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ies involving isothermal (8) and nonisothermal (15) TP crystallization in sesame oil. This cooling rate is in line with theslow cooling rate achieved by industrial crystallizers.Microscopy studies. Crystal morphology of the PS/sesameoil solution was obtained under the same isothermal conditionsutilized in the DSC studies using a polarized microscope withcamera (model BX60F/PMC35; Olympus Optical Co., Ltd.,Tokyo, Japan). The experimental setup has been described previously (8). After induction of nucleation, pictures of the crystals were taken as a function of time.Calculation of kinetic parameters.The isothermal DSC datawere utilized to evaluate the kinetics of TP crystallization inthe PS/sesame oil solutions using the Avrami equation (18):−ln(1 −F) = ztn[2]where Fis the fraction of crystal transformed at timet, nis theindex of the crystallization reaction or Avrami exponent, and zis the rate constant of crystallization, which depends on themagnitude of n,the nucleation rate, and the linear growth rateof the spherulite (19). The value of Fwas calculated by integration of the isothermal DSC crystallization curves as described by Henderson (20) utilizing Equation 3 and accordingto Figure 1:F= ∆Ht/∆Htot[3]where ∆Ht is the area under the DSC crystallization curve fromt= Tito t= t, and ∆Htotis the total area under the crystallizationcurve. The values of ∆Htand ∆Htotwere calculated with theDSC software library. In fact, Fis a reduced crystallinity sinceit associates an instant crystallinity to the total one achievedunder the experimental conditions. Then, Fvaries from 0 to 1.The value of nwas calculated from the slope of the linearregression of the plot of ln[−ln(1 −F)] vs. ln(t) using values offractional crystallization between 0.25 and 0.75 (18). The nvalue describes the crystal growth mechanism. Thus, a crystallization process with a n= 4 follows a polyhedral crystalgrowth mechanism, a value of n= 3 represents a plate-likecrystal growth mechanism, and a n= 2 indicates a linear crystal growth (19).When nucleation occurs from the melt the rate of nucleation,J, depends on the activation free energy to develop a stable nucleus, ∆Gc,and the activation free energy for molecular diffusion, ∆Gd. The Fisher-Turnbull equation (Eq. 4) describes thissituation and was utilized, according to Ng (21) and Herrera etal.(22), to evaluate the magnitude of ∆GcJ= (NkT/h)exp(−∆Gc/kT)exp (−∆Gd/kT) [4]where Jis the rate of nucleation that is inversely proportionalto Ti, Nis the number of molecules per mole, kis the Boltzmanconstant, Tis absolute temperature, and his Planck’s constant.In a spherical nucleus, ∆Gcis associated with the effective supercooling, ∆T, and the surface free energy at the crystal/meltinterface, σ, through the following equation:∆Gc= (16/3)πσ3
(TM
o
)
2
/(∆H)
2
(∆T)
2
[5]
where (16/3)πresults from the spherical shape attributed to the
nucleus and ∆H is the heat of fusion. The effective supercooling, (T
M
o
−T), is the difference between the equilibrium melting temperature, T
M
o
, and the isothermal temperature of crystallization, T. The magnitude of T
M
o
was established following
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