화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.123, No.10, 2291-2295, 2001
Polymorphism in 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene crystallized from solution
An examination has been made of the role of solvent type in the definition of the polymorphic nature of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene precipitated from solution. A combination of calorimetric and structural techniques including in situ crystallization studies using synchrotron radiation has shown that the variations in polymorphic form following precipitation from solution do not arise specifically from any stereospecific guidance that the nature of the solvent might impose on the structural form. Rather the differences are linked to the variations in solubility and hence supersaturation which might build up prior to nucleation and growth and to the isolation of the metastable orthorhombic phase from the solvent. The final conclusion is that the changes fit well with Ostwald's Law of Stages with the orthorhombic form always precipitating initially followed by its conversion to the stable monoclinic form. The previously observed tendency for some solvents to yield one or the other form then becomes attributable to kinetics in solution rather than structural control. It can be associated with the solubility of the material in the solvent used and the role of this factor in a solvent-mediated phase transformation. On this basis rules can be formulated for the isolation of the metastable forms of this and similarly related polymorphic systems.