posted on 2021-10-27, 14:05authored byVasanth K. Kumar, Kiran A. Ramisetty, Renuka K. Devi, Gamidi Rama Krishna, Claire Heffernan, Andrew A. Stewart, Jian Guo, Srinivas Gadipelli, Dan Brett, Evangelos P. Favvas, Åke C. Rasmuson
Crystallization experiments performed with highly
supercooled solutions produced highly pure (>99 wt %) and highly
crystalline mesocrystals of curcumin from impure solutions (∼22%
of two structurally similar impurities) in one step. These
mesocrystals exhibited a crystallographic hierarchy and were
composed of perfectly or imperfectly aligned nanometer-thick
crystallites. X-ray diffraction and spectroscopic analysis confirmed
that the spherulites are a new solid form of curcumin. A theoretical
hypothesis based on particle aggregation, double nucleation, and
repeated secondary nucleation is proposed to explain the spherulite
formation mechanism. The experimental results provide, for the first
time, evidence for an organic molecule to naturally form spherulites
without the presence of any stabilizing agents. Control experiments
performed with highly supercooled pure solutions produced
spherulites, confirming that the formation of spherulites is attributed to the high degree of supercooling and not due to the
presence of impurities. Likewise, control experiments performed with a lower degree of supercooling produced impure crystals of
curcumin via classical molecular addition mechanisms. Collectively, these experimental observations provide, for the first time,
evidence for particle-mediated crystallization as an alternate and efficient method to purify organic compounds.