haribo1
Ex-Bluelighter
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2006
- Messages
- 4,822
Most drugs are presented in their salt forms. HCl, HBr, HSO4 and so on. Now, here is my dumbness. Why is it, for example, that morphine comes as a sulfate whereas codeine comes as a phosphate?
On a related note, using an organic salt such as citrate, will the drug & salt dissociate when heated sufficiently? I mean, if you made diamorphine acetate, will it form acetic acid and freebase heroin as it's heated. I'm sure shelf-life is impared, but it would sure be convenient.
On one post, pseudotrophyl 4-fluoro benzoate was shown to not readily form salts like a hydrochloride. I know a lot of the cocaine analogs like CTF are usually presented as the naphthalene-1,5-disulfonate (Armstrongs acid?).
Sorry for this sad, sad, untutored question, but I've only ever worked with HCl, HBr & H2SO4 salts.
On a related note, using an organic salt such as citrate, will the drug & salt dissociate when heated sufficiently? I mean, if you made diamorphine acetate, will it form acetic acid and freebase heroin as it's heated. I'm sure shelf-life is impared, but it would sure be convenient.
On one post, pseudotrophyl 4-fluoro benzoate was shown to not readily form salts like a hydrochloride. I know a lot of the cocaine analogs like CTF are usually presented as the naphthalene-1,5-disulfonate (Armstrongs acid?).
Sorry for this sad, sad, untutored question, but I've only ever worked with HCl, HBr & H2SO4 salts.

