In
pharmaceuticals, several methods are employed to determine the water content of
a substance/product. Among which Karl Fischer Titration (KF) and Loss on Drying
(LOD) are most honored and largely reliable methods.
Loss-on-Drying (Weight Loss)
This
method uses the principle of drying a sample of the product and comparing the
weight before and after drying. The difference in weight represents the
moisture that is in the product. This can be accomplished by using various manner
such as drying ovens, infrared balances, and infrared lamps. Whatsoever, the
drying conditions are strictly specified. The difference in weight after drying
is due to the loss of all evaporated matter, which is taken to represent the
moisture content. Repeatability and accuracy of this method solely depend up on the
temperature and time controls adopted during testing.
The
difficulty is that this technique measures all the moisture lost from the
sample, which includes not just water but also any other volatile component
already present in the sample (like residual volatile solvents) or created by
polymerization or degradation of the sample.
Karl Fischer (KF) Titration
Karl
Fischer titration is a very specific determination method which detects and
measures only water, including water of crystallization and surface-absorbed
water. It is based upon a redox reaction involving water and iodine in the
presence of a base, an alcohol, and sulfur dioxide. The water-iodine reaction
is dependent upon the presence of water, and therefore the titer of reagent
used up in the reaction reflects the amount of water in the sample as there is
no other source of water.
The
KF reagent contains iodine and when it has completely reacted with the total
water, excess iodine appears in the solution, causing a color change as well as
an electrometric change which can be detected by a double platinum electrode.
KF titration measures total water and is not affected by the presence of
residual volatile solvents. It has a wide and sensitive range of determination
from a water content of 100% to 1 ppm.
KF
|
LOD
|
KF is a method, which measures only the water
content (i.e. it's water-specific) in a product sample.
|
LOD
on the other hand, measures the
total change in weight of a material as a result of drying. For some products, components such as
alcohol or fat evaporate with the water. Therefore, the LOD method measures
both the water and volatile impurities such as those mentioned previously
|
Karl Fischer titration is a chemical method. It involves
adding a reagent to the sample to cause a reaction that converts the water in
a product to a non-conductive chemical.
|
Loss
on Drying compares the weight of a product before and after it is dried. This
difference in weight is taken as the percentage of moisture in the product.
|
Key Words
Loss On Drying
Water determination LOD Vs KF
Karl Fischer Vs Loss –On Drying –Which Method is Best?
|
No comments:
Post a Comment