Abstract

Dicarboxylic acids (DiAs) are probably among of the most popular cocrystal formers. Due to the high hydrophilicity and nontoxicity, they are promising solubilizers of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). Although DiAs appear to be highly capable of forming multicomponent crystals with various compounds, some systems reported in the literature are physical mixtures of the solid state without forming stable intermolecular complex. In this study, an accurate cocrystal screening model was developed based on the MARSplines (Multivariate Adaptive Regression Splines) methodology and easily computable descriptors driven simply from the SMILES codes. Additionally, the data set was enriched with several new mixtures of sulfamethazine. As demonstrated, this sulfonamide can form new multicomponent crystals with oxalic, malonic, and maleic acids. In the case of the latter system, a significant 10-fold solubility advantage was observed. The whole data set comprised 608 cocrystals and 104 systems hardy miscible in ...

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