to a humid atmosphere (over 50% relative humidity),
ketoprofen tends to crystallize in the amorphous films. At low solution
concentrations (i.e., low film thickness and low ketoprofen loading)
and high humidity, only nanometer-size crystals could be detected.
Increasing the polymer mass ratio may favor or prevent crystallization
of ketoprofen in the amorphous films depending on its own crystallization
behavior in those films.
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Tizaoui, Chaima; Rietveld, Ivo B.; Galai, Haykel; Coquerel, Gérard; Morin-Grognet, Sandrine; Gbabode, Gabin (2025). “Stabilization”
of Amorphous Ketoprofen
in Thin Films. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.4c03933