Understand reactor design equations for batch, CSTR, and plug flow reactors. A practical guide for catalytic scientists using AMI lab reactor instruments.
Crystalline hydrates appear throughout pharmaceutical, chemical, and materials development — and the water molecules incorporated into the crystal lattice are never just an inert passenger. Whether bound as loosely associated surface moisture or as stoichiometric water of crystallization, that water directly influences a material’s stability, solubility, mechanical behavior, and processability. Knowing how tightly that water is bound — and how it leaves the crystal under thermal stress — is essential for predicting product performance and controlling manufacturing quality.
This article demonstrates how TGA crystalline hydrates analysis goes well beyond simple mass-loss quantification. Using isothermal thermogravimetric analysis on a representative crystalline hemihydrate compound, this study extracts the activation energy of dehydration and identifies the specific diffusion mechanism governing water release — information that a single dynamic TGA scan cannot provide. All measurements were performed using the AMI TGA 1000, part of AMI’s range of thermal analysis instruments
A crystalline hydrate incorporates water molecules into its crystal lattice in a defined stoichiometric ratio — monohydrate, hemihydrate, dihydrate, and so on. The water can occupy structurally distinct environments: channel water running through open lattice pathways, isolated-site water trapped in discrete pockets, or water directly coordinated to specific lattice ions. Each environment binds water with a different strength, and that binding strength directly determines the temperature and kinetics of dehydration.
Hemihydrates — compounds containing 0.5 mol of water per mole of compound — are a particularly informative case study. Because the hydration site is only partially occupied, hemihydrates often show complex, multi-step thermal behavior: water loss can proceed through intermediate phases, anisotropic diffusion pathways, or structural rearrangement of the lattice as it transitions toward the anhydrous form. A single melting-point-style measurement cannot capture this complexity — but TGA crystalline hydrates analysis, particularly when combined with isothermal kinetic measurements, can.
|
Related reading: For a discussion of pharmaceutical polymorphism and how DSC-measured calorimetric data supports solid-state characterization decisions, see our article on differential scanning calorimetry application for pharmaceutical polymorphism. Hydrate and polymorph characterization are frequently performed together in pharmaceutical preformulation. |
|---|
Two complementary TGA experimental modes are available for hydrate characterization, and this study uses the second for the detailed kinetic work:
A crystalline organic hemihydrate was analyzed by isothermal TGA at four temperatures: 50°C, 55°C, 60°C, and 77°C. Each sample was held at constant temperature on the TGA 1000 while mass loss was recorded continuously over time. The total dehydration corresponds to release of 0.5 mol of water per mole of compound — approximately 2.7% of the sample’s initial mass, consistent with hemihydrate stoichiometry.
Across all four isothermal temperatures, water release did not occur as a single first-order process. Instead, dehydration proceeded through distinct stages (Figure 1; alt text: fractional weight loss vs. time for the hemihydrate at 55°C, 60°C, and 70°C showing sequential multi-stage dehydration): the process began abruptly, slowed, accelerated again, and gradually tapered off as full dehydration was approached.
This staged behavior is a direct signature of structurally distinct water binding environments within the hemihydrate lattice. A simple, single-site hydrate would show a smooth, monotonic approach to complete dehydration. The observed acceleration-deceleration pattern indicates that water is not leaving the crystal uniformly — different fractions of the total water content are governed by different rate-limiting processes at different stages of dehydration.
Despite the sequential, multi-step nature of dehydration, an overall apparent rate constant was estimated at each isothermal temperature using a global linear regression approach applied to the fractional weight loss data. Plotting the natural logarithm of these rate constants against inverse temperature (the Arrhenius plot) yields the activation energy for the overall dehydration process.
|
Result: Activation energy (Ea) ≈ 29 kcal/mol (~121 kJ/mol) for the overall dehydration of the crystalline hemihydrate, derived from isothermal TGA data at 50°C, 55°C, 60°C, and 77°C |
|---|
An activation energy in this range indicates a moderately strong thermal barrier to dehydration — consistent with water that is structurally incorporated into the lattice rather than loosely adsorbed surface moisture, which typically shows much lower activation energies (often below 50 kJ/mol). This value provides a quantitative basis for predicting the compound’s dehydration propensity under different storage temperature and humidity conditions, directly informing packaging and shelf-life specifications.
To understand the stepwise kinetics in more mechanistic detail, a focused kinetic model analysis was applied to the 55°C isothermal data. Two classical diffusion-controlled solid-state kinetic models — as described in Byrn’s foundational work on solid-state pharmaceutical chemistry — were evaluated:
|
Model |
Equation |
Physical Picture |
|---|---|---|
|
One-dimensional diffusion |
α² ∝ kt |
Water diffuses out along a single preferred direction — consistent with channel-type hydrate structures where water occupies linear lattice channels |
|
Three-dimensional diffusion (Jander equation) |
1 − (2/3)α − (1−α)^0.667 = kt |
Water diffuses outward through a progressively thickening dehydrated shell in three dimensions — consistent with isotropic diffusion through bulk dehydrated material |
Comparing the fit quality of both models against the experimental fractional dehydration data at 55°C (Figure 2; alt text: comparison of one-dimensional and three-dimensional Jander diffusion model fits to experimental dehydration data at 55°C) revealed a clear pattern: the data is best described by a transition between regimes over the course of dehydration, rather than a single model holding throughout.
|
Mechanistic interpretation: Water at the crystal surface escapes rapidly once liberated from its binding site — consistent with minimal diffusion resistance early in the process. As dehydration progresses, deeper hydration layers must diffuse through an increasingly thick layer of already-dehydrated material to reach the surface — a classic signature of diffusion-limited kinetics that intensifies as the reaction proceeds. This explains the observed shift from behavior resembling one-dimensional diffusion early in the process toward three-dimensional (Jander-type) diffusion control as dehydration approaches completion. |
|---|
Identifying whether a hydrate’s dehydration is diffusion-controlled — and how that control evolves during the process — has direct, practical consequences:
Extracting reliable activation energies and diffusion mechanisms from TGA crystalline hydrates data places specific demands on instrument performance: small, sequential mass-loss events must be resolved clearly, isothermal temperature control must be precise and stable over extended hold times, and baseline drift must be minimal enough not to obscure subtle rate changes. The TGA 1000 (Figure 3; alt text: AMI TGA 1000 thermogravimetric analyzer with high-sensitivity microbalance and compact heating furnace) is built to meet exactly these demands.
|
Related capability: When dehydration steps occur in close temperature proximity and risk overlapping in a standard dynamic scan, AMI’s Step Isothermal function — standard on all AMI TGA instruments — automatically inserts isothermal holds at key transition points to enhance separation between overlapping mass-loss events. See our article on Step-Isothermal TGA for enhanced component separation for full details — this feature is particularly useful for hydrates and materials with closely spaced thermal transitions. |
|---|
Thermogravimetric analysis of crystalline hydrates offers far more than a simple measure of water content. As demonstrated in this study, isothermal TGA crystalline hydrates analysis at multiple temperatures enables extraction of the dehydration activation energy (~29 kcal/mol for this hemihydrate) and identification of the underlying diffusion mechanism — revealing a transition from rapid surface-water release toward diffusion-limited bulk dehydration as the process approaches completion.
This mechanistic understanding directly supports practical decisions in pharmaceutical and materials development: predicting shelf-life and storage stability, setting safe processing temperature limits, and informing particle engineering and salt/form selection strategies. The AMI TGA 1000, with its high-sensitivity microbalance and precise isothermal temperature control, provides the resolution and stability required for this level of kinetic analysis. Explore AMI’s full range of thermal analysis instruments, or visit the AMI Technical Library for further application notes on TGA, DSC, and thermal characterization of pharmaceutical and materials science compounds.
Beyond quantifying total water content, TGA of crystalline hydrates reveals the number and temperature ranges of distinct dehydration steps, which indicate structurally different water binding environments in the crystal. When combined with isothermal measurements at multiple temperatures, TGA also enables extraction of the dehydration activation energy via Arrhenius analysis and identification of the rate-limiting mechanism — such as diffusion control — by fitting kinetic models to the fractional dehydration data. This mechanistic information cannot be obtained from a single dynamic TGA scan alone.
Sequential, multi-stage dehydration occurs when water molecules occupy structurally distinct sites within the crystal lattice, each with a different binding strength. Hemihydrates — with only partial occupancy of the hydration site — are particularly prone to this behavior, sometimes proceeding through intermediate phases before reaching the anhydrous form. The result is a thermogram or isothermal weight-loss curve that shows abrupt onset, deceleration, re-acceleration, and gradual tapering, rather than a single smooth, monotonic mass-loss event.
Activation energy is determined using isothermal TGA at multiple temperatures. At each temperature, the sample is held constant while mass loss is recorded as a function of time, and an apparent rate constant is extracted from the fractional dehydration data. Plotting the natural log of these rate constants against the inverse of absolute temperature (an Arrhenius plot) produces a line whose slope is directly proportional to the activation energy. In this study, isothermal measurements at 50°C, 55°C, 60°C, and 77°C yielded an activation energy of approximately 29 kcal/mol for the overall dehydration of a representative crystalline hemihydrate.
Diffusion-controlled dehydration occurs when the rate-limiting step is the physical transport of water (or water vapor) through the solid material, rather than the chemical process of breaking the water-lattice bond itself. It is identified by fitting solid-state kinetic models — such as one-dimensional diffusion (α² ∝ kt) or three-dimensional Jander diffusion (1 − (2/3)α − (1−α)^0.667 = kt) — to the fractional dehydration data and comparing fit quality. A characteristic signature of diffusion control is that the dehydration rate slows as the process progresses, because water must diffuse through an increasingly thick layer of already-dehydrated material to escape the crystal.
Dehydration kinetic data from TGA crystalline hydrate studies directly informs several practical decisions: predicting shelf-life and storage stability by extrapolating dehydration rate to storage temperatures using the measured activation energy; setting safe processing temperature limits for drying, granulation, and compression operations; understanding how particle size affects dehydration rate, since diffusion path length scales with particle dimensions; and supporting salt and crystal form selection during pharmaceutical development by comparing dehydration propensity across candidate hydrate forms.
Understand reactor design equations for batch, CSTR, and plug flow reactors. A practical guide for catalytic scientists using AMI lab reactor instruments.