Title of article :
Microscale chemistry-based design of eco-friendly, reagent-saving and efficient pharmaceutical analysis: A miniaturized Volhardʹs titration for the assay of sodium chloride
Author/Authors :
Rojanarata، نويسنده , , Theerasak and Sumran، نويسنده , , Krissadecha and Nateetaweewat، نويسنده , , Paksupang and Winotapun، نويسنده , , Weerapath and Sukpisit، نويسنده , , Sirarat and Opanasopit، نويسنده , , Praneet and Ngawhirunpat، نويسنده , , Tanasait، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
This work demonstrates the extended application of microscale chemistry which has been used in the educational discipline to the real analytical purposes. Using Volhardʹs titration for the determination of sodium chloride as a paradigm, the reaction was downscaled to less than 2 mL conducted in commercially available microcentrifuge tubes and using micropipettes for the measurement and transfer of reagents. The equivalence point was determined spectrophotometrically on the microplates which quickened the multi-sample measurements. After the validation and evaluation with bulk and dosage forms, the downsized method showed good accuracy comparable to the British Pharmacopeial macroscale method and gave satisfactory precision (intra-day, inter-day, inter-analyst and inter-equipment) with the relative standard deviation of less than 0.5%. Interestingly, the amount of nitric acid, silver nitrate, ferric alum and ammonium thiocyanate consumed in the miniaturized titration was reduced by the factors of 25, 50, 50 and 215 times, respectively. The use of environmentally dangerous dibutyl phthalate was absolutely eliminated in the proposed method. Furthermore, the release of solid waste silver chloride was drastically reduced by about 25 folds. Therefore, microscale chemistry is an attractive, facile and powerful green strategy for the development of eco-friendly, safe, and cost-effective analytical methods suitable for a sustainable environment.
Keywords :
Volhardיs method , Pharmaceutical Analysis , Microscale chemistry , Miniaturized titration , Green analytical method