About: Fenbufen is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 255 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3844 citations. The topic is also known as: CL-82204 & gamma-oxo(1,1'-biphenyl)-4-butanoic acid.
TL;DR: In this paper, a low-to medium-throughput approach, encompassing both a melt and solution crystallization step as a route to the identification of co-crystals, was reported.
Abstract: Co-crystal screening is routinely undertaken using high-throughput solution growth. We report a low- to medium-throughput approach, encompassing both a melt and solution crystallization step as a route to the identification of co-crystals. Prior to solution studies, a melt growth step was included utilizing the Kofler mixed fusion method. This method allowed elucidation of the thermodynamic landscape within the binary phase diagram and was found to increase overall screening efficiency. The pharmaceutically acceptable adduct nicotinamide was selected and screened against a small set of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) (ibuprofen (both the racemic compound (R/S) and S-enantiomer), fenbufen, flurbiprofen (R/S), ketoprofen (R/S), paracetamol, piracetam, and salicylic acid) as part of a larger systematic study of synthon stability. From the screen, three new co-crystal systems have been identified (ibuprofen (R/S and S) and salicylic acid) and their crystal structures determined. Because of poor crystal growth synchrotron radiation was required for structure solution of the S-ibuprofen nicotinamide co-crystal. Two further potential systems have also been discovered (fenbufen and flurbiprofen), but crystals suitable for structure determination have yet to be obtained. A greater ability to control crystallization kinetics is required to yield phase-pure single-crystalline material for full verification of this crystal engineering strategy.
TL;DR: In this paper, the anti-inflammatory drug Fenbufen has been intercalated into layered double hydroxides for the first time by co-precipitation under a nitrogen atmosphere.
TL;DR: In this paper, a liquid chromatographic method using normal solid-phase extraction has been developed for the simultaneous analysis of twelve nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in human urine.
TL;DR: A practical and reproducible high-performance liquid chromatographic method using normal solid-phase extraction has been developed for the simultaneous analysis of twelve non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in human urine using indomethacin as an internal standard.
TL;DR: The micron and nanometer-sized γ-cyclodextrin metal-organic frameworks (γ-CD-MOFs) were successfully synthesized using the microwave technique for the first time for rapid and facile synthesis as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The micron and nanometer-sized γ-cyclodextrin metal–organic frameworks (γ-CD-MOFs) were successfully synthesized using the microwave technique for the first time for rapid and facile synthesis. Polyethylene glycol 20000 (PEG 20000) was used as surfactant to control the size and morphology of γ-CD-MOFs. The as-synthesized γ-CD-MOFs were characterized using various techniques, including X-ray powder diffraction (PXRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and N2 adsorption. The increment in the reaction time and MeOH ratio dramatically damaged the crystalline integrity of γ-CD-MOFs. Fenbufen was selected as a model drug to evaluate the loading characteristics of γ-CD-MOF crystals. As a result, the nanometer sized γ-CD-MOFs (100–300 nm) showed rapid and higher adsorption (196 mg g–1) of Fenbufen in EtOH when compared with the micron crystals. The adsorption parameters fitted well to a pseudo-second-order kinetic model and chemisorption of Fenbufen was further supported by mol...