Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Phase equilibria from molecular simulation

Associated organisational unit

Electronic data

  • 2018boothroydphd

    Final published version, 3.92 MB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY-NC-ND: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Phase equilibria from molecular simulation

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Unpublished

Standard

Phase equilibria from molecular simulation. / Boothroyd, Simon.
Lancaster University, 2018. 136 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Boothroyd, S. (2018). Phase equilibria from molecular simulation. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/360

Vancouver

Boothroyd S. Phase equilibria from molecular simulation. Lancaster University, 2018. 136 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/360

Author

Boothroyd, Simon. / Phase equilibria from molecular simulation. Lancaster University, 2018. 136 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{42173d7526d542e29dba7c9b676b65d0,
title = "Phase equilibria from molecular simulation",
abstract = "Phase equilibria are at the heart of many properties of substances, such as their solubility, manufacturability, and stability. They are of significant industrial and commercial interest, perhaps most importantly to the pharmaceutical industry where drug stability and solubility are two of the largest challenges of drug development. The focus of this thesis then was to develop a molecular level understanding of phase equilibria, and produce tools and models to predict phase stability. An emphasis was given to exploring solid-solid and solid-liquid equilibria and stability. Specifically, the work presented here aimed to elucidate what drives the formation of multicomponent crystals, improve available models for exploring phase equilibria phenomena and explore solubility prediction from first principles as a potentially more powerful alternative to correlation based methods. These three fundamental areas were explored by employing molecular simulation in combination with the machinery of statistical mechanics, utilising advanced sampling methods and free energy calculations. This approach has led to the development of a foundation for understanding multicomponent crystal formation in terms of molecular affinities and packing, the characterisation of a set of soft coarse-grained potentials for use in phase equilibria studies, which overcome the main limitations of the most widely used potential, and finally, the development of a novel method for solubility prediction from first principles. Here, this novel method was successfully applied to an ionic (aqueous sodium chloride) and small molecular (urea in methanol and aqueous urea) system. In the future, these results are expected to lead to a set of guidelines for predicting (and perhaps prohibiting) multicomponent crystal formation, the development of a higher class of coarse-grained transferable force field with utility in studying phase equilibria, and powerful approach for predicting solubility of even large, flexible molecules (such as pharmaceuticals).",
keywords = "molecular simulation, phase equilibria, statistical mechanics",
author = "Simon Boothroyd",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/360",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Phase equilibria from molecular simulation

AU - Boothroyd, Simon

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Phase equilibria are at the heart of many properties of substances, such as their solubility, manufacturability, and stability. They are of significant industrial and commercial interest, perhaps most importantly to the pharmaceutical industry where drug stability and solubility are two of the largest challenges of drug development. The focus of this thesis then was to develop a molecular level understanding of phase equilibria, and produce tools and models to predict phase stability. An emphasis was given to exploring solid-solid and solid-liquid equilibria and stability. Specifically, the work presented here aimed to elucidate what drives the formation of multicomponent crystals, improve available models for exploring phase equilibria phenomena and explore solubility prediction from first principles as a potentially more powerful alternative to correlation based methods. These three fundamental areas were explored by employing molecular simulation in combination with the machinery of statistical mechanics, utilising advanced sampling methods and free energy calculations. This approach has led to the development of a foundation for understanding multicomponent crystal formation in terms of molecular affinities and packing, the characterisation of a set of soft coarse-grained potentials for use in phase equilibria studies, which overcome the main limitations of the most widely used potential, and finally, the development of a novel method for solubility prediction from first principles. Here, this novel method was successfully applied to an ionic (aqueous sodium chloride) and small molecular (urea in methanol and aqueous urea) system. In the future, these results are expected to lead to a set of guidelines for predicting (and perhaps prohibiting) multicomponent crystal formation, the development of a higher class of coarse-grained transferable force field with utility in studying phase equilibria, and powerful approach for predicting solubility of even large, flexible molecules (such as pharmaceuticals).

AB - Phase equilibria are at the heart of many properties of substances, such as their solubility, manufacturability, and stability. They are of significant industrial and commercial interest, perhaps most importantly to the pharmaceutical industry where drug stability and solubility are two of the largest challenges of drug development. The focus of this thesis then was to develop a molecular level understanding of phase equilibria, and produce tools and models to predict phase stability. An emphasis was given to exploring solid-solid and solid-liquid equilibria and stability. Specifically, the work presented here aimed to elucidate what drives the formation of multicomponent crystals, improve available models for exploring phase equilibria phenomena and explore solubility prediction from first principles as a potentially more powerful alternative to correlation based methods. These three fundamental areas were explored by employing molecular simulation in combination with the machinery of statistical mechanics, utilising advanced sampling methods and free energy calculations. This approach has led to the development of a foundation for understanding multicomponent crystal formation in terms of molecular affinities and packing, the characterisation of a set of soft coarse-grained potentials for use in phase equilibria studies, which overcome the main limitations of the most widely used potential, and finally, the development of a novel method for solubility prediction from first principles. Here, this novel method was successfully applied to an ionic (aqueous sodium chloride) and small molecular (urea in methanol and aqueous urea) system. In the future, these results are expected to lead to a set of guidelines for predicting (and perhaps prohibiting) multicomponent crystal formation, the development of a higher class of coarse-grained transferable force field with utility in studying phase equilibria, and powerful approach for predicting solubility of even large, flexible molecules (such as pharmaceuticals).

KW - molecular simulation

KW - phase equilibria

KW - statistical mechanics

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/360

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/360

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -