posted on 2018-11-01, 00:00authored byAisling Lynch, Lijun Jia, Michael Svärd, Åke C. Rasmuson
Salicylamide
was used as a model active pharmaceutical compound
to investigate the crystal growth process and its associated kinetics.
The impact of organic solvent, supersaturation, and temperature on
the crystal growth was studied. The multiparticle crystal growth kinetics
were determined using the seeded isothermal de-supersaturation method
and modeled using several growth rate equations, using different representations
of the driving force. The results showed that crystal growth is significantly
influenced by experimental conditions. Within the range of experimental
conditions, the growth kinetics was affected strongly by the temperature
and to a lesser degree by solvent choice. Comparison of the growth
order parameter reveals a surface integration controlled growth. Higher
than expected activation energies indicate desolvation as a governing
process. A comparison of the influence of the solvent on the crystal
growth of salicylamide against previously published approximate data
at much higher supersaturation shows good agreement, but the influence
on the interfacial energy is opposite to that observed for crystal
nucleation. In a detailed comparison with crystal growth data of salicylic
acid, there is a consistency in the influence of the solvent on the
crystal growth of the two compounds. Salicylamide growth kinetics
is more strongly affected by increasing temperature than salicylic
acid.