1 research outputs found
From Molecules to Crystals: The Solvent Plays an Active Role Throughout the Nucleation Pathway of Molecular Organic Crystals
Crystallization is indisputably one
of the oldest and most widely
used purification methods. Despite this fact, our current understanding
of the early stages of crystallization is still in its infancy. In
this work dynamic light scattering and proton nuclear magnetic resonance
were used to investigate the changes occurring in 4′-hydroxyacetophenone
colloidal particles, as they form in a supersaturated aqueous solution
and evolve toward anhydrous or hydrate materials during a cooling
crystallization process. In the concentration range probed, the particles
are initially composed by both solute and water. If the outcome of
crystallization is an anhydrous phase, a complete loss of solvent
from the particles is progressively observed up to the onset of crystal
precipitation. These findings provide unique experimental evidence
that the role of solvent in the formation of crystals can go well
beyond influencing the self-assembly and clustering of solute molecules
prior to nucleation