Griselda E. Narda
National Scientific and Technical Research Council
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Featured researches published by Griselda E. Narda.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009
María C. Bernini; Felipe Gándara; Marta Iglesias; Natalia Snejko; Enrique Gutiérrez-Puebla; Elena V. Brusau; Griselda E. Narda; M. Ángeles Monge
Yb(C(4)H(4)O(4))(1.5)] undergoes a temperature-triggered single-crystal to single-crystal transformation. Thermal X-ray single-crystal studies showed a reversibly orchestrated rearrangement of the atoms generated by the breaking/formation of coordination bonds, in which the stoichiometry of the compound remains unchanged. The transformation occurs on heating the crystal at approximately 130 degrees C. This uncommon behavior was also studied by thermal methods, FTIR spectroscopy, and thermodiffractometry. Both polymorphs, alpha (room-temperature form) and beta (high-temperature form), are proven to be active heterogeneous catalysts; the higher catalytic activity of beta is owed to a decrease in the Yb coordination number. A mechanism based on spectroscopic evidence and involving formation of the active species Yb-O-OH is proposed for the sulfide oxidation.
Water Research | 2003
E.D. Vega; J.C. Pedregosa; Griselda E. Narda; P.J. Morando
The interaction of oxovanadium(IV) (VO(2+)) in aqueous solution with commercial calcium hydroxyapatite (CAP) has been studied. VO(2+) ions are adsorbed on the surface of CAP by coordination to OH groups, without modification of the crystalline lattice. The extent of the adsorption is followed by chemical analysis, ESR and IR spectroscopy. Results are compared with those obtained for VO(2+)/synthetic calcium hydroxyapatite (HAP), reported by us in previous works. The uptake is better than the observed for HAP. The maximum adsorption is observed at pH 3.5 and 288 K. We conclude that VO(2+) is indeed adsorbed on CAP and the extent of adsorption depends on the pH and temperature.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2011
María C. Bernini; Natalia Snejko; Enrique Gutiérrez-Puebla; Elena V. Brusau; Griselda E. Narda; M. A. Monge
Two new holmium-succinate frameworks have been synthesized by hydrolysis in situ of the succinylsalicylic acid under different hydrothermal conditions. Compound 1, [Ho(2)(C(4)H(4)O(4))(3)(H(2)O)(2)]·0.33(C(7)H(6)O(3)), P ̅i space group, has a novel structure composed by 1D-SBUs consisting of [HoO(9)] chains of polyhedra linked by the succinate ligands giving a 3D framework. Compound 2, [Ho(2)(C(4)H(4)O(4))(3)(H(2)O)(2)], also belonging to the P ̅i space group, has a denser structure. The role of the in-situ-generated salicylic acid on formation of both structures is studied by means of a synthesis design methodology. A topological study of the new holmium succinate compounds in comparison with the previously reported 3D holmium-succinate framework is performed here.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2010
María C. Bernini; Víctor A. de la Peña-O’Shea; Marta Iglesias; Natalia Snejko; Enrique Gutiérrez-Puebla; Elena V. Brusau; Griselda E. Narda; Francesc Illas; M. Ángeles Monge
Two new layered polymeric frameworks have been synthesized under different hydrothermal conditions and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, thermal analysis, and variable temperature-Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (VT-FTIR). The compound I, with formula [Er(2)(dms)(3)(H(2)O)(4)], has a triclinic cell with parameters a = 5.8506 A, b = 9.8019 A, c = 11.9747 A, alpha = 70.145 degrees , beta = 80.234 degrees , and gamma = 89.715 degrees , and the compound II, [Er(2)(dms)(3)(H(2)O)], is monoclinic and its cell parameters are a = 11.1794 A, b = 18.2208 A, c = 12.7944 A, beta = 112.4270 degrees , where dms = 2,2-dimethylsuccinate ligand. A theoretical study including energy calculations of the dms conformers was carried out at the Density Functional Theory (DFT-B3LYP) level of theory, using the 6-311G* basis set. Further calculations of the apparent formation energies of I and II crystalline structures were performed by means of the periodic density functional theory, using DF plane-waves. The analysis of the structural features, theoretical relative stabilities, and the influence of synthesis conditions are presented here. The heterogeneous catalytic activity of the new compounds is tested and reported.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2009
Felipe T. Martins; Person P. Neves; Javier Ellena; Gerardo Enrique Camí; Elena V. Brusau; Griselda E. Narda
Mebendazole (MBZ) is a common benzimidazole anthelmintic that exists in three different polymorphic forms, A, B, and C. Polymorph C is the pharmaceutically preferred form due to its adequated aqueous solubility. No single crystal structure determinations depicting the nature of the crystal packing and molecular conformation and geometry have been performed on this compound. The crystal structure of mebendazole form C is resolved for the first time. Mebendazole form C crystallizes in the triclinic centrosymmetric space group and this drug is practically planar, since the least-squares methyl benzimidazolylcarbamate plane is much fitted on the forming atoms. However, the benzoyl group is twisted by 31(1) degrees from the benzimidazole ring, likewise the torsional angle between the benzene and carbonyl moieties is 27(1) degrees. The formerly described bends and other interesting intramolecular geometry features were viewed as consequence of the intermolecular contacts occurring within mebendazole C structure. Among these features, a conjugation decreasing through the imine nitrogen atom of the benzimidazole core and a further resonance path crossing the carbamate one were described. At last, the X-ray powder diffractogram of a form C rich mebendazole mixture was overlaid to the calculated one with the mebendazole crystal structure.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Matias I. Sancho; Marcos Guillermo Russo; M. Sergio Moreno; Estela Gasull; Sonia E. Blanco; Griselda E. Narda
The characterization of the inclusion complex between 2-hydroxybenzophenone (2OHBP) and β-cyclodextrin (βCD) in the solid state was performed using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), powder X-ray diffractometry (PXRD), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The apparent formation constant of the complex was determined by phase solubility diagrams and liquid chromatography (HPLC) at different temperatures. The formation of the inclusion complex induced slight shifts in the FTIR spectrum while by PXRD a new crystalline phase was observed. TEM studies revealed that the complex forms aggregates of nanometric size. The inclusion complex showed a higher solubility in the tested dissolution media than free 2OHBP. Moreover, the freeze-dried solid complex exhibits a higher thermal stability than the solid free drug. The thermodynamic analysis allowed us to conclude that the encapsulation process is endothermic in water and exothermic in methanol-water.
Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy | 2016
Marcos Guillermo Russo; Matias I. Sancho; Lorena M.A. Silva; Héctor A. Baldoni; Tiago Venancio; Javier Ellena; Griselda E. Narda
In this paper, co-grinding mixtures of omeprazole-amoxicillin trihydrate (CGM samples) and omeprazole-anhydrous amoxicillin (CGMa samples) at 3:7, 1:1 and 7:3 molar ratios, respectively, were studied with the aim of obtaining a co-amorphous system and determining the potential intermolecular interactions. These systems were fully characterized by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), FT-infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray powder diffraction (PXRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and solid state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (ssNMR). The co-grinding process was not useful to get a co-amorphous system but it led to obtaining the 1:1 CGMa disordered phase. Moreover, in this system both FTIR and ssNMR analysis strongly suggest intermolecular interactions between the sulfoxide group of omeprazole and the primary amine of amoxicillin anhydrous. The solubility measurements were performed in simulated gastric fluid (SGF) to prove the effect of the co-grinding process. Complementarily, we carried out density functional theory calculations (DFT) followed by quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) and natural bond orbital (NBO) analyses in order to shed some light on the principles that guide the possible formation of heterodimers at the molecular level, which are supported by spectroscopic experimental findings.
Journal of Coordination Chemistry | 2001
Elena V. Brusau; J.C. Pedregosa; Griselda E. Narda; G. Pozzi; Gustavo A. Echeverría; G. Punte
Abstract Single crystal X-ray crystal diffraction, IR and TGA-DTA data and searches in the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) have been used to analyze coordination binding modes of Cd(II) in dicarboxylate complexes with anions of different length. The results, discussed in this paper, show that Cd(II) presents a range of coordination geometries. Six, seven and eight coordination with different degrees of departure from regular polyhedra are observed. The length of the ions influences the availability of donor oxygens and induces bidentate, six or four member chelating rings, and monodentate binding, which produces polymerization of different dimensionality.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2013
Karina de Paula; Gerardo Enrique Camí; Elena V. Brusau; Griselda E. Narda; Javier Ellena
Mebendazole mesylate monohydrate, a new stable salt of mebendazole (MBZ), has been synthesized and fully characterized. It was obtained from recrystallization of MBZ forms A, B, or C in diverse solvents with the addition of methyl sulfonic acid solution. The crystal packing is first organized as a two-dimensional array consisting of rows of alternating MBZ molecules linked to columns of mesylate ions by hydrogen bonds. The three-dimensional structure is further developed by classical intermolecular interactions involving water molecules. In addition, nonclassical contacts are also found. The vibrational behavior is consistent with the crystal structure, the most important functional groups showing shifts to lower or higher frequencies in relation to the MBZ polymorphs. Thermal analysis indicates that the compound is stable up to 50°C. Decomposition occurs in five steps. Solubility studies show that the title compound presents a significant higher performance than polymorph C.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2016
Robertino O. Gaitano; Natalia Lorena Calvo; Griselda E. Narda; Teodoro S. Kaufman; Rubén M. Maggio; Elena V. Brusau
Mixing aqueous solutions of sodium diclofenac (DIC-Na) and ranitidine hydrochloride (RAN·HCl) afforded an off-white solid (DIC-RAN) that was investigated from the microscopic, thermal, diffractometric, spectroscopic, and functional (chemometrics-assisted dissolution) points of view. The solid has a 2:1 (DIC:RAN) molar ratio according to (1)H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. It is thermally stable, displaying a broad endothermic signal centered at 105°C in the thermogram, and its characteristic reflections in the powder X-ray diffractogram remained unchanged after a 3-month aging period. Scanning electron microscopy micrographs uncovered its morphology, whereas the spectral data suggested an interaction between the carboxylic acid of DIC and the alkyldimethylamino moiety of RAN. The dissolution of DIC-RAN was monitored at different pH values by an ultraviolet/chemometrics procedure, being complete within 5 min at pH 6.8. This compares favorably with the dissolution of a DIC-Na sample of the same particle size.