Thermodynamic vs. kinetic basis for polymorph selection

Benjamin K. Hodnett, Vivek Verma

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Ratios of equilibrium solubilities rarely exceed two-fold for polymorph pairs. A model has been developed based on two intrinsic properties of polymorph pairs, namely the ratio of equilibrium solubilities of the individual pairs (C* me/C* st) and the ratio of interfacial energies (γst/γme) and one applied experimental condition, namely the supersaturation identifies which one of a pair of polymorphs nucleates first. A domain diagram has been developed, which identifies the point where the critical free energy of nucleation for the polymorph pair are identical. Essentially, for a system supersaturated with respect to both polymorphs, the model identifies that low supersaturation with respect to the stable polymorph (Sst) leads to an extremely small supersaturation with respect to the metastable polymorph (Sme), radically driving up the critical free energy with respect to the metastable polymorph. Generally, high supersaturations sometimes much higher than the upper limit of the metastable zone, are required to kinetically favour the metastable polymorph.

Original languageEnglish
Article number272
JournalProcesses
Volume7
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2019

Keywords

  • Classical nucleation theory
  • Interfacial energy
  • Metastable zone width
  • Polymorphs
  • Solubility
  • Supersaturation

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