» Articles » PMID: 38401048

Influence of Nucleation on Relaxation, Molecular Cooperativity, and Physical Stability of Celecoxib Glass

Overview
Journal Mol Pharm
Specialty Pharmacology
Date 2024 Feb 24
PMID 38401048
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Although nucleation is considered the first step in the crystallization of glass materials, the structure and properties of the nuclei are not understood well. Influence of nucleation on the structure and dynamics of celecoxib glass was evaluated in this study. The nuclei for Form III were induced by annealing the glass at freezing temperature, and their impact on the relaxation behavior was investigated using thermal analysis and broadband dielectric spectroscopy to find accelerated α relaxation and suppressed β relaxation. In addition, observed after nucleation was a decrease in cooperativity of the molecular motion, presumably because of the appearance of void spaces in the glass structure. During long-term isothermal crystallization studies, crystal growth to Form III was accelerated in the presence of the nuclei, whereas this effect was less remarkable when a different crystal form dominated the crystallization behavior. These observations should provide more detailed insights into the nucleation mechanism and impact of nucleation on molecular dynamics including physical stability of pharmaceutical glasses. In addition, discussed is the remarkable acceleration of the crystallization rate of the celecoxib glass just below its , which could be understood by diffusionless crystal growth.

Citing Articles

Crystal Nucleation in Ibuprofen Glass: Possible Relevance between the Characteristic Length of the Cooperatively Rearranging Region and the Size of Crystal Nuclei.

Kawakami K, Ohyama K J Phys Chem B. 2025; 129(7):2096-2104.

PMID: 39915259 PMC: 11848918. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.4c07005.


An Investigation of the Impact of Precipitation Temperature and Filter Cake Thickness on the Physical Stability of Amorphous Solids: A Case Study.

Li Z, Liao X, Gong Z, Zhang B, Nawaz A Molecules. 2024; 29(10).

PMID: 38792188 PMC: 11123877. DOI: 10.3390/molecules29102327.