Presentation 1
Presentation 1
Presentation 1
Of
Pharmaceuticals
Balaji Ethiraj
Kinetic data for seventeen aqueous
systems crystallized by cooling
,evaporation ,salting out and reaction
Sr. no. Aqueous M Temp. C* (mol/lit) C C/C* GX108 Xmax
system (kg/kmol) (oC) (m/s) (μm)
1/ 4
G
x 3.67
6k B /
v 0
Fig maximum obtainable mean crystal size versus
relative supersaturation for 17 systems according to
table1
Processes Occurring During
Precipitation
Chemical Reaction and salting out effect
Chemicalreactionswhichinitiateprecipitationprocess
A B
kr
C
withthereactionrate
dc E
A k0 exp cAa cBb cCc
dt RT
kineticsdependonlyontheconcentrationsofreac tan tAthelastequationscanbewrittenforafirstorderreaction :
dcA dcC
kr cA
dt dt
Therateofgenerationsof sup ersaturationcanbederivedfromthisequation
d dS d cc / cc* cA
kr *
dt dt dt cC
ItisobviousthatlowconcentrationsofcomponentAandmixingareveryimpor tan tforthe lim itationandlevellingoutoftheundesired sup ersaturationpeaks
Mixing Of fluids
C '2
Is
C' 2
• The mixing process of liquid within a stirred vessel is composed of macro
mixing time Ɵmacro and Ɵ micro .
• The selectivity of the homogenous chemical reaction and the quality of the
crystalline product depend on the ratios of micro
and micro
macro reac
timeofdiffusion diff
D
AB / k 2
d
timeofreaction reac reac
In turbulent flow regime (Re=sd2ρ/η>104 ) the mixing time in the baffled
tanks with tank height H equal to tank diameter Td is given by:
Td2
macro ,turb 7.33
macro ,lam 860
The intensity of segregation Is:
1
Is
2 micro
1
0.88 ln sc
6.25
u '
3
d
Crystallization
The Crystallization process which leads to the solidifications of the product
consists of nucleation and subsequent growth.
• Nucleation
• Nucleation mechanisms are considered to be either homogeneous, or heterogeneous, where solid
surfaces catalyze the generation of nuclei.
• Primary nucleation was first considered and, in comparison to the other nucleation mechanism, it
had been shown that it was dominant in precipitation processes.
• The dimensionless rate of primary nucleation ɸ was given by with
exp( ),
ln S 2
with
B prism
•
3 SL M
3 D AB cN A
7 / 3
8kT s N A
2
SL
3
16 M
f
3 s N A kT
In Fig. 7, ɸ is plotted against the relative supersaturation σ =S - 1 =Δ c/c*.
For all the systems from Table 1, the parameter , which represents the
system properties, lies in the hatched area (10-30< ɸ <10-20;5<Г<200)can
be seen that primary nucleation only occurs in the supersaturation range
σ > 1 or S = σ + 1 > 2.
It can be seen from Fig.7 that a critical supersaturation, at which
nucleation is initiated, can be easily determined for any system with a
given Г -parameter. Contact angles < 180˚ (heterogeneous nucleation)
reduce the critical supersaturation in comparison to homogeneous
nucleation.
A special case arises when no dust particles and only crystals of the
solute are present in the solution. This represents secondary
nucleation. According to the maximum affinity between cluster and
crystal, the contact angle and the correcting factor f approach zero.
Consequently ,the critical supersaturation is strongly reduced in
comparison to primary nucleation. In systems containing some
crystals, the critical supersaturation should be reduced to zero.
However, for very small supersaturation and low growth rates of the
nuclei, the induction times may be very long.
In the case of precipitation of sparingly soluble substances, the
question arises whether nuclei are generated by primary or secondary
nucleation.
to answer this questions the critical supersaturation ccrit, hom is plotted
against the solubility c* as seen from fig.
The diagram shows that primary nucleation begins at relative supersaturation
Δ c/c* > 0.5, depending on the physical properties of the system .
Growth , Ageing and Agglomeration:
The growth of the crystals depends upon supersaturation .
The growth of the small and slowly growing crystals is often surface
integration controlled and can be described by a second order semi-empirical
relations G k c
g *
2
c
The growth rate coefficient kg, was found experimentally to be in the range 10-
12m/s < kg< 10-4m/s . The more complex the shape of the molecules, their
dipole moment and functional groups, the smaller are their growth coefficients
kg. However, the faster the crystal grows, the stronger is the tendency to
incorporate impurities.
The driving force for ageing is the difference in solubility between the crystals
of different sizes. Small crystals are dissolved and the large ones increase in
size. The speed, at which ageing occurs in saturated solutions, depends largely
on particle size x and solubility c* and may be expressed
Approximately as dissolution time t.
RTx 3
t
2
6 SL *
v DAB c
In both cases, mixing has to take place on the molecular level before
precipitation proceeds. Since many precipitation processes are conducted at
very high supersaturation, the characteristic reaction time is of the same
order of magnitude or even smaller than the mixing time. When this
situation prevails, the course of the mixing process helps to determine the
course of supersaturation. This explains why mixing conditions affect
crystal shape, purity, crystallinity, and in some cases, even the phase
modification (e.g., polymorph) that is formed.
When one wishes to produce large crystals of high crystallinity and purity,
precipitation should be conducted at low supersaturation. Therefore,
reactants should be added near areas of high mixing intensity, and as far as
possible from each other, i.e., a good dispersion of the concentrated reactant
with the reactor contents should be stimulated.
If fine particles with a narrow size distribution are desired, intense mixing
should provide rapid contact between concentrated reactants.
Recommendations for operating conditions:
The value of supersaturation Δc has to be selected between 0.01and 0.1mol/l
in order to obtain growth rates between 0.5X10-8 and 5X10-8 m/s.
The crystallizations process is very sensitive to supersaturation so it
important to avoid excessive supersaturation which is likely to be generated
at the feed inlet.
Secondary nucleations is the main source of nuclei for systems with
solubilities c* in excess of 0.5mol/l or relative supersaturations σ smaller
than 0.5.secondary nucleation largely depend upon mechanisms and fluid
dynamics in the crystallizer, as seen from
ch
w3
ch
2D
It is very important to avoid nucleation and crystallization in the hollow
shaft which would result in incrustation. Since the time required for
mixing strongly depends on the local specific power input ε the chemical
engineer is interested in the ε field of the crystallizer under discussion.
Fig 15…………………………………………………………………………………..
Fig shows a stirred vessel equipped with a 3-blade Marine type
propeller /
(d/Td =0.33), and a 2-stage-2-blade Intermig (d/Td = 0.7) .