0000000000504944

AUTHOR

Pierre Bracconi

showing 12 related works from this author

Structural properties of magnesium stearate pseudopolymorphs: effect of temperature.

2003

A thorough review of the relevant literature reveals that the interaction between water vapour and magnesium stearate, in contrast to many other metal soaps, is not properly understood. The structural modifications associated with the up-take or loss of water of vegetable-derived commercial magnesium stearate powders exposed to humid air or vacuum at room temperature are investigated using standard powder X-ray diffractometry. It is found that in such conditions magnesium stearate reacts reversibly with the vapour phase with structural consequences very similar to the high temperature transition between the crystalline and rotator phases of other anhydrous metal soaps. When temperature is i…

DiffractionChemical PhenomenaChemistry PhysicalAnalytical chemistryPharmaceutical ScienceWaterMetalHeatingCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundLattice constantchemistryDrug StabilityX-Ray Diffractionvisual_artX-ray crystallographyAnhydrousvisual_art.visual_art_mediumTechnology PharmaceuticalMagnesium stearateHydratePowder diffractionStearic AcidsInternational journal of pharmaceutics
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On the difficulty of assessing the specific surface area of magnesium stearate

2001

Abstract The water content of as-received commercial magnesium stearate batches from animal and vegetable sources have been modified by ageing in humid air at room temperature or by vacuum treatment. The complete adsorption–desorption isotherms of nitrogen and krypton vapours by samples of these as received and modified materials have been measured at liquid nitrogen temperature after standardised vacuum degassing. They are greatly affected by the initial water content of the material. In particular: (a) the BET surface area values computed from the adsorption branch vary widely and is increasing with increasing water content; (b) anomalous hysteresis of varying amplitude is observed in all…

NitrogenChemistry PharmaceuticalKryptonKryptonAnalytical chemistryWaterPharmaceutical Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementMineralogyLiquid nitrogenExcipientschemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionchemistrySpecific surface areaDesorptionAdsorptionMagnesium stearateWater contentStearic AcidsBET theoryInternational Journal of Pharmaceutics
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Electronic microdiffraction study of structural modifications resulting from the dehydration of gypsum. Prediction of the microstructure of resulting…

2001

Abstract Endothermic decomposition reactions (solid 1→solid 2+gas) generally affect only part of the inter-atomic bonds of the solid 1 structure. In consequence, the morphology and external dimensions of particles remain unchanged (the particles of solid 2 are referred to as pseudomorphs of those of solid 1). The gas release normally leads to a decrease of the molar volume of the precursor solid, resulting in cracking and formation of intra-particle porosity. This work deals with such a reaction: the dehydration of gypsum into sub-hydrated and anhydrous phases. Ultrathin (010) gypsum cleaved plates have been dehydrated under controlled conditions and studied by electron microdiffraction. Al…

GypsumChemistryGeneral Chemistryengineering.materialCondensed Matter PhysicsMicrostructureEndothermic processCrystallographyElectron diffractionChemical engineeringTransmission electron microscopyAnhydrousengineeringGeneral Materials SciencePorosityPseudomorphSolid State Ionics
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Thermal analyses of commercial magnesium stearate pseudopolymorphs

2005

Abstract Two commercial magnesium stearate powders in two well-characterised structural states are investigated using DSC and coupled TGA–DTA under dry nitrogen flow. They consist of either a mixture of crystalline hydrates or a poorly crystallised so-called anhydrate. Following the degassing of unbound water, 1 or 3 weight-loss peaks are observed below about 100 °C, each associated with one heat loss peak at the same temperature. The present results and a review of graphical data from literature show that the so-called anhydrate always contains a significant amount of water. At the beginning of the dehydration process, the heat loss is the same as the standard heat of vaporisation of water…

ChemistryMineralogyCondensed Matter Physicsmedicine.diseaseThermogravimetrychemistry.chemical_compoundDifferential scanning calorimetryChemical engineeringPolymorphism (materials science)medicineGravimetric analysisDehydrationMagnesium stearatePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryThermal analysisHydrateInstrumentationThermochimica Acta
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Irreversible modifications of the porous microstructure of soluble anhydrite β-CaSO4 induced by hydration-dehydration cycles

2006

26 pages; The internal surface area of hexagonal (soluble) primary anhydrite CaSO4 produced by dehydration of gypsum decreases by about 70 % when the anhydrite is successively subjected to rehydration and dehydration at room temperature in humid air and in vacuum respectively. In the rehydration step, the hemihydrate is formed; its dehydration yields secondary anhydrite. Additional hydration-dehydration cycles in the same conditions have a much smaller effect. The first cycle also brings about a modification of the t-plot, which reveals that the micropores of primary anhydrite are irreversibly healed. Mercury intrusion porosimetry shows that the primary dehydration of gypsum also generates …

[CHIM.INOR] Chemical Sciences/Inorganic chemistryhemihydrateporosity[ SPI.MAT ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materialsdehydration[ CHIM.INOR ] Chemical Sciences/Inorganic chemistrysurface area[CHIM.INOR]Chemical Sciences/Inorganic chemistry[SPI.MAT] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materialsgypsumanhydrite[SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materials
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Theory of mercury intrusion in a distribution of unconnected wedge-shaped slits

2004

Effective mercury intrusion in a wedge-shaped slit is gradual, the intruded depth increasing with applied pressure. The Washburn equation must be modified accordingly. It relates the distance, e, separating the three-phase contact lines on the wedge faces to the hydrostatic pressure, P, wedge half-opening angle alpha, mercury surface tension gamma, and contact angle theta: e=(-2gamma/P)cos(theta-alpha) if theta-alpha>pi2. The equations relating the volume of mercury in a single slit to hydrostatic pressure are established. The total volume of mercury V(Hg)(tot)(E(0),e) intruded in a set of unconnected isomorphous slits (same alpha value) with opening width, E, distributed over interval [E(0…

business.industryHydrostatic pressurechemistry.chemical_elementGeometryPorosimetrySurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsMercury (element)BiomaterialsContact angleSurface tensionColloid and Surface ChemistryOpticschemistryTransition metalWashburn's equationMercury intrusionbusinessJournal of Colloid and Interface Science
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Comparison of different methods for evaluating the transmission function of a two-stage cylindrical mirror analizer in XPS applications

2007

Three different evaluations of the energy dependence of the transmission-detection function of a two-stage cylindrical electron analyzer have been obtained by resorting to three established procedures. Their relative merits have been tested as follows. First they have been used to correct raw XPS spectra of clean Cu, Ag and Au surfaces. Next, the secondary electron background has been subtracted using Tougaard's method. Finally, the primary electron spectra so obtained have been reanalyzed by peak area measurement in the frame of the modern formalism for quantitative XPS analysis. Ideally a constant residual value should thus be obtained. The variability of these residuals with peak energy …

Physics - Instrumentation and Detectorstwo-stage CMAtransmission function[ SPI.MAT ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/MaterialsXPSFOS: Physical sciencescylindrical mirror analyzer[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det]Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det)[ PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET ] Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det][SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materials
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Microstructural modifications resulting from the dehydration of gypsum

2001

Various faces of dehydrated gypsum-cleaved blocks and single crystals have been investigated using optical microscopy, SEM, and TEM. The orientation of the cracks with respect to the initial gypsum structure and the Miller indices of all possible crack planes have been determined. These crack planes have been found to be few and to correspond to planes of high atomic density in the initial and final structures, therefore characterised by a low surface tension. These observations allow us to propose cracking criteria based on general concepts of crystal growth. The cracks' dimensions measured on different faces of the pseudomorph are distributed over several orders of magnitude and seems to …

Scanning electron microscopeChemistryOrders of magnitude (temperature)MineralogyCrystal growthGeneral ChemistryCondensed Matter PhysicsMicrostructurelaw.inventionSurface tensionCrackingOptical microscopelawmental disordersGeneral Materials ScienceComposite materialPseudomorphSolid State Ionics
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Quantitative phase analysis and thickness measurement of surface-oxide layers in metal and alloy powders by the chemical-granular method

1998

The principles of the chemical-granular analysis of metal and alloy powders are reviewed and the results are compared with those provided by the spectroscopic analytical techniques XPS, AES and SIMS, including ion etching in their depth-profiling mode, when they are applied to the same materials. Several examples are analysed and it is shown that the chemical-granular method alone can provide the very same information as depth profiling. However, it is averaged over a macroscopic powder sample in contrast to one or a few single particles. Nevertheless, it is the combination of the chemical-granular and depth-profiling analyses that really provides an unparalleled description in quantitative…

ChemistryAlloyX-rayAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomySurfaces and InterfacesGeneral Chemistryengineering.materialCondensed Matter PhysicsMicrostructureSurfaces Coatings and FilmsIonMetalSecondary ion mass spectrometryX-ray photoelectron spectroscopyvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringMetal powderComposite material
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Assessing the particle size of a broadly dispersed powder by complementary techniques

1998

The experimental determination of reliable particle size distribution curves and statistical parameters of broad distributions is known to be a difficult task. This problem is addressed here in an attempt to characterize the granularity of three distinct batches of a pharmaceutical powder (fenofibrate from Fournier Laboratories). The methodology consists in comparing the results, expressed in terms of surface based mean diameter, as obtained by three complementary techniques, namely optical microscopy image analysis, laser light low angle diffraction and surface area measurement by krypton physisorption. These techniques are applied in parallel to the material of interest and to a certified…

Diffractionbusiness.industryKryptonStatistical parameterPharmaceutical Sciencechemistry.chemical_elementlaw.inventionCertified reference materialsOpticschemistryOptical microscopelawParticle-size distributionParticle sizeGranularityBiological systembusinessInternational Journal of Pharmaceutics
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Heterogeneous kinetics: from solid–gas reaction to solid–liquid dissolution

2002

Abstract The extension of the formal kinetics of solid–gas reactions to solid–liquid dissolution is investigated theoretically. The work is based on modelling the dissolution of a solid in a closed system by a stoichiometrically simple chemical reaction A solid ⇄A liquid proceeding up to either an equilibrium state if the solid phase is initially in excess or exhaustion in the reverse situation. The initial amount of solid compared to the capacity of the liquid phase appears as a major factor of complexity. First, the rate equation is formulated in terms of the intensive variables without any assumption about the mechanism and the rate-limiting step. The resulting equations are compared to …

Work (thermodynamics)Thermodynamic equilibriumChemistryPhase (matter)KineticsThermodynamicsRate equationPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCondensed Matter PhysicsInstrumentationDissolutionChemical reactionStoichiometryThermochimica Acta
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Physical chemistry of the powder metallurgy of beryllium: Chemical characterization of the powder in relation to its granularity

1996

Combining the systematic quantitative chemical analysis of the light impurities H, C, N, and O, the quantitative thermal desorption of molecular H2O and H2, and X ray diffractometry of various size fractions of a commercial Be powder (SP-65 grade from Brush-Wellman) allowed the precise de-termination of the mean composition and equivalent mean thickness of the surface impurity phases in the passivation-contamination layer on the surface of the particles. The overall surface stoichi-ometry is as follows: 0.2 BeOcrystallized, 0.8 [BeO - 0.59 H2O]amorphous, 0.14 H2Oads The result of the elemental analysis by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy of the unetched surface of a powder pellet is compare…

Materials scienceX-ray photoelectron spectroscopyMechanics of MaterialsImpurityElemental analysisPowder metallurgyMetals and AlloysIntermetallicAnalytical chemistryMetal powderParticle sizeCondensed Matter PhysicsChemical compositionMetallurgical and Materials Transactions A
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