Calibrationless Semi-Quantitative Analysis of a Heterogeneous Sample Using Raman Microscope Mapping
Applications | 2009 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Mapping and semi-quantitative chemical imaging of solid dosage forms is critical for pharmaceutical quality control, formulation development, and impurity detection. Raman microscopy enables high spatial resolution and molecular specificity without the morphologic artifacts common in FT-IR imaging, allowing detailed analysis of heterogeneous samples.
This study demonstrates a calibration-free approach for semi-quantitative mapping of a painkiller tablet. By combining dispersive Raman microscopy with multivariate curve resolution (MCR) within OMNIC Atlµs software, the method aims to identify tablet components, determine their distribution, and estimate relative concentrations without external calibration standards.
The analytical workflow involved:
MCR separated four key components: acetaminophen, caffeine, aspirin, and titanium dioxide coating. Chemical images revealed distinct spatial domains for each component. Binary mapping yielded composition estimates (approx. 44% acetaminophen, 11% caffeine, 44% aspirin, 1.4% TiO₂) in close agreement with tablet specifications. Importantly, MCR enabled detection of minor TiO₂ contamination in aspirin at ∼5%, a challenge for conventional spectral inspection.
This calibration-free approach offers:
Advancements may include real-time process monitoring, integration with other imaging modalities, automated high-throughput mapping, and refined chemometric algorithms to further improve quantitative accuracy and speed.
The presented method establishes a straightforward, calibration-free protocol for semi-quantitative Raman mapping of pharmaceutical tablets. MCR within Atlµs software provides accurate component identification and concentration estimates, supporting quality control and formulation analysis.
Nishikida K, Tarr JA, Izzia F, Nunn NS. Standardless Semi-Quantitative Image Analysis of Heterogeneous Microscopic Materials. Poster, Pittsburgh Conference, 2006.
RAMAN Spectroscopy, Microscopy
IndustriesMaterials Testing, Pharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Mapping and semi-quantitative chemical imaging of solid dosage forms is critical for pharmaceutical quality control, formulation development, and impurity detection. Raman microscopy enables high spatial resolution and molecular specificity without the morphologic artifacts common in FT-IR imaging, allowing detailed analysis of heterogeneous samples.
Study Objectives and Overview
This study demonstrates a calibration-free approach for semi-quantitative mapping of a painkiller tablet. By combining dispersive Raman microscopy with multivariate curve resolution (MCR) within OMNIC Atlµs software, the method aims to identify tablet components, determine their distribution, and estimate relative concentrations without external calibration standards.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The analytical workflow involved:
- Acquiring Raman spectra over a 6×5.5 mm tablet cross-section at 50 µm intervals using a Thermo Scientific Nicolet Almega XR microscope with a 780 nm laser and 10× objective.
- Applying baseline correction and intensity normalization to raw spectra.
- Performing MCR to resolve pure component spectra and concentration profiles.
- Converting concentration maps into binary area maps to calculate surface occupancy.
- Estimating weight percentages from relative areas, assuming similar component densities.
Main Results and Discussion
MCR separated four key components: acetaminophen, caffeine, aspirin, and titanium dioxide coating. Chemical images revealed distinct spatial domains for each component. Binary mapping yielded composition estimates (approx. 44% acetaminophen, 11% caffeine, 44% aspirin, 1.4% TiO₂) in close agreement with tablet specifications. Importantly, MCR enabled detection of minor TiO₂ contamination in aspirin at ∼5%, a challenge for conventional spectral inspection.
Benefits and Practical Applications
This calibration-free approach offers:
- Non-destructive, high-resolution mapping of pharmaceutical solids.
- Reliable identification of active ingredients, excipients, and coatings without standards.
- Enhanced detection of minor impurities and polymorphic forms.
- Robustness to sample morphology artifacts.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advancements may include real-time process monitoring, integration with other imaging modalities, automated high-throughput mapping, and refined chemometric algorithms to further improve quantitative accuracy and speed.
Conclusion
The presented method establishes a straightforward, calibration-free protocol for semi-quantitative Raman mapping of pharmaceutical tablets. MCR within Atlµs software provides accurate component identification and concentration estimates, supporting quality control and formulation analysis.
Reference
Nishikida K, Tarr JA, Izzia F, Nunn NS. Standardless Semi-Quantitative Image Analysis of Heterogeneous Microscopic Materials. Poster, Pittsburgh Conference, 2006.
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