Abstract
Solid-state reaction of the active pharmaceutical ingredient theophylline with citric acid is a well-established example of a mechanochemical reaction leading to a model pharmaceutical cocrystal. Here, classical force field molecular dynamics was employed to investigate molecular mixing and structural distortion that take place upon mechanically driven indentation of a citric acid nanoparticle upon a slab of crystalline theophylline. Through non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations, a 6 nm diameter nanoparticle of citric acid was introduced onto an open (001) surface of a theophylline crystal, varying both the angle of incidence of the nanoparticle between 15◦ and 90◦ and the indentation speed between 1ms−1 and 16ms−1. This theoretical study enabled the evaluation of how these two parameters promote molecular mixing and overall structural deformation upon mechanical contract of theophylline and citric acid, both of which are important parameters underlying mechanochemical cocrystallisation. The results show that the angle of incidence plays a key role in the molecular transfer ability between the two species and in the structural disruption of the initially spherical nanoparticle. Changing the indentation speed, however, did not lead to a discernible trend in molecular mixing, highlighting the importance of the incident angle in mechanochemical events.
Supplementary materials
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Supplementary Information
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Details of computational methods, and additional computational datya analyses.
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