Kristaps Saršu̅ns, Artis Kons, Toms Rekis and Agris Be̅rziņš*,
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Experimental and Computational Study of Solid Solutions Formed between Substituted Nitrobenzoic Acids
We present an experimental and computational study of the formation of solid solutions in binary systems of substituted nitrobenzoic acids. Different isomers with a methyl group, hydroxyl group, and chlorine substituents are studied. We show that the solid solution formation likelihood evaluated based on the observed solubility limit is notably affected by both the exchanged functional groups and the location of the substituents in the molecular structure. This demonstrates that the component solubility limit strongly depends on the intermolecular interactions present in the crystal structure and is altered by the molecule replacement. Solid solutions form in all of the studied crystalline phases. Component solubility limits from ∼5% up to 50% were observed. The obtained results indicated that the calculated intermolecular interaction energy change by the functional group replacement does not allow rationalization of the experimentally observed solubilities, considering neither the molecules adjacent to the replace group nor all the molecules within a 15 Å radius. The relative energy of the experimental structures and isostructural phases obtained from the computationally generated structure landscapes calculated at the level providing accurate energy ranking was found to be mostly consistent with the experimentally observed component solubilities.
期刊介绍:
The aim of Crystal Growth & Design is to stimulate crossfertilization of knowledge among scientists and engineers working in the fields of crystal growth, crystal engineering, and the industrial application of crystalline materials.
Crystal Growth & Design publishes theoretical and experimental studies of the physical, chemical, and biological phenomena and processes related to the design, growth, and application of crystalline materials. Synergistic approaches originating from different disciplines and technologies and integrating the fields of crystal growth, crystal engineering, intermolecular interactions, and industrial application are encouraged.