Influence of solvent polarity and supersaturation on template-induced nucleation of carbamazepine crystal polymorphs
File(s)68 - Manuscript - TiPoD (solvent effect) R1.docx (1.23 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Parambil, JV
Poornachary, SK
Tan, RBH
Heng, JYY
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Studies on the use of template surfaces to induce heterogeneous crystal nucleation have gained momentum in recent years-with potential applications in selective crystallisation of polymorphs and in the generation of seed crystals in a continuous crystallisation process. In developing a template-assisted solution crystallisation process, the kinetics of homogeneous versus heterogeneous crystal nucleation could be influenced by solute-solvent, solute-template, and solvent-template interactions. In this study, we report the effect of solvents of varying polarity on the nucleation of carbamazepine (CBZ) crystal polymorphs, a model active pharmaceutical ingredient. The experimental results demonstrate that functionalised template surfaces are effective in promoting crystallisation of either the metastable (form II) or stable (form III) polymorphs of CBZ only in moderately (methanol, ethanol, isopropanol) and low polar (toluene) solvents. A solvent with high polarity (acetonitrile) is thought to mask the template effect on heterogeneous nucleation due to strong solute-solvent and solvent-template interactions. The current study highlights that a quality-by-design (QbD) approach-considering the synergistic effects of solute concentration, solvent type, solution temperature, and template surface chemistry on crystal nucleation-is critical to the development of a template-induced crystallisation process.
Date Issued
2016-09-28
Date Acceptance
2016-09-01
Citation
Journal of Crystal Growth, 2016, 469, pp.84-90
ISSN
1873-5002
Publisher
Elsevier
Start Page
84
End Page
90
Journal / Book Title
Journal of Crystal Growth
Volume
469
Copyright Statement
© 2016, Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. This manuscript is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Subjects
Applied Physics
0303 Macromolecular And Materials Chemistry
0306 Physical Chemistry (Incl. Structural)
Publication Status
Published