Solving the Computational Puzzle: Toward a Pragmatic Pathway for Modeling Low-Energy Vibrational Modes of Pharmaceutical Crystals

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Five pharmaceutically relevant compounds with increasing molecular complexity, benzoic acid, diphenylacetic acid, L-tyrosine, celecoxib (form III), and carvedilol (form II), were investigated using a combination of low-frequency Raman (LFR) spectroscopy measurements and theoretical solid-state density functional theory (DFT) calculations. L-Tyrosine, specifically, was investigated in more detail to evaluate the effect and rationale for using specific computational parameters. The experimental data were used to validate the DFT simulations by probing the spectral dynamics of the low-energy vibrational modes in a broad temperature range. Principal component analysis (PCA) and individual peak analysis were also used to further elucidate temperature-induced changes. Given the nature of the conducted theoretical calculations, LFR measurements in a cold environment proved especially useful to accurately assess their quality due to complex, temperature-induced spectral dynamics for most of the investigated compounds (especially, L-tyrosine).

Original languageEnglish
JournalCrystal Growth & Design
Volume20
Issue number10
Pages (from-to)6947-6955
ISSN1528-7483
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • TRIPLE-ZETA VALENCE, NEUTRON-DIFFRACTION, RAMAN-SPECTROSCOPY, BENZOIC-ACID, L-TYROSINE, BASIS-SETS, TEMPERATURE, STABILITY, COCRYSTALS, COMPONENTS

ID: 252304289