Maximising your Crystalline

  • Crystallization
  • 27 February 2025, Online

About the webinar

The Crystalline is a powerful tool in research and development workflows. It allows for obtaining greater information at small scale, thus reducing timelines and material usage. The instrument makes it possible to capture real time particle size distribution and morphology, as well as collect solubility and metastable zone width information.

In order to maximize the information generated by the Crystalline, the user can adapt various options and settings during the experiments. In this webinar, we explain how you can best plan experiments, change instrument settings and analysis data, in order to generate the insights you need in your research.

The webinar is designed for Crystalline V2 users who want to make the most out of their instrument capabilities, as well as Crystalline V1 users or non-users who would like to understand the benefits the V2 can bring to their lab.

Topics covered:
  • How to program an experiment
  • How to use the cameras
  • Measuring solubility and how to process data
  • Advanced analysis feature and how to program it

Watch the webinar video recording using the form on this page or download the webinar presentation slides from the Publications section.

Presenter

Thomas Kendall

Application Specialist at Technobis

Thomas has 9 years of experience in solid form and crystallization development in the pharmaceutical sector. He earned his PhD in Chemical Engineering with CMAC at the University of Strathclyde, investigating nucleation mechanisms in pharma systems. He previously worked for Pharmorphix (part of Johnson Matthey) as a solid form scientist investigating customer compounds in pharma and agro sector.  With extensive experience in polymorph, salt, and co-crystal screening, as well as crystallization development using process analytical technologies, experiments, and modelling software up to kilogram scale, Thomas has authored several patents, webinars, and a book chapter on solid form and crystallization development.

Watch the webinar recording