Antisolvent crystallization is commonly used in the formation of heat-sensitive compounds as it is the case for most active pharmaceutical ingredients. Membranes have the ability to control the antisolvent mass transfer to the reaction medium, providing excellent mixing that inhibits the formation of local supersaturations responsible for the undesired properties of the resulting crystals. Still, optimization of the operating conditions is required. This work investigates the impact of solution velocity, the effect of antisolvent composition, the temperature and gravity, using glycine-water-ethanol as a model crystallization system, and polypropylene flat sheet membranes. Results proved that in any condition, membranes were consistent in providing a narrow crystal size distribution (CSD) with coefficient of variation (CV) in the range of 0.5-0.6 as opposed to 0.7 obtained by batch and drop-by-drop crystallization. The prism-like shape of glycine crystals was maintained as well, but slightly altered when operating at a temperature of 35 °C with the appearance of smoother crystal edges. Finally, the mean crystal size was within 23 to 40 µm and did not necessarily follow a clear correlation with the solution velocities or antisolvent composition, but increased with the application of higher temperature or gravity resistance. Besides, the monoclinic form of α-glycine was perfectly maintained in all conditions. The results at each condition correlated directly with the antisolvent transmembrane flux that ranged between 0.0002 and 0.001 kg/m. s. In conclusion, membrane antisolvent crystallization is a robust solution offering consistent crystal properties under optimal operating conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/membranes13020140 | DOI Listing |
Mater Horiz
December 2024
Department of Physics, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei 11677, Taiwan, Republic of China.
Chiral perovskites, which are applied to spin organic light-emitting diodes as a spin-induced spin selectivity (CISS) layer, have attracted increasing amounts of attention. A device based on a thicker perovskite CISS layer leads to strongly spin-polarized EL emission. However, chiral perovskite films suffer from poor device performance due to difficulties in carrier injection and film quality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
November 2024
School of Chemical Engineering, Institute of Engineering, Suranaree University of Technology Nakhon Ratchasima 30000 Thailand
Sci Rep
November 2024
Department of Pharmaceutical Engineering and Technology, Indian Institute of Technology (BHU), Varanasi, 221005, Uttar Pradesh, India.
Present work aims to prepare Soluplus stabilized, phospholipid-modified, and cetuximab-conjugated paclitaxel nanocrystals (NCs) as stable nanocarriers for targeted drug delivery. The NCs, prepared using concurrent antisolvent precipitation cum cold crystallization method followed by probe sonication, were found to be monodispersed particles with sub-200 nm size. The microscopic analysis uncovered rod and spherical anisotropy for Soluplus stabilized (PTX-NCs) and phospholipid modified (Lipid/PTX-NCs) nanocrystals, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale
December 2024
Department of Applied Physics and Astronomy, University of Sharjah, P.O. Box 27272, United Arab Emirates.
Perovskite solar cells (PSCs) with high power conversion efficiencies (PCEs) can be produced using a variety of methods, such as different fabrication methods, device layout modification, and component and interface engineering. The efficiency of a perovskite solar cell is largely dependent on the overall quality of the perovskite thin-film in every scenario. The utilization of spin-coating followed by the antisolvent pouring (ASP) method is prevalent in nearly all fabrication techniques to achieve superior perovskite thin-films.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemSusChem
November 2024
Department of Chemical Engineering, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 114 28, Stockholm, Sweden.
In this study L-(+)-tartaric acid was used to extract metals from either pure cathode material (NMC111) or black mass from spent lithium-ion batteries. The leaching efficiencies of Li, Co, Ni, and Mn from NMC111 are >87 % at 70 °C, with an initial solid to liquid ratio of 17, and >72.4±1.
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