48 results on '"Suryanarayana MV"'
Search Results
2. Isotope separation of 176Lu a precursor to 177Lu medical isotope using broadband lasers
- Author
-
Suryanarayana Mv
- Abstract
A new photoionization scheme accessible by Rhodamine dye lasers is proposed for the isotopeseparation of 176Lu. 5d6s2 2D3/2 (0.0 cm-1) - 573.8130 nm -> 5d6s6p 4Fo3/2 (17427.28 cm-1) - 609.6007 nm -> 6s6p2 4P3/2 (33831.46 cm-1) ---> Autoionization State---> Lu+ Optimum conditions for the isotope separation have been derived and compared with thepreviously reported work. The enrichment of ~ 49% can be obtained with > 12 mg / hourproduction rates even when broadband lasers with bandwidth of 500 MHz employed for the twostep excitation. The simplified system requirements for the photoionization scheme with a highproduction rate is expected reduce the global shortage of 176Lu for medical applications.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Laser isotope separation of 176Lu through off-the-shelf lasers
- Author
-
Suryanarayana, Mv, primary and Sankari, Manda, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Isotope shifts and hyperfine structure in the 555.8-nm S-1(0) -> P-3(1) line of Yb
- Author
-
Pandey, Kanhaiya, Singh, Alok K, Kumar, P V Kiran, Suryanarayana, MV, and Natarajan, Vasant
- Subjects
Physics - Abstract
We apply our technique of using a Rb-stabilized ring-cavity resonator to measure the frequencies of various spectral components in the 555.8-nm 1S0-->3P1 line of Yb. We determine the isotope shifts with 60 kHz precision, which is an order-of-magnitude improvement over the best previous measurement on this line. There are two overlapping transitions, 171Yb(1/2-->3/2) and 173Yb(5/2-->3/2), which we resolve by applying a magnetic field. We thus obtain the hyperfine constants in the 3P1 state of the odd isotopes with a significantly improved precision. Knowledge of isotope shifts and hyperfine structure should prove useful for high-precision calculations in Yb necessary to interpret ongoing experiments testing parity and time-reversal symmetry violation in the laws of physics.
- Published
- 2009
5. Absolute frequency determination of the $5P_{3/2} \rightarrow 7S_{1/2}$ transition in $^{87}Rb$
- Author
-
Pandey, Kanhaiya, Kumar, Kiran PV, Suryanarayana, MV, and Natarajan, Vasant
- Subjects
Physics - Abstract
We report the absolute frequency of the important $5S_{1/2} \rightarrow 7S_{1/2}$ two-photon transition in $^{87}Rb$. We access the upper state using two dipole-allowed transitions via the intermediate $5P_{3/2}$ state. This allows us to use much lower laser intensities compared to directly driving the two-photon transition, thereby avoiding potential errors due to the AC Stark shift. Collisional shifts are also minimized because the atomic density required is several orders of magnitude smaller. Our values are consistent with earlier frequency-comb measurements.
- Published
- 2008
6. Theoretical investigations on the laser isotope separation of 175 Yb for medical applications.
- Author
-
Sankari M and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Humans, Lasers, Ytterbium chemistry
- Abstract
The possibility of laser isotope separation of
175 Yb from irradiated natural Yb has been investigated. The optimum process parameters such as powers and bandwidths of the lasers, Doppler broadening and the number density of the atoms have been derived through density matrix calculations. It has been shown that it is possible to produce175 Yb (>42% enriched) at a production rate of 62 μg/hour (or 1.5 mg/day). This corresponds to the production rate of 1350 patient doses (of 7.4 GBq each) per day. The radionuclidic purity of the isotopic mixture is expected to be 99.9999%. The method is highly suitable for the countries having only low-flux nuclear reactors., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Numerical study of the laser isotope separation of optically pumped 102 Pd.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV and Sankari M
- Abstract
The feasibility of laser isotope separation of
102 Pd through pulsed laser optical pumping followed by isotope selective photoionization has been studied through density matrix formalism. The effect of various parameters such as bandwidth of the excitation lasers, intensity of the lasers and Doppler broadening of the atomic ensemble on the efficiency of optical pumping and isotope selective photoionization have been evaluated. The optimum number density in the laser-atom interaction region has been derived from the studies of the effect of charge exchange collisions on the degree of enrichment. It has been shown that it is possible to enrich102 Pd up to ~ 23.7% at a production rate of 1.1 mg /h. The achievable degree of enrichment through this photoionization scheme is higher than the previously reported laser isotope separation process. The radionuclidic purity of the irradiated enriched mixture has been found to be suitable for medical applications., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Laser isotope separation of 192 Ir.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV and Sankari M
- Abstract
The following two-step isotope selective photoionization process has been studied for the separation of
192 Ir isotope from natural Iridium irradiated in a medium flux reactor for 28 days.5d7 6s2 F9/240.0cm-1 →247.5871nm5d7 6s6p40389.83cm-1 J=9/2→307.9nmIr+ Density matrix formalism has been used for the investigation of laser isotope separation process. Optimum system parameters such as peak power densities of the excitation and ionization lasers, bandwidth of the excitation laser, angular divergence limit to the atomic ensemble have been derived. Effects of number density and ion travel distance prior to collection on charge exchange probability have also been studied. It has been shown that it is possible produce ∼98% enriched192 Ir at rate of 82 μg/h (27.9 GBq/h or 0.76 Ci/h) which can provide activity of 334 TBq/g or 9027 Ci/g. The enriched192 Ir can be used in both high-dose brachytherapy and high speed radiography. This is the first ever study on the laser based enrichment of Iridium isotopes., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Laser isotope separation of 223 Ra.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
A three-step photoionization has been theoretically studied for the laser isotope separation of
223 Ra through the following photoionization scheme. [Formula: see text] The effect of bandwidth, peak power density of the excitation and ionization lasers, Doppler broadening of the atomic ensemble, number density of the atoms, and charge exchange collisions on the laser isotope separation process has been studied. The optimum system parameters for the separation of223 Ra through this photoionization scheme have been derived. The effect of unknown parameters on the degree of enrichment has also been discussed. It has been theoretically shown that it is possible to produce223 Ra isotope with 98.5% radio-isotopic purity at a rate of 0.74 μg/h corresponding to the production rate of 435 patient doses per hour. This is the first ever study on the laser isotope separation of Radium isotopes., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Enrichment of 150 Nd for neutrinoless double-beta decay detection.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
A 562 nm-627 nm-597 nm three-step resonant photoionization scheme has been studied using the density matrix formalism for the enrichment of
150 Nd in weighable quantities for the neutrinoless double-beta decay detection. The effect of bandwidth of the excitation laser and charge exchange collisions, on the production rates and degree of enrichment has also been studied. Optimum conditions for the efficient enrichment of150 Nd isotope have been derived. It has been shown that it might be possible to produce 50 kg of 66% enriched150 Nd isotope in about five months (16 h/day) using the conditions derived through this investigation. This enables to reach the 0νββ decay half-life limit of ≈ 1.8 × 1025 year for the150 Nd isotope., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Laser isotope separation of 176 Lu through off-the-shelf lasers.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV and Sankari M
- Abstract
We propose a novel and simple method for the laser isotope separation of
176 Lu a precursor for the production of177 Lu medical isotope. The physics of the laser-atom interaction has been studied through the dynamics of the atomic level populations using the density matrix formalism. It has been shown that a combination of cw excitation lasers and pulsed ionization laser can be used for the laser isotope separation of176 Lu. The optimum conditions for the efficient and selective separation of176 Lu have been derived by studying the time evolution of level population under laser excitation. It has also been shown that, it might be possible to produce ~ 100% enriched176 Lu isotope at a rate of 5 mg/h, which is higher than all previously reported methods so far. The isotope separation process proposed can be easily adopted using off-the-shelf lasers, for similar atomic systems., (© 2021. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Isotope separation of 176 Lu a precursor to 177 Lu medical isotope using broadband lasers.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
A new photoionization scheme accessible by Rhodamine dye lasers is proposed for the isotope separation of
176 Lu.[Formula: see text][Formula: see text] Optimum conditions for the laser isotope separation have been theoretically computed and compared with the previously reported work. The enrichment of ~ 63% can be obtained with > 22 mg/h production rate even when broadband lasers with bandwidth of 500 MHz are employed for the two step excitation. The simplified system requirements for the photoionization scheme combined with a high production rate of176 Lu than previously reported is expected to reduce the global shortage of176 Lu isotope for medical applications.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Estimation of enantiomeric impurity in piperidin-3-amine by chiral HPLC with precolumn derivatization.
- Author
-
Raghunadha Babu CV, Vuyyuru NR, Padmaja Reddy K, Suryanarayana MV, and Mukkanti K
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid instrumentation, Limit of Detection, Piperidines analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Solutions, Stereoisomerism, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Piperidines chemistry
- Abstract
A simple, precise, accurate, robust chiral high-performance liquid chromatographic (chiral HPLC) method was developed for estimation of (S)-piperidin-3-amine (S-isomer) in (R)-piperidin-3-amine dihydrochloride (R-AMP). As AMP is a high-melting solid and nonchromophoric compound, development of a suitable chiral method is a challenging task. The proposed chiral HPLC-UV method involves a precolumn derivatization technique with para toluene sulphonyl chloride (PTSC) in the presence of a base to introduce chromophore into analytes. It utilizes chiralpak AD-H column with a simple mobile phase of 0.1% diethyl amine in ethanol with a 0.5 mL/min flow rate. Analytes were monitored by using a UV detector at 228 nm. The resolution between the two enantiomers was more than 4.0. The developed method was validated as per current International Conference on Harmonization (ICH) guidelines., (© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Stability-Indicating UPLC Method for Tramadol HCl Impurities in the Tramadol Injection after Dilution by Infusion Fluids (5% Dextrose and 0.9% Sodium Chloride).
- Author
-
Binnor AK, Mukkanti K, Suryanarayana MV, and Roy SB
- Abstract
A novel, rapid, and sensitive ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) method has been developed and validated as per ICH guidelines for the determination of tramadol HCl impurities in the tramadol HCl injection after reconstitution by infusion fluids (5% dextrose and 0.9% sodium chloride). The tramadol HCl injection is for the treatment of patients with moderate-to-severe pain. The stability of the reconstituted solution is critical before intravenous injection. The literature search resulted in few published articles on assays of tramadol in infusion fluids by conventional HPLC. No attempts have yet been made to determine the impurities in infusion fluids, as the concentration of tramadol after reconstitution is extremely low (0.4 mg/mL) and that of impurities is even lower. The proposed method is novel as it allows the quantitation of the impurities of tramadol HCl and is based on modern chromatographic techniques like UPLC. The method was developed using the Waters Acquity BEH C18 column with a mobile phase consisting of a gradient mixture of solvent A (trifluroacetic acid buffer) and solvent B (methanol: acetonitrile). The model stability study was designed by diluting the tramadol HCl injection in the 5% dextrose injection and 0.9% sodium chloride injection. Each mixture was kept under storage at room temperature (25 ± 2°C) for testing at initial, 2, 4, 8, 12, 18 & 24 hours. The validation study illustrates that the proposed method is suitable for the determination of tramadol and its impurities. The proposed method makes use of the LC-MS-compatible mobile phase. It can be useful for the determination of tramadol HCl and its impurities in plasma samples and other pharmaceutical dosage forms.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A novel reverse phase stability indicating RP-UPLC method for the quantitative determination of fifteen related substances in Ranolazine drug substance and drug product.
- Author
-
Malati V, Reddy AR, Mukkanti K, and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Acetanilides isolation & purification, Drug Contamination, Limit of Detection, Linear Models, Piperazines isolation & purification, Ranolazine, Reproducibility of Results, Solutions, Acetanilides analysis, Acetanilides chemistry, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Chromatography, Reverse-Phase methods, Piperazines analysis, Piperazines chemistry
- Abstract
A gradient reverse-phase ultra performance liquid chromatographic (RP-UPLC) method was developed for the quantitative determination of Ranolazine and potential process-related impurities (starting materials, positional isomers, degradants and byproducts) at the level of 0.1 μg mL(-1) to 0.3 μg mL(-1). Fifteen potential impurities were identified in the crude samples during the process development. Tentative structures for all the impurities were assigned based on m/z values from LC-MS/MS analysis. This method can be used for the quality control of both drug substance and drug product. All these impurities were separated with a gradient UPLC method by using a polar embedded Waters Acquity BEH RP18 100 mm × 2.1 mm,1.7 μm column, monobasic sodium buffer, a basic organic modifier and acetonitrile in the mobile phase. Further, this method is also capable of separating a major oxidative degradant Di-N-oxide. Impurities having electron donating groups(+I effect) on the phenyl ring increased the retention by improved п-п interactions. The drug was subjected to the International Conference on Harmonization (ICH)-prescribed hydrolytic, oxidative, photolytic and thermal stress conditions. The performance of the method was validated according to the present ICH guidelines for specificity, limit of detection, limit of quantification, linearity, accuracy, precision, ruggedness and robustness., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A stability-indicating ultra-performance liquid chromatographic method for estimation of related substances and degradants in paliperidone active pharmaceutical ingredient and its pharmaceutical dosage forms.
- Author
-
Bindu KH, Reddy IU, Anjaneyulu Y, and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Drug Stability, Isoxazoles chemistry, Isoxazoles standards, Limit of Detection, Paliperidone Palmitate, Pyrimidines chemistry, Pyrimidines standards, Reproducibility of Results, Tablets chemistry, Tablets standards, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Isoxazoles analysis, Pyrimidines analysis
- Abstract
A simple, linear gradient, rapid, precise and stability-indicating analytical method was developed for the estimation of related substances and degradants of paliperidone API and tablets. The chromatographic separations were achieved using an Acquity ultra-performance liquid chromatograph (BEH 100 mm, 2.1 mm, 1.7 µm C-18 column) employing 0.01 M potassium dihydrogen phosphate buffer (pH 2.0) as mobile phase A and acetonitrile-water (9:1) as mobile phase B. A linear gradient (mobile phase A, mobile phase B in the ratio of 84:16) with a 0.45 mL/min flow rate was chosen. All six impurities were eluted within five minutes of run time. The column temperature was maintained at 25 °C and a detector wavelength of 238 nm was employed. Paliperidone was exposed to thermal, photolytic, hydrolytic and oxidative stress conditions. The stressed samples were analyzed by the proposed method. Considerable degradation of the analyte was observed when it was subjected to oxidative conditions and impurity F was found to be the major degradant. Peak homogeneity data of paliperidone obtained by photodiode array (PDA) detection demonstrated the specificity of the method in the presence of degradants. The method was validated with respect to linearity, precision, accuracy, ruggedness, robustness, limit of detection and limit of quantification., (© The Author [2012]. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Simultaneous Determination of Sitagliptin Phosphate Monohydrate and Metformin Hydrochloride in Tablets by a Validated UPLC Method.
- Author
-
Malleswararao CS, Suryanarayana MV, and Mukkanti K
- Abstract
A novel approach was used to develop and validate a rapid, specific, accurate and precise reverse phase ultra performance liquid chromatographic (UPLC) method for the simultaneous determination of Sitagliptin phosphate monohydrate and Metformin hydrochloride in pharmaceutical dosage forms. The chromatographic separation was achieved on Aquity UPLC BEH C8 100 × 2.1 mm, 1.7 μm, column using a buffer consisting of 10 mM potassium dihydrogen phosphate and 2 mM hexane-1-sulfonic acid sodium salt (pH adjusted to 5.50 with diluted phosphoric acid) and acetonitrile as organic solvent in a gradient program. The flow rate was 0.2 mL min(-1) and the detection wavelength was 210 nm. The limit of detection (LOD) for Sitagliptin phosphate monohydrate and Metformin hydrochloride was 0.2 and 0.06 μg mL(-1), respectively. The limit of quantification (LOQ) for Sitagliptin phosphate monohydrate and Metformin hydrochloride was 0.7 and 0.2 μg mL(-1), respectively. This method was validated with respect to linearity, accuracy, precision, specificity and robustness. The method was also found to be stability-indicating.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A new validated liquid chromatographic method for the determination of loratadine and its impurities.
- Author
-
Ramulu G, Ravindra Kumar Y, Vyas K, Suryanarayana MV, and Mukkanti K
- Abstract
An improved gradient, reversed-phase liquid chromatographic (RP-LC) method was developed and subsequently validated for the determination of Loratadine and its impurities/degradation products in pharmaceutical drug substance. Separation was achieved with Inertsil ODS-3V, 250 × 4.6 mm, 5μ column with gradient elution at a flow rate of 1.0 mL min(-1). UV detection was performed at 220 nm. The described method is linear over a range of LOQ (0.044, 0.088, 0.084, and 0.072 μg mL(-1) for impurity-B, impurity-C, impurity-D, and impurity-E respectively) to 1.2 μg mL(-1) (0.6 μg mL(-1) of the specification limit) for all the impurities and degradation products. The recovery of impurities were found to be in the range of 85-115 %. The method is simple, selective, and accurate for the quantification of impurities and degradation products of Loratadine in its bulk drug samples.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Complete 1H, 13C, 19F and 31P NMR data assignment of CWC-related chemicals N,N-dialkyl-P-alkyl phosphonamidic fluorides.
- Author
-
Sharma M, Goud DR, Gupta AK, and Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
The complete multinuclear (1)H, (13)C, (31)P and (19)F NMR data of symmetrically substituted amines containing N,N-dialkyl-P-alkyl phosphonamidic fluorides are presented. Assignment was achieved, using various one-and two-dimensional NMR experiments., (Copyright 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Kinetics of adsorptive removal of DEClP and GB on impregnated Al2O3 nanoparticles.
- Author
-
Saxena A, Srivastava AK, Singh B, Gupta AK, Suryanarayana MV, and Pandey P
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Air Pollutants chemistry, Chemical Warfare Agents chemistry, Chromatography, Gas methods, Flame Ionization methods, Kinetics, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning methods, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission methods, Models, Chemical, Phosphoric Acids chemistry, Time Factors, Air Pollutants isolation & purification, Aluminum Oxide chemistry, Nanoparticles chemistry, Nanotechnology methods, Organophosphorus Compounds chemistry, Phosphates chemistry, Sarin chemistry
- Abstract
Nanoparticles of AP-Al(2)O(3) (aero-gel produced alumina) have been produced by an alkoxide based synthesis involving aluminum powder, methanol, toluene and water. Thus produced alumina nanoparticles were characterized and the data indicated the formation of nanoparticles of alumina in the size range of 2-30 nm with high surface area (375 m(2)/g). Thereafter, these nanoparticles were impregnated with reactive chemicals. Adsorptive removal kinetics for DEClP (diethylchlorophosphate) and GB (isopropylmethylphosphonofluoridate, sarin) was monitored by GC-FID (gas chromatograph coupled with flame ionization detector) technique and found to be following pseudo first order reaction kinetics. Among impregnated AP-Al(2)O(3) nanoparticles based sorbent systems AP-Al(2)O(3) impregnated with 9-molybdo-3-vanadophosphoric acid (10%, w/w) was found to be the most reactive with least half-life values of 7 and 30 min for the removal of DEClP and GB, respectively, whereas unimpregnated AP-Al(2)O(3) nanoparticles showed the best adsorption potential among all studied systems. In addition to this, hydrolysis reaction {identified using GC/MS (gas chromatograph coupled with mass spectrometer) technique} was found to be the route of degradation of DEClP and GB on impregnated alumina nanoparticles., ((c) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Ketoximes to N-substituted thioamides via PSCl3 mediated Beckmann rearrangement.
- Author
-
Pathak U, Pandey LK, Mathur S, and Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
N-Substituted thioamides were accessed from ketoximes by utilising PSCl3 as a uniquely capable reagent to induce Beckmann rearrangement as well as to capture the intermediate nitrilium ion.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Direct detection of alkylphosphonic acids in environmental matrices by proton coupled phosphorus NMR.
- Author
-
Sharma M, Gupta AK, Mewar S, Beldar A, Suryanarayana MV, and Raza SK
- Subjects
- Chemical Warfare, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy standards, Molecular Structure, Phosphorus Isotopes, Reference Standards, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Organophosphonates analysis, Protons
- Abstract
A simple, convenient, and direct one-dimensional (1D) (31)P NMR technique is demonstrated for the detection of alkylphosphonic acids (marker of nerve agents). The results of detection were validated after conducting various in-house exercises. The confidence generated by this study was found very useful in detection of different alkylphosphonic acids spiked in various official interlaboratory proficiency tests conducted by Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)., (2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Absolute frequency determination of the 5P3/2-->7S1/2 transition in 87Rb.
- Author
-
Pandey K, Kumar PV, Suryanarayana MV, and Natarajan V
- Abstract
We report the absolute frequency of the important 5S(1/2)-->7S(1/2) two-photon transition in (87)Rb. We access the upper state using two dipole-allowed transitions via the intermediate 5P(3/2) state. This allows us to use much lower laser intensities compared to directly driving the two-photon transition, thereby avoiding potential errors due to the AC Stark shift. Collisional shifts are also minimized because the atomic density required is several orders of magnitude smaller. Our values are consistent with earlier frequency-comb measurements.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A novel quantification method of pantaprazole sodium monohydrate in sesquihydrate by thermogravimetric analyzer.
- Author
-
Reddy VR, Rajmohan MA, Shilpa RL, Raut DM, Naveenkumar K, Suryanarayana MV, and Mathad VT
- Subjects
- Calibration, Calorimetry, Differential Scanning, Pantoprazole, Powders, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, X-Ray Diffraction, 2-Pyridinylmethylsulfinylbenzimidazoles analysis, Anti-Ulcer Agents analysis, Thermogravimetry methods, Water chemistry
- Abstract
To demonstrate the applicability of thermogravimetric analyzer as a tool for the quantification of pantaprazole sodium monohydrate in sesquihydrate, studies have been conducted. Thermal analysis (DSC, TGA) crystallographic (PXRD) and spectroscopic techniques (FT-IR) were used for the characterization of the polymorphs. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) analysis was explored by high-resolution dynamic (Hi-Res-dynamic) and high-resolution modulated (Hi-Res-modulated) test procedures to quantify the hydrate polymorphic mixtures. The two polymorphic forms exhibited significant differences and good resolution in the second derivative thermogram generated by Hi-Res-modulated test procedure. Thus, the TGA with Hi-Res-modulated test procedure was considered for the quantification of monohydrate in sesquihydrate. The calibration plot was constructed from the known mixtures of two polymorphs by plotting the peak area of the second derivative thermogram against the weight percent of monohydrate. Using this novel approach, 1 wt% limit of detection (LOD) was achieved. The polymorphic purity results, obtained by TGA in Hi-Res-modulated test procedure were found to be in good agreement with the results predicted by FT-IR and was comparable with the actual values of the known polymorphic mixtures. The Hi-Res-modulated TGA technique is very simple and easy to perform the analysis.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Molecularly imprinted polymer-based potentiometric sensor for degradation product of chemical warfare agents. Part I. Methylphosphonic acid.
- Author
-
Prathish KP, Prasad K, Rao TP, and Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
A biomimetic potentiometric sensor for the specific recognition of methylphosphonic acid (MPA), the degradation product of nerve agents sarin, soman, VX, etc., was designed. This involves the preparation of MPA imprinted polymer particles and removal of the template by soxhlet extraction. Subsequently, the leached MIP particles were dispersed in 2-nitrophenyloctyl ether (plasticizer) and embedded in polyvinyl chloride matrix. The sensor responds to MPA in the concentration range 5x10(-8) to 1x10(-4) and 1x10(-3) to 1x10(-1)M with a detection limit of 5x10(-8)M. The selectivity of the sensor has been tested with respect to chemical analogues such as phosphoric acid, sodium dihydrogen phosphate, organophosphorous pesticide and triazine herbicides. The utility of the sensor was tested for field monitoring of MPA in spiked ground water.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Isotope-selective excitation of 41Ca isotope in Doppler-free two-photon continuous-wave excitation: a case study.
- Author
-
Kumar PV, Sankari M, Acharyulu GV, and Suryanarayana MV
- Abstract
Seven schemes are studied theoretically for Doppler-free two-photon excitation of rare (41)Ca isotope using single-mode continuous-wave lasers. The ionization efficiencies and optical selectivities for all the schemes are calculated for various powers of the excitation and ionization lasers and for various focusing conditions of the two lasers. To maximize the ionization efficiencies and the optical selectivities, wavelength-dependent Stark compensation is used. Certain laser wavelengths of the ionization step termed as magic wavelengths are identified for compensating the Stark shift induced by the excitation laser. The effects of the Stark-shift-induced asymmetry and its reversal by selecting the appropriate magic wavelength for the ionization step for various excitation and ionization laser intensities are investigated. The ionization efficiency and optical selectivity for the best scheme after Stark compensation are found to be 8.4 x 10(-4) and approximately 9 x 10(3), respectively.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Adsorption of dimethyl methylphosphonate on metal impregnated carbons under static conditions.
- Author
-
Saxena A, Singh B, Sharma A, Dubey V, Semwal RP, Suryanarayana MV, Rao VK, and Sekhar K
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Kinetics, Mass Spectrometry, Spectrophotometry, Infrared, Temperature, Carbon chemistry, Metals chemistry, Organophosphorus Compounds chemistry
- Abstract
Active carbon, grade 80 CTC, of surface area 1199m(2)/g, 12x30 BSS particle size and coconut shell origin was impregnated (5%, W/W) with various impregnants such as Cu(II) 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetonate, Cu(II) 1,1,1-trifluoroacetylacetonate, 1-phenylbute-1,3-dione-2-oxime plus Cu(II) using incipient wetness technique. These impregnated carbons along with active carbon (Grade 80 CTC) and whetlerite were studied for the adsorption of dimethyl methylphosphonate (DMMP) at 33+/-1 degrees C under static conditions. Cu(II) 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetonate impregnated carbon system showed highest uptake (68.5%, W/W) of DMMP amongst all the carbon systems, however, active carbon with higher surface area could adsorb 61.5% (W/W) of DMMP under same conditions. It indicated that the adsorption by Cu(II) 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetonate impregnated carbon was not only due to physisorption but chemisorption as well. Kinetics of adsorption was also studied and various parameters such as equilibration time, equilibration capacity, rate constant (k), diffusional exponent (n) and constant (K) were determined. Carbons with and without DMMP exposure were also studied using IR and TGA techniques. Reaction products were analyzed using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC/MS) and found to be methyl methylphosphonic acid (MMPA) and methylphosphonic acid (MPA) for Cu(II) 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetonate impregnated carbon.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Plastic antibody for the recognition of chemical warfare agent sulphur mustard.
- Author
-
Boopathi M, Suryanarayana MV, Nigam AK, Pandey P, Ganesan K, Singh B, and Sekhar K
- Subjects
- Antibodies immunology, Plastics chemistry, Security Measures, Surface Properties, Antibodies analysis, Biosensing Techniques methods, Chemical Warfare Agents analysis, Immunoassay methods, Mustard Gas analysis, Mustard Gas chemistry
- Abstract
Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) known as plastic antibodies (PAs) represent a new class of materials possessing high selectivity and affinity for the target molecule. Since their discovery, PAs have attracted considerable interest from bio- and chemical laboratories to pharmaceutical institutes. PAs are becoming an important class of synthetic materials mimicking molecular recognition by natural receptors. In addition, they have been utilized as catalysts, sorbents for solid-phase extraction, stationary phase for liquid chromatography and mimics of enzymes. In this paper, first time we report the preparation and characterization of a PA for the recognition of blistering chemical warfare agent sulphur mustard (SM). The SM imprinted PA exhibited more surface area when compared to the control non-imprinted polymer (NIP). In addition, SEM image showed an ordered nano-pattern for the PA of SM that is entirely different from the image of NIP. The imprinting also enhanced SM rebinding ability to the PA when compared to the NIP with an imprinting efficiency (alpha) of 1.3.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. In-situ degradation of sulphur mustard and its simulants on the surface of impregnated carbon systems.
- Author
-
Sharma A, Saxena A, Singh B, Sharma M, Suryanarayana MV, Semwal RP, Ganeshan K, and Sekhar K
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Gas, Kinetics, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Molecular Structure, Spectrophotometry, Infrared, Carbon chemistry, Mustard Gas analogs & derivatives, Mustard Gas chemistry
- Abstract
Bis-2-chloroethyl sulphide (sulphur mustard or HD) is an extremely toxic and persistent chemical warfare agent. For in situ degradation of HD and its analogues (simulants), i.e., dibutyl sulphide (DBS) and ethyl 2-hydroxyethyl sulphide (HEES), different carbon systems such as 11-molybdo-1-vanadophosphoric acid impregnated carbon (V(1)/C), ruthenium chloride impregnated carbon (Ru/C) and combination of these two (V(1)/Ru/C) were prepared. These carbons were characterized for cumulative micropore volume and surface area by N(2) BET. The kinetics of the in situ degradation of HD and its simulants were studied and found to be following the first order kinetics. Kinetic rate constants and t(1/2) values were determined. Products were characterized using NMR, IR and GC-MS. Reaction products were found to be sulphoxide and sulphone. The combined system, i.e., 11-molybdo-1-vanadophosphoric acid plus ruthenium chloride (V(1)/Ru/C) was found to be best for in-situ degradation of HD and its simulants. In-situ degradation by polyoxometalate based system was found to be stoichiometry based while Ru/C oxidized HD in presence of chemisorbed oxygen. In combined system of V(1)/Ru/C ruthenium worked as a catalyst and polyoxometalate acted as a source of oxygen. Effect of moisture was also studied in combined system. Rate of degradation of HD was found to be increasing with increased percentage of moisture content.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Kinetics of degradation of sulphur mustard on impregnated carbons.
- Author
-
Prasad GK, Singh B, Suryanarayana MV, and Batra BS
- Subjects
- Adsorption, Kinetics, Micropore Filters, Charcoal chemistry, Mustard Gas chemistry
- Abstract
Kinetics of degradation of sulphur mustard (HD) on the surface of NaOH/CrO3/C, NaOH/CrO3/EDA/C and RuCl3/C systems has been examined by using gas chromatography technique by extracting and analyzing the residual HD periodically. The carbons were prepared by impregnating activated carbon with 4% sodium hydroxide plus 3% Cr(VI) as CrO3 with and without 5% ethylene diamine (EDA) and 5% ruthenium chloride by using their aqueous solutions. Obtained carbons were characterized for surface area analysis by BET conventional method. Kinetic plots reveal that the observed reactions are fast at the initial stages, slow at the later stages and progress to a steady state indicating the first order behavior. Effect of moisture on kinetic rate is also observed. In the case of NaOH/CrO3/C system the rate constant is decreased from 13.36 to 5.53 x 10(-2) h(-1) and half life is increased from 5.2 to 12.54 h while moisture content is increased from 1.9% to 11.2%. Whereas, the rate constant of HD degradation reaction is decreased from 10.4 to 4.14 x 10(-2) h(-1) and half life is increased from 6.7 to 16.72 h while moisture content is increased from 2.1% to 10.8% on NaOH/CrO3/EDA/C. Reaction on RuCl3/C system also behaves in the similar manner. Extracted reaction products were characterized by GC/MS and it is found that on NaOH/CrO3/C, HD degrades to hemisulphur mustard, thiodiglycol and 1,4-oxathiane. Whereas, on NaOH/CrO3/EDA/C, HD is degraded to 1,4-thiazane and it is degraded to divinyl sulphone on RuCl3/C. All these investigations reveal that above mentioned carbons can be used in nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) filtration systems for protection against sulphur mustard.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Structural characterization of impurities in pioglitazone.
- Author
-
Kumar YR, Reddy AR, Eswaraiah S, Mukkanti K, Reddy MS, and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Drug Contamination, Hypoglycemic Agents chemical synthesis, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Mass Spectrometry, Pioglitazone, Spectrophotometry, Infrared, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Thiazolidinediones chemical synthesis, Hypoglycemic Agents chemistry, Thiazolidinediones chemistry
- Abstract
In the pioglitazone bulk drug three prominent impurities I-III were detected up to concentrations of 0.1% (ranging from 0.05-0.1%) by reversed phase HPLC. These impurities were isolated from enriched mother liquor samples and characterized as 5-(4-hydroxybenzyl)-1,3-thiazolidine-2,4-dione (I) 5-(4-fluorobenzyl)-1,3-thiazolidine-2,4-dione (II), 2-[2-(4-bromophenoxy) ethyl-5-ethyl pyridine (III) based on their 1H, and 13C NMR, DEPT, Mass and IR spectral data. Structure elucidation and synthesis of these impurities is discussed.
- Published
- 2004
32. A validated chiral HPLC method for the enantiomeric separation of tolterodine tartarate.
- Author
-
Kumar YR, Ramulu G, Vevakanand VV, Vaidyanathan G, Srinivas K, Kumar MK, Mukkanti K, Reddy MS, Venkatraman S, and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Molecular Structure, Reproducibility of Results, Stereoisomerism, Tolterodine Tartrate, Benzhydryl Compounds chemistry, Cresols chemistry, Phenylpropanolamine chemistry
- Abstract
An isocratic chiral HPLC method was developed for the separation of tolterodine tartarate enantiomers. The mobile phase consists of n-hexane and isopropyl alcohol in the ratio of 980:20 (v/v) with 1 ml diethylamine and 0.6 ml trifluoroacetic acid. Chiralcel OD-H (250 mm x 4.6mm) column was used at constant room temperature. Flow rate was kept at 0.5 ml/min. This method is capable of detecting the S-isomer up to 0.1 microg/ml. The method was validated in terms of linearity, precision, limit of detection (LOD) and limit of quantification (LOQ).
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Structural identification and characterization of impurities in moxifloxacin.
- Author
-
Kumar YR, Prasad Raju VV, Kumar RR, Eswaraiah S, Mukkanti K, Suryanarayana MV, and Reddy MS
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Fluoroquinolones, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Mass Spectrometry methods, Molecular Structure, Moxifloxacin, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Aza Compounds analysis, Aza Compounds chemistry, Drug Contamination, Quinolines analysis, Quinolines chemistry
- Abstract
In the synthesis of Moxifloxacin four prominent impurities were detected in HPLC analysis. These impurities were detected in gradient HPLC method. They were isolated from enriched mother liquors and were characterized as 1-cyclopropyl-6-fluoro-1,4-dihydro-8-methoxy-7-[(S,S)-N-methyl-2,8-diazabicyclo (4,3,0) non-8yl]-4-oxo-3-quinoline carboxylic acid (Impurity-1), methyl-1-cyclopropyl-6-fluoro-1,4-dihydro-8-methoxy-7-[(S,S)-2,8-diazabicyclo(4,3,0)non-8-yl]-4-oxo-3-quinoline carboxylate (impurity-2), and 1-cyclopropyl-6-fluoro-1,4 dihydro-8-hydroxy-7-[(S,S)-2,8-diazobicyclo(4,3,0)non-8-yl]-4-oxo-3-quinoline carboxylicacid (impurity-3), 1-cyclopropyl-6,7-difluoro-8-hydroxy-4-oxo-1,4 dihydro-3-quinoline carboxylicacid (impurity-4) by means of 1H, 13C NMR, DEPT, IR and mass spectral data. Structural elucidation by spectral data was discussed.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Studies on the response mechanism of thermionic detection to organophosphorus compounds.
- Author
-
Vijaya Saradhi UV, Suryanarayana MV, Gupta AK, Semwal RP, and Jayaram B
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Gas methods, Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Thermodynamics, Organophosphorus Compounds chemistry
- Abstract
The response of thermionic/nitrogen-phosphorus detection (TID) to a series of organophosphonate esters has been studied. The response of TID is found to decrease with the increase in the alkyl chain length of the molecules. An attempt has been made to propose the response mechanism of TID for these compounds. The charge carriers accountable for the response do not necessarily arise by combustion of the molecule but by a reaction involving alkali metal and the compound. This has been supported by thermodynamic parameters and molecular descriptors. The mechanism of the reaction that appears to be bimolecular has been explained by steric effects. The study successfully explains the observed change in the response of TID with minor changes in structures of the molecules.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Evaluation of astemizole purity by HPLC.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV, Venkataraman S, Reddy MS, Reddy BP, Sastry CS, and Krupadanam GL
- Abstract
A liquid chromatographic method is described for the evaluation of Astemizole purity. The method is also applicable for the analysis of pharmaceutical dosage forms of Astemizole using indole as internal standard. Separation was achieved with a micro bondapak C(18) column and phosphate buffer (pH 6.0):acetonitrile (50:50 v/v) as eluent, at a flow rate of 1.5 ml/min with UV detection at 280 nm. The method is suitable for estimating the possible impurities if any present in Astemizole up to 0.05% for 1a and 0.25% for 1b. The method is simple, rapid and accurate for the analysis of Astemizole.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A computer program in BASIC for estimation of LD50 of a chemical by Dixon's up and down method.
- Author
-
Pandey AC, Suryanarayana MV, and Vishwakarma RK
- Subjects
- Animals, Biometry methods, Lethal Dose 50, Programming Languages, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Software
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Structure-activity relationship studies with mosquito repellent amides.
- Author
-
Suryanarayana MV, Pandey KS, Prakash S, Raghuveeran CD, Dangi RS, Swamy RV, and Rao KM
- Subjects
- Acetamides chemistry, Animals, DEET analogs & derivatives, DEET chemistry, Insect Repellents chemistry, Lipids chemistry, Molecular Structure, Regression Analysis, Structure-Activity Relationship, Acetamides pharmacology, Acetanilides, Culicidae drug effects, DEET pharmacology, Insect Repellents pharmacology
- Abstract
A series of amide analogues of N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide (DEET) and N,N-diethylphenylacetamide (DEPA) were synthesized to study their mosquito repellency in relation to chemical structure and physical properties. None of these parameters (vapor pressure, lipophilicity, and molecular length) could be related to protection time. However, when the protection time of all five amides derived from the same carboxylic acid was expressed in terms of all three parameters together, excellent correlation was obtained.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Acute and subacute inhalation toxicity studies of a new broad spectrum insect repellent, N,N-diethylphenylacetamide.
- Author
-
Vijayaraghavan R, Rao SS, Suryanarayana MV, and Swamy RV
- Subjects
- Acetamides administration & dosage, Aerosols, Animals, Atmosphere Exposure Chambers, Body Weight drug effects, Female, Inhalation, Insect Repellents administration & dosage, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Acetamides toxicity, Acetanilides, Insect Repellents toxicity
- Abstract
N,N-Diethylphenylacetamide (DEPA) is an inexpensive, long-acting and broad spectrum insect repellent. The acute LC50 for a 4-h exposure of DEPA aerosol was found to be 1.451 mg l-1 (1.290-1.633) in male and 1.375 mg l-1 (1.307-1.447) in female rats. DEPA did not cause delayed deaths. Acute exposure to 0.9 LC50 revealed that liver might be a target organ for DEPA toxicity. On subacute exposures to 0.2, 0.6 and 0.8 LC50 for 6 h per day, 5 days a week for 2 weeks, there was no significant change in the 0.2 LC50 group, as evaluated by the body weight gain and organ body weight ratio. The minimal changes observed in the 0.6 LC50 group were of reversible type as the animals recovered on cessation of exposure. A massive concentration of 0.8 LC50 produced lethal effects. The study shows that DEPA has a low mammalian toxicity by inhalation as was found earlier with cutaneous application of the insect repellent.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. N,N-diethylphenylacetamide in treated fabrics as a repellent against Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus (Diptera: Culicidae).
- Author
-
Rao KM, Prakash S, Kumar S, Suryanarayana MV, Bhagwat MM, Gharia MM, and Bhavsar RB
- Subjects
- Aedes, Animals, Culex, Humans, Acetamides, Acetanilides, Culicidae, Insect Bites and Stings prevention & control, Insect Repellents, Protective Clothing
- Abstract
The efficacy of fabrics impregnated with N,N-diethylphenylacetamide (DEPA), a new repellent, was studied in the laboratory and field against Aedes aegypti (L.) and Culex quinquefasciatus Say. DEPA-treated polyester cotton and cotton fabrics provided repellency for 30 and 36 d and had a half-life of 11 and 5 d, respectively. The repellent could not be applied at a rate of greater than 15% of fabric weight. DEPA-treated fabric patches were found to be a practical and novel approach and were effective for 90 d in the laboratory against Ae. aegypti and 77 d in the field against Cs. quinquefasciatus.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Spectrophotometric determination of some antiallergic agents with 3-methyl-2-benzothiazolinone hydrazone.
- Author
-
Sastry CS, Tipirneni AS, and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Benzothiazoles, Hydrazones, Spectrophotometry, Histamine Antagonists analysis, Thiazoles
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Some observations concerning the direct titration of nitrite with cerium(IV).
- Author
-
Muralikrishna U, Subrahmanyam K, Suryanarayana MV, and Krishnamurthy M
- Abstract
Direct titration of nitrite with cerium (IV), with ferroin as indicator, is shown to give satisfactory results if the acidity is kept between 0.033 and 0.055M at the end-point. Loss of nitrous acid owing to volatilization and decomposition is discussed. From 10 to 60 mg of sodium nitrite can be estimated with a standard deviation of 5 mug and an average error of 0.2%.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Gas chromatographic studies of the carbamylation of haemoglobin by methyl isocyanate in rats and rabbits.
- Author
-
Ramachandran PK, Gandhe BR, Venkateswaran KS, Kaushik MP, Vijayaraghavan R, Agarwal GS, Gopalan N, Suryanarayana MV, Shinde SK, and Sriramachari S
- Subjects
- Animals, Antisickling Agents chemical synthesis, Chromatography, Gas, Cyanates chemical synthesis, Hemolysis drug effects, In Vitro Techniques, Rabbits, Rats, Antisickling Agents pharmacology, Cyanates pharmacology, Hemoglobins analysis, Isocyanates
- Abstract
Carbamylation of the N-terminal valine of haemoglobin with methyl isocyanate in rats and rabbits has been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo by gas chromatography. N-Methylcarbamylated haemoglobin, converted by cyclization into 3-methyl-5-isopropylhydantoin, has been quantified by gas chromatography. Standard hydantoin was synthesized, chemically characterized and used for calibration. The method is simple and reliable in the concentration range 0.06-2 nmol. Carbamylation of haemoglobin by methyl isocyanate in vivo in rats can be identified only above a dose of 1.05 mg/l in inhalation exposures. It is inferred that methyl isocyanate in the "active" form crosses the alveolar and erythrocyte membranes and carbamylates the haemoglobin.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Extractive spectrophotometric determination of some anti-inflammatory agents with methylene violet.
- Author
-
Sastry CS, Prasad Tipirneni AS, and Suryanarayana MV
- Subjects
- Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Phenothiazines, Spectrophotometry, Atomic, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal analysis
- Abstract
A fairly sensitive spectrophotometric method for the determination of ibuprofen, ketoprofen, piroxicam, diclofenac sodium, mefenamic acid or enfenamic acid in bulk samples and pharmaceutical preparations is described, based on the formation of a chloroform-soluble, coloured ion-association complex between the drug and Methylene Violet at pH 7.6.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Spectrophotometric determination of muzolimine.
- Author
-
Sastry CS, Suryanarayana MV, Tipirneni AS, and Prasad TN
- Abstract
Five simple, rapid and sensitive spectrophotometric procedures for the determination of muzolimine in bulk samples and pharmaceutical dosage forms are described. The methods are based on the formation of coloured species when muzolimine is reacted with 3-methyl-2-benzothiazolinone hydrazone hydrochloride, p-N,N-dimethylphenylenediamine dihydrochloride or p-N-methylaminophenol sulphate and a suitable oxidant or with 2,6-dichloroquinone chlorimide. The results obtained are reproducible with a coefficient of variation of less than 1.5%.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Gas chromatographic identification of urinary metabolites of insect repellent N,N-diethylphenylacetamide on inhalation exposure in rats.
- Author
-
Rao SS, Vijayaraghavan R, Suryanarayana MV, and Ramachandran PK
- Subjects
- Acetamides toxicity, Acetamides urine, Administration, Inhalation, Animals, Chromatography, Gas, Flame Ionization, Insect Repellents toxicity, Insect Repellents urine, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Acetamides metabolism, Acetanilides, Insect Repellents metabolism
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Spectrophotometric determination of antimalarials using quinones.
- Author
-
Sastry BS, Venkata Rao E, Suryanarayana MV, and Sastry CS
- Subjects
- Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Powders, Antimalarials analysis, Quinones
- Published
- 1986
47. Effectiveness of macrogol and talcum base formulations of a new insect repellent N, N-diethyl phenyl acetamide.
- Author
-
Prakash S, Kumar S, Suryanarayana MV, Sharma RK, and Rao KM
- Abstract
Synopsis The effectiveness of macrogol and talcum base formulations of a new multi-insect repellent N, N-diethyl phenyl acetamide (DEPA) was studied against Aedes aegypti mosquitoes in the laboratory. The efficacy was compared with widely used repellent in India, viz. Dimethylphthalate. Twenty-five per cent DEPA incorporated macrogol ointment and talcum base formulation offered more than 8 h and 6 h protection, as compared to DMP for 3 h and 1 h 30 min, respectively. The ointment was found to be stable as more than 99% DEPA was recovered by gas liquid chromatography after 6 months of storage at room temperature. The repellent formulations have not shown any gross adverse effect to the skin of albino rabbits.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Application of p-N,N-dimethylphenylenediamine dihydrochloride for the determination of some diuretics.
- Author
-
Sastry CS, Suryanarayana MV, and Tipirneni AS
- Abstract
A spectrophotometric method is described for the determination of acetazolamide, frusemide, polythiazide, benzthiazide, hydrochlorothiazide, hydroflumethiazide, trichlormethiazide and amiloride hydrochloride (AML) either in pure form or in pharmaceutical formulations. The method is based on the reaction with p-N,N-dimethylphenylenediamine dihydrochloride and chloramine-T, to give a coloured product having maximum absorbance at 660 nm (for AML) or at 540 nm for the others, and reproducible within +/- 1.0%.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.