The atomic force microscope has been developed and used to image arrays of molecules at the (001) and (100) faces of aspirin crystals in water and in air. Lattice spacings composed of methyl groups and the part of the phenyl groups on the surface of the (001) in water, are consistent with X-ray diffraction data. The surface of (100) face which shows most perfect cleavage in bulk, is more difficult to image. This initial success in imaging at drug crystal surfaces clarified the different structural behavior at the submolecular level for three crystal faces, and the close relationship to the differences in the dissolution velocity. © 1991, The Pharmaceutical Society of Japan. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Masak, N., Machida, K., Kado, H., Yokoyama, K., & Tohtya, T. (1991). Atomic force microscope images of the surfaces of aspirin crystals at submolecular resolution. Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 39(7), 1899–1901. https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.39.1899
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