Abstract

A novel strategy utilizing the quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) was developed for the in situ discrimination of polymorphic nucleation (form-I and form-II) and phase transformation of sulfamerazine (SMZ) in cooling crystallization. According to Ostwald's rule of stages, metastable form-I of SMZ is first nucleated and then shifted to stable form-II by solution-mediated phase transformation. Through surface modification with the self-assembled monolayer technique of a functional group, QCM distinctively detects the formation of the two polymorphs. The results indicated that –NH2 (among the several functional groups tested) selectively accommodated stable form-II on the QCM sensor's surface and completely prevented the adsorption of metastable form-I on the surface. Therefore, the–NH2-terminated QCM detected the formation of form-I only using the solution viscosity variation on the surface. However, it monitored the nucleation and growth of form-II via the solid mass change on the surface during the phase transformation of form-I to form-II. This strategy suggests a new and precise solution for in situ discrimination of SMZ polymorphs and their phase transformation.

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