Crystallization of 5-methyl-2-[(2-nitrophenyl)amino]-3-thiophenecarbonitrile (1), previously found
to produce six conformational polymorphs from solution, on single-crystal pimelic acid (PA) substrates results
in selective and oriented growth of the metastable “YN” (yellow needle) polymorph on the (101)PA faces of
the substrate. Though the freshly cleaved substrate crystals expose (101)PA and (111)PA faces, which are both
decorated with [101̄]PA ledges that could serve as nucleation sites, crystal growth of YN occurs on only (101)PA.
Goniometry measurements performed with an atomic force microscope reveal that the (001)YN plane contacts
(101)PA with a crystal orientation [100]YN||[010]PA and [010]YN||[101̄]PA. A geometric lattice analysis using a
newly developed program dubbed GRACE (geometric real-space analysis of crystal epitaxy) indicates that
this interfacial configuration arises from optimal two-dimensional epitaxy and that among the six polymorphs
of 1, only the YN polymorph, in the observed orientation, achieves reasonable epitaxial match to (101)PA. The
geometric analysis also reveals that none of the polymorphs, including YN, can achieve comparable epitaxial
match with (111)PA, consistent with the absence of nucleation on this crystal face. In contrast, sublimation of
1 on cleaved succinic acid (SA) substrates, which expose large (010)SA faces decorated with steps along [101̄]SA,
affords growth of several polymorphs, each with multiple orientations, as well as oriented crystals of a new
metastable polymorph on the (010)SA surfaces. The lack of polymorphic selectivity on (010)SA can be explained
by the geometric lattice analysis, which reveals low-grade epitaxial matches between (010)SA and several
polymorphs of 1 but no inherent selectivity toward a single polymorph. These observations demonstrate the
sensitivity of crystal nucleation to substrate surface structure, the potential of crystalline substrates for selective
nucleation and discovery of polymorphs, and the utility of geometric lattice modeling for screening of substrate
libraries for controlling polymorphism