Yes, that's the idea.
Some substances separate spontaneously, and I hope Czochralski helps here as well, because it controls precisely where crystallization occurs and at what speed. The resulting big single-crystal is much purer, as the strong selectivity of crystallization produces it full effect, without crystal joints where impurities find a harbour.
For semiconductors, the growth tuned to months for 2m produces crystals with a packing perfection unseen elsewhere; supposedly not needed here.
It is my (limited!) understanding that most substances pack regularly one S molecule alternating with one R molecule in their crystal, as this is the combination that fits best, but for some other substances, S molecules pack better with S only, and R with R only, so in a plate they crystallize to a mix of separated S and R crystals.
Pasteur first sorted out the individual crystals
, then triggered the separation using two enantiomeric seeds
. This can be the method still in use now, or the industry has a better one, I don't know.
Czochralski - using two enantiomeric seeds, yes - would bring to these special substances the advantage of crystallizing only where desired and under controlled conditions. Bridgeman is one other process.
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I believe to understand (do I?) that these special substances are the only
entry gate for technology into chiral synthesis. Special acids that separate spontaneously can be sorted out and then serve to purify amines that wouldn't spontaneously; special amines purify acids; and so on. Hence separating first the special substaces is useful, and I hope Czochralski helps here.
Next, when separating esters, a controlled crystallization by Czochralski can help as well - though there are other methods.
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Is a
chiral solvent useful? As a drawback, it needs bigger amounts than an esterification; recycling looks possible in both cases.
It depends on the solvent's chiral selectivity. If it dissolves the S product far better, then R will crystallize first and can be harvested, and S later and can be harvested, before the solvent is reused.
Though, as I figure that a solvent molecule has few contact points with the solute, chiral selectivity is less probable than in a crystal where contact points between the molecules are numerous.