Acta Crystallographica Section B

Structural Science

Volume 61, Part 6 (December 2005)


research papers



Acta Cryst. (2005). B61, 689-699    [ doi:10.1107/S0108768105031356 ]

The unusual phases of anhydrous and hydrated pinacol

X. Hao, S. Parkin and C. P. Brock

Abstract: The structure of highly twinned pinacol (2,3-dimethyl-2,3-butanediol) monohydrate, the existence of which has been known since 1922, has been determined, and the structures of anhydrous pinacol and its two other known hydrates have been reinvestigated. All the phases are unusual. The anhydrous phase [Jeffrey & Robbins (1978). Acta Cryst. B34, 3817-3820] is exceptional among molecular crystals in having molecules located on three different symmetry sites (1, \overline 1 and 2). A hexagonal form of pinacol originally described as a second polymorph [Dahlqvist & Sillanpää (2000). J. Mol. Struct. 524, 141-149] has been shown to be a solvate of uncertain composition that is very loosely packed. Pinacol hexahydrate, which was originally reported as tetragonal and highly disordered [Kim & Jeffrey (1970). J. Chem. Phys. 53, 3610-3615], appears to be described better as having an orthorhombic structure that is both disordered and twinned; the diffraction pattern at 90 K shows structured diffuse scattering that suggests short-range correlations of disordered molecules. The occurrence of this unusual set of structures is attributed to the combination of the hydrogen-bonding requirements of the pinacol molecule with its small size and limited conformational flexibility.

Keywords: unusual phases; pinacol; twinning; polymorphism; disorder; hydrogen bonding.


pdfdisplay filedownload file

Portable Document Format (PDF) file (988.0 kbytes)
Pictures of all the crystals except for the hexagonal phase


Notes:

To open or display or play some files, you may need to set your browser up to use the appropriate software. See the full list of file types for an explanation of the different file types and their related mime types and, where available links to sites from where the appropriate software may be obtained.

The download button will force most browsers to prompt for a file name to store the data on your hard disk.

Where possible, images are represented by thumbnails.

 bibliographic record in  format

  Find reference:   Volume   Page   
  Search:     From   to      Advanced search

Copyright © International Union of Crystallography
IUCr Webmaster