Abstract
Salts and cocrystals are multicomponent crystals that can be distinguished by the location of the proton between an acid and a base. At the salt end of the spectrum proton transfer is complete, and on the opposite end proton transfer is absent in cocrystals. However, for acid-base complexes with similar pK a values, the extent of proton transfer in the solid state is not predictable and a continuum exists between the two extremes. For these systems, both the ΔpKa value (pKa of base - pKa of acid) and the crystalline environment determine the extent of proton transfer. A total of 20 complexes containing theophylline and guest molecules with ΔpKa values less than 3 have been prepared, resulting in 13 cocrystals, five salts, and two complexes with mixed ionization states based on IR spectroscopy and single-crystal diffraction data. We propose modifications to the ΔpKa rule for selecting salt screen counterions that focus on the discovery of solid forms with useful physical properties rather than an arbitrary cutoff value for ΔpKa. © 2007 American Chemical Society.
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Childs, S. L., Stahly, G. P., & Park, A. (2007). The salt-cocrystal continuum: The influence of crystal structure on ionization state. Molecular Pharmaceutics, 4(3), 323–338. https://doi.org/10.1021/mp0601345
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