PHAYG062 - Preformulation: O, W o W O, W O, W
PHAYG062 - Preformulation: O, W o W O, W O, W
PHAYG062 - Preformulation: O, W o W O, W O, W
The questions below are designed to help you consolidate your learning. If you can answer them
all correctly, then you will do very well in the course. If not, then consult your lecture notes, the
course text (“Essentials of Pharmaceutical Preformulation” by Gaisford and Saunders), or me
(g.williams@ucl.ac.uk)! Please note that there is no obligation to do these questions: they do not
need to be handed in and will not be marked, but they offer you the opportunity to test your
understanding of the material covered.
2. Give the expression for Po,w. What values will Po,w have if a drug is (a) lipophilic, and (b)
hydrophilic?
Po,w = Co / Cw. For a lipophilic drug Po,w is > 1; for a hydrophilic drug Po,w will be < 1.
3. 107 mg of a drug D is dissolved in 50 mL of water, and 50 mL octanol added. The shake flask
method is then used to determine the partition coefficient. The concentration of drug in the
water layer at the end of the experiment is found to be 0.754 mg/mL. Assuming that the drug
is unionisable, calculate Po,w and log P.
Co + Cw = 107 mg
Cw = 0.754 mg/mL, so total amount of drug in water layer is 50 x 0.754 = 37.7 mg.
Hence, amount of water in octanol layer s 107 - 37.7 = 69.3 mg. Co = 69.3 / 50 = 1.386 mg/mL.
Total amount of drug = amount in water layer + amount in octanol layer = 35.6 +131.0539 =
166.6539 mg = 167 mg (3 s.f.)
funionised = 1/ 6.667 = 0.14999… and hence Po,w = 0.346 / 0.14999… = 2.3089958 = 2.31 (3 s.f.)
A solvent which is more polar than n-octanol is hypo-discriminating; one which is less polar than n-
octanol is hyper-discriminating.
Salt formation causes the production of ionised species, and hence more of the drug will be found
in the water layer. This will cause log P to reduce in value, and frequently it becomes negative (salt
formation causes materials to become more hydrophilic, and in the limit through salt formation we
can convert a lipophilic material into a hydrophilic species).
8. Detail the differences between normal phase and reverse phase chromatography.
Normal phase chromatography has a polar stationary phase and a non-polar mobile phase;
reverse phase chromatography has a non-polar stationary phase and a polar mobile phase.
9. Draw a diagram to illustrate how the retention factor may be determined in TLC.
This gives you the resolution factor, R f. We then convert this to the retention factor using:
10. What factors need to be considered when developing an HPLC method for analysis of an API?
A range of factors must be considered, and extensive optimisation is likely to be required. We will
need to select:
- The column;
- The solvent system;
- The column pressure;
- The column temperature;
- The flow rate;
- An appropriate drug concentration range;
- A suitable detection technology (UV, mass spec, etc).
These parameters need to be optimised to ensure good resolution between analytes, but also the
effective use of machine time and reagents, solvents, etc.