Pedersen O. - Pharmaceutical Chemical Analysis: Methods for Indentification andLimit Tests

Pharmaceutical Chemical Analysis: Methods for Indentification andLimit Tests

Pedersen O.

ISBN: 0849319781
Vydavatelství: CRC Press
Rok vydání: 2006
Dostupnost: Na objednávku

Původní cena: 0 Kč
Cena: Na vyžádání

Nárok na dopravu zdarma
Přidat do wishlistu
Zpět Tisknout Pošli poptávku

Many of the monographs in the European Pharmacopiea, the industry standard test for certain groups of ingredients and excipients, do not describe the tests in full, but reference general methods based on test-tube chemistry that is typically very old. When a test fails, you need to know what went wrong, how it can be fixed, and how to convince QA\QC that the tested material is okay. All in the space of just a few days. This gives you little time to dig out the relevant scientific literature, literature that is often so old it doesn't show up in an electronic search, costing you even more time in an already time-sensitive production schedule. Making this knowledge easily accessible and directly applicable to work in the lab, "Pharmaceutical Chemical Analysis: Methods for Limit Tests and Identifications" explains the purpose of these older tests, the chemistry involved, and hazards to avoid. Organized into two sections, the book covers the 2.3.1 Identification of ions and functional groups tests and 2.4 Limit tests respectively. Each section includes two general chapters that cover subjects relevant to all the pharmacopoeial identification/limit test and then goes on to describe the individual tests in chapters organized and named as they appear in the European Pharmacopoeia. Each chapter begins with a short discussion on the purpose and rationale of the tests, followed by a review of the physical and chemical characters of the target ion or compound. The author describes the chemical background and logic of the individual procedural steps of the test with formulas and reaction and provides tips on the strengths and weaknesses of these techniques in terms of specificity, ruggedness, and potential procedural pitfalls. The European Pharmacopoeia tests put QC/QA chemists in the position of using chemical methods based on analytical principles that have largely been abandoned by modern analytical chemistry and are a limited part of the curriculum for the newly trained, very instrumentally oriented, analytical chemist. But strict regulatory requirements and economic pressures make the pharmaceutical industry understandably reluctant to replace a test that is simple, cheap, and performs well with expensive, unvalidated instrumental techniques. This resource bridges the gap by providing an in-depth understanding of the principles behind the European Pharmacopoeia tests and how to use them, saving you valuable production time.