Development and applications of an inexpensive and modular medium-throughput microcrystalliser for the preparation and characterisation of solid phases

Elizabeth A. Willneff, Roger J. Davey, Claire L. Richards, Rebecca C. Burton, Johannes J. Cilliers

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Identification, isolation, and control of solid form are important for process and product control of specialty chemicals and pharmaceutical compounds. Solid forms are commonly isolated by crystallisation from solution and as a consequence acquisition of both phase equilibrium and kinetic information is vital. In these cases, control of solid form requires a complete assessment of the relationship between crystallisation conditions and both structural and physical aspects of solid form through a number of experiments which may run into many hundreds for complex systems. Traditionally such experiments have been completed sequentially. To fully characterise complex systems in this manner often takes years and so to accelerate this process and characterise a wider phase space, tools for studying multiple samples have been developed to increase throughput. These high-throughput synthetic and analytical techniques are often prohibitively expensive for smaller-scale research laboratories. As a solution to this problem, we have developed a low cost (
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)29-34
    Number of pages5
    JournalJournal of Crystal Growth
    Volume294
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Aug 2006

    Keywords

    • A1. Characterisation
    • A1. Light tomography
    • A1. Medium throughput
    • A1. Nucleation
    • A2. Growth from solutions
    • B1. Organic compounds

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