Why is Physical Organic Chemistry Important in Pharmaceutical Chemical Process Development?

All members of the department are welcome: undergraduates, postgraduates, postdocs, teaching staff, technical staff - anyone who would like to attend and learn a little bit about what our speakers do in their research career. Members from other disciplines within the School, and the wider University community, are also welcome to attend.

All PhD students in Chemistry are expected to attend as part of their PhD training.

Why is Physical Organic Chemistry Important in Pharmaceutical Chemical Process Development?
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This is a past event

The utility of applying approaches rooted in physical organic chemistry to the development of manufacturing processes for active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) will be demonstrated through three AstraZeneca case studies. These will illustrate applications to a reaction, work-up and to control a reaction occurring during the formation and crystallisation of a salt. The work-up phase of a reaction will be illustrated by an investigation of a pH controlled extraction. Unexpectedly we found that we were able to separate unreacted starting material from the product of a Buchwald-Hartwig coupling reaction despite the two compounds having nearly identical pKas. These observations led us to propose a general equation for the partition of ionisable molecules as a function of pH and the molecules partition coefficient.

Speaker
Ian Ashworth, Principle Scientist - Astra Zeneca
Hosted by
Dr Eve Wildman
Venue
Meston Lecture Theatre 6