Analysis of the structure and morphology of fenoxycarb crystals.

J Mol Graph Model

Materials and Surface Science Institute, Chemical and Environmental Sciences Department, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland; Department of Chemical Engineering and Technology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper examines how the surface structure of fenoxycarb (FC) affects its crystal growth and shape, highlighting the correlation between predicted and actual crystal morphologies.
  • It finds that fenoxycarb primarily develops into a platelet-like form, with its {001} faces influencing its overall morphology, while solvent choice has minimal impact on these characteristics.
  • The study identifies two main interaction modes among FC molecules that dictate crystal shape, emphasizing the stability of the crystal's surfaces due to weak intermolecular bonds.

Article Abstract

In this paper, we have explored the relationship between surface structure and crystal growth and morphology of fenoxycarb (FC). Experimental vs. predicted morphologies/face indices of fenoxycarb crystals are presented. Atomic-scale surface structures of the crystalline particles, derived from experimentally indexed single crystals, are also modelled. Single crystals of fenoxycarb exhibit a platelet-like morphology which closely matches predicted morphologies. The solvent choice does not significantly influence either morphology or crystal habit. The crystal morphology is dominated by the {001} faces, featuring weakly interacting aliphatic or aromatic groups at their surfaces. Two distinct modes of interaction of a FC molecule in the crystal can be observed, which appear to be principal factors governing the microscopic shape of the crystal: the relatively strong collateral and the much weaker perpendicular bonding. Both forcefield-based and quantum-chemical calculations predict that the aromatic and aliphatic terminated {001} faces have comparably high stability as a consequence of weak intermolecular bonding. Thus we predict that the most developed {001} surfaces of fenoxycarb crystals should be terminated randomly, favouring neither aliphatic nor aromatic termination.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmgm.2014.07.008DOI Listing

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Analysis of the structure and morphology of fenoxycarb crystals.

J Mol Graph Model

September 2014

Materials and Surface Science Institute, Chemical and Environmental Sciences Department, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland; Department of Chemical Engineering and Technology, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Article Synopsis
  • The paper examines how the surface structure of fenoxycarb (FC) affects its crystal growth and shape, highlighting the correlation between predicted and actual crystal morphologies.
  • It finds that fenoxycarb primarily develops into a platelet-like form, with its {001} faces influencing its overall morphology, while solvent choice has minimal impact on these characteristics.
  • The study identifies two main interaction modes among FC molecules that dictate crystal shape, emphasizing the stability of the crystal's surfaces due to weak intermolecular bonds.
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