Abstract

The computational modeling supported with experimental results can explain the overall structural packing by predicting the hydrogen bond interactions present in any cocrystals (active pharmaceutical ingredients + coformer) as well as salts. In this context, the hydrogen bonding synthons, physiochemical properties (chemical reactivity and stability), and drug-likeliness behavior of proposed nicotinamide–oxalic acid (NIC–OXA) salt have been reported by using vibrational spectroscopic signatures (IR and Raman spectra) and quantum chemical calculations. The NIC–OXA salt was prepared by reactive crystallization method. X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) techniques were used for the characterization and validation of NIC–OXA salt. The spectroscopic signatures revealed that (N7–H8)/(N23–H24) of the pyridine ring of NIC, (C═O), and (C–O) groups of OXA were forming the intermolecular hydrogen bonding (N–H⋯O–C), (C–H⋯O═C), and (N–H⋯O═C), respectively, in NIC–OXA salt. Additionally, the quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) showed that (C10–H22⋯O1) and (C26–H38⋯O4) are two unconventional hydrogen bonds present in NIC–OXA salt. Also, the natural bond orbital analysis was performed to find the charge transfer interactions and revealed the strongest hydrogen bonds (N7–H8⋯O5)/(N23–H24⋯O2) in NIC–OXA salt. The frontier molecular orbital (FMO) analysis suggested more reactivity and less stability of NIC–OXA salt in comparison to NIC–CA cocrystal and NIC. The global and local reactivity descriptors calculated and predicted that NIC–OXA salt is softer than NIC–CA cocrystal and NIC. From MESP of NIC–OXA salt, it is clear that electrophilic (N7–H8)/(N23–H24), (C6═O4)/(C3═O1) and nucleophilic (C10–H22)/(C26–H38), (C6–O5)/(C3–O2) reactive groups in NIC and OXA, respectively, neutralize after the formation of NIC–OXA salt, confirming the presence of hydrogen bonding interactions (N7–H8⋯O5–C6) and (N23–H24⋯O2–C3). Lipinski’s rule was applied to check the activeness of salt as an orally active form. The results shed light on several features of NIC–OXA salt that can further lead to the improvement in the physicochemical properties of NIC.

Highlights

  • Pharmaceutical salts and cocrystals represent a interesting and relevant group of multicomponent solids

  • A comparison with the experimental/theoretical geometrical parameters of NIC and nicotinamide–oxalic acid (NIC–Oxalic acid (OXA)) salt revealed that the values are the same, which are within 0.017/0.003 Å, 0.5°/0.7°, and 0.5°/

  • It is clear that in NIC–OXA salt, the (N23–H24) and (N7–H8) stretching vibrations are observed in a lower wavenumber (2,852 cm−1 in the IR spectrum) than calculated values (2,897 and 2,894 cm−1, respectively), which confirms the presence of intermolecular hydrogen bonding (N23–H24/O2) and (N7–H8/O5)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Pharmaceutical salts and cocrystals represent a interesting and relevant group of multicomponent solids. In continuation of our previous work on nitrofurantoin-4-dimethylaminopyridine (NF-DMAP) salt (Khan et al, 2019) and NIC–citric acid (NIC–CA) cocrystal (Verma et al, 2019), the current study is focused on the prediction of physicochemical properties of NIC–OXA salt and its comparison with NIC–CA cocrystal (Verma et al., 2019). Due to this fact, the ground-state optimized structure, hydrogen bond motifs, their energies, and structure–reactivity relationship of NIC–OXA salt have been reported by DFT calculations (Varbanov et al, 2013). The drug-like properties of NIC–OXA salt have been studied by Lipinski’s rule of five (Lipinski et al, 1997)

EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS
QUANTUM CHEMICAL CALCULATIONS AND COMPUTATIONAL DETAILS
Geometry Minimization and Energies
Spectroscopic (IR and Raman) Assignments
Pyridine Rings (R1 and R2) Vibrations
Carboxamide Group Stretching Vibrations
Modes Involved in Intermolecular Hydrogen
X-Ray Powder Diffraction Pattern
Differential Scanning Calorimetry Analysis
Topological and Energy Parameters at Bond Critical Points
Natural Bond Orbital Analysis
Frontier Molecular
Global Reactivity Descriptors
Local Reactivity Descriptors
Molecular Electrostatic Potential Surface
4.10 Molar Refractivity
CONCLUSION
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
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