Investigations on Nucleation and Growth Kinetics of Urea Crystals from Methanol
โ Scribed by S. Boomadevi; R. Dhanasekaran; P. Ramasamy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 142 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0232-1300
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The induction period of urea in methanol has been measured experimentally by the visual observation method. The induction period, which is inversely proportional to the nucleation rate, has been used to estimate the interfacial tension between the urea crystal and the methanol solution and hence the nucleation parameters like critical radius (r*), number of molecules in the radius (i*) and Gibbs' free energy change for the formation of a critical nucleus (โG*) have been calculated. The fundamental diffusion equation is solved numerically and the concentration profiles and growth rate of urea for successive intervals of time are determined using computer simulation model. The simulation has been carried out under different experimental conditions. Single crystals of urea were grown from methanol and their second harmonic generation was observed using Nd: YAG laser.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Bulk crystallization is emerging as a new industrial operation for protein recovery. Characterization of bulk protein crystallization is more complex than protein crystallization for structural study where single crystals are grown in flow cells. This is because both nucleation and crystal growth pr
Nucleation and growth kinetics have been investigated for many crystallization systems from analysis of the steady state population density distribution of mixed suspension, mixed product removal ( MSMPR) crystallizers (Randolph and Larson, 1971). Plots of the logarithm of crystal population density
This paper reviews the work made by the group of the present author on the effect of impurities on the kinetics of crystal growth in solutions. The impurity effect is here discussed in the light of the model proposed by Kubota and Mullin [J. Crystal Growth, 152 (1995) 86], in which impurities are as