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The copper(II) ion in [Cu(C5H5N3O)2(CF3SO3)2]·H2O lies on a center of symmetry and is coordinated by two pyrazine­carbox­amide ligands in a square-planar geometry with Cu-O and Cu-N distances of 1.9445 (14) and 1.9680 (17) Å, respectively. The Cu(C5H5N3O)2 unit is approximately planar, with an average atomic deviation of 0.057 (4) Å from the least-squares plane. Each copper center is further coordinated, in the axial direction, by two symmetry-equivalent O atoms from tri­fluoro­methane­sulfonate anions with a Cu-O distance of 2.4871 (17) Å, giving the copper(II) ion a Jahn-Teller distorted-octahedral geometry.

Supporting information

cif

Crystallographic Information File (CIF) https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600536802003252/cm6000sup1.cif
Contains datablocks I, global

hkl

Structure factor file (CIF format) https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600536802003252/cm6000Isup2.hkl
Contains datablock I

CCDC reference: 182592

Key indicators

  • Single-crystal X-ray study
  • T = 295 K
  • Mean [sigma](C-C) = 0.003 Å
  • R factor = 0.037
  • wR factor = 0.105
  • Data-to-parameter ratio = 15.3

checkCIF results

No syntax errors found

ADDSYM reports no extra symmetry








Comment top

The multifunctionality of the pyrazine-2-carboxamide (pyca) ligand offers interesting possibilities in crystal engineering, owing to its chelating properties in addition to its potential as a linker molecule between metal centers. In this contribution, we present the crystal structure of bis(pyrazine-2-carboxamide)bis(trifluoromethanesulphonato)copper(II) monohydrate, (I). The copper(II) ion lies on a center of symmetry and is coordinated by two pyca ligands in a square-planar geometry (Figure 1). The Cu2+ ion chelates the pyca ligand via N1 and O1 to form a five-membered chelate ring. The N1—O1—Cu1—N1i—O1i moiety [symmetry code (i): -x, -y, -z] is strictly planar. The average atomic deviation from the least-squares plane defined by all the non-H atoms of the pyca ligand is 0.024 (4) Å. The ligand plane forms an angle of 5.83 (9) ° with the former plane, which results in a copper out-of-plane distance from the pyca ligand of 0.1422 (1) Å.

The changes of the intermolecular geometry of the pyca molecule upon coordination with the Cu2+ cation are insignificant, with all distances within one standard deviation of the average value for the four crystalline polymorphs of pyca structurally determined (Allen & Kennard, 1993). Each copper center is further coordinated, in the axial direction, by two symmetry-equivalent oxygen atoms from trifluoromethanesulfonate anions. The geometry of the copper ion can thus be considered as a Jahn–Teller distorted octahedron. The water molecule lies on a twofold axis and forms four hydrogen bonds by accepting two symmetry-equivalent protons from the amide groups and by donating two relatively weak, equivalent hydrogen bonds to trifluoromethanesulfonate oxygen atoms. The hydrogen-bond pattern is completed by a relatively weak hydrogen bond between the amide group and the trifluoromethanesulfonate O11 atom. The packing in the unit cell, viewed along the b axis, is shown in Fig. 2.

In the closely related bis(pyca)copper(II) perchlorate (Sekisaki, 1973), the copper center is chelated by two symmetry-equivalent pyca ligands with Cu—O and Cu—N distances of 1.964 (4) and 1.999 (6) Å, respectively. In this case, however, the perchlorate anions are non-coordinating, and the axial positions of the copper ion are occupied by the ring N atom, corresponding to N4 of the title compound, of adjacent Cu(pyca)2 complexes, resulting in a two-dimensional square-grid network. In acetylacetonato(pyca)copper(II) perchlorate monohydrate (Zhong et al., 1990), which has a similar bidentate coordination mode to the title compound, the Cu—O and Cu—N distances are 2.008 (6) and 1.992 (3) Å, respectively. Interestingly, in this case the perchlorate anions occupy axial positions, with Cu—O distances of 2.543 (9) and 2.871 (4) Å, and each perchlorate anion bridges two adjacent copper centers to form extended chains.

Experimental top

A mixture of Cu(H2O)6(CF3SO3)2 (1 mmol) and pyrazine-3-carboxamide (4 mmol) in water/ethanol (50:50) was stirred while boiling. The solution was allowed to evaporate slowly, which afforded X-ray quality crystals. The chosen crystals were coated with a hydrocarbon oil and mounted on a glass fibre

Computing details top

Data collection: SMART (1998); cell refinement: SMART and SAINT (1998); data reduction: SAINT; program(s) used to solve structure: SHELXTL (1998); program(s) used to refine structure: SHELXTL; molecular graphics: SHELXTL; software used to prepare material for publication: SHELXTL.

Figures top
[Figure 1] Fig. 1. ORTEP (Johnson, 1976) drawing of the molecular structure of the title compound, with displacement ellipsoids drawn at the 30% probability level for all non-H atoms.
[Figure 2] Fig. 2. The packing in the unit cell, viewed along the b axis. Hydrogen atoms and oxygen and flourine atoms of the trifluoromethanesulfonate anions are omitted for clarity.
bis(pyrazine-2-caboxamide)bis(trifluoromethanesulphonato)copper(II) monohydrate top
Crystal data top
[Cu(C5H5N3O)2(CF3SO3)2]·H2OF(000) = 1252
Mr = 625.94Dx = 1.794 Mg m3
Orthorhombic, PbcnMo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å
Hall symbol: -P 2n 2abCell parameters from 1907 reflections
a = 8.9014 (7) Åθ = 2.2–28.0°
b = 13.7809 (11) ŵ = 1.23 mm1
c = 18.8910 (15) ÅT = 295 K
V = 2317.3 (3) Å3Prism, blue
Z = 40.30 × 0.25 × 0.18 mm
Data collection top
Bruker SMART CCD
diffractometer
2738 independent reflections
Radiation source: fine-focus sealed tube1907 reflections with I > 2σ(I)
Graphite monochromatorRint = 0.035
ω scansθmax = 28.0°, θmin = 2.2°
Absorption correction: multi-scan
(SADABS; Bruker, 1998)
h = 1111
Tmin = 0.710, Tmax = 0.809k = 1818
13434 measured reflectionsl = 2416
Refinement top
Refinement on F2Secondary atom site location: difference Fourier map
Least-squares matrix: fullHydrogen site location: inferred from neighbouring sites
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.037H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement
wR(F2) = 0.105 w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0773P)2]
where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3
S = 0.89(Δ/σ)max < 0.001
2738 reflectionsΔρmax = 0.53 e Å3
179 parametersΔρmin = 0.54 e Å3
0 restraintsExtinction correction: SHELXL, Fc*=kFc[1+0.001xFc2λ3/sin(2θ)]-1/4
Primary atom site location: structure-invariant direct methodsExtinction coefficient: 0.0034 (5)
Crystal data top
[Cu(C5H5N3O)2(CF3SO3)2]·H2OV = 2317.3 (3) Å3
Mr = 625.94Z = 4
Orthorhombic, PbcnMo Kα radiation
a = 8.9014 (7) ŵ = 1.23 mm1
b = 13.7809 (11) ÅT = 295 K
c = 18.8910 (15) Å0.30 × 0.25 × 0.18 mm
Data collection top
Bruker SMART CCD
diffractometer
2738 independent reflections
Absorption correction: multi-scan
(SADABS; Bruker, 1998)
1907 reflections with I > 2σ(I)
Tmin = 0.710, Tmax = 0.809Rint = 0.035
13434 measured reflections
Refinement top
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.0370 restraints
wR(F2) = 0.105H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement
S = 0.89Δρmax = 0.53 e Å3
2738 reflectionsΔρmin = 0.54 e Å3
179 parameters
Special details top

Experimental. A hemisphere of data (1291 frames) was collected for each structure (0.3° frame width) with 40 s exposure time. The crystal-detector distance was 4.74 cm. Water- and amide-H atoms were located on difference Fourier maps and isotropically refined with no restraints. Carbon-H atoms were generated in ideal positions and were refined as riding on their respective C atoms.

Geometry. All e.s.d.'s (except the e.s.d. in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell e.s.d.'s are taken into account individually in the estimation of e.s.d.'s in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between e.s.d.'s in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell e.s.d.'s is used for estimating e.s.d.'s involving l.s. planes.

Refinement. Refinement of F2 against ALL reflections. The weighted R-factor wR and goodness of fit S are based on F2, conventional R-factors R are based on F, with F set to zero for negative F2. The threshold expression of F2 > σ(F2) is used only for calculating R-factors(gt) etc. and is not relevant to the choice of reflections for refinement. R-factors based on F2 are statistically about twice as large as those based on F, and R- factors based on ALL data will be even larger.

Fractional atomic coordinates and isotropic or equivalent isotropic displacement parameters (Å2) top
xyzUiso*/Ueq
Cu10.00000.00000.00000.03429 (14)
O10.04724 (18)0.06811 (10)0.08735 (7)0.0350 (3)
O20.50000.2722 (2)0.25000.0551 (7)
N10.10327 (19)0.10799 (12)0.04774 (9)0.0325 (4)
N20.1408 (2)0.04973 (16)0.19627 (10)0.0398 (5)
N40.2283 (3)0.24654 (14)0.13453 (11)0.0564 (6)
C20.1308 (3)0.19622 (16)0.02345 (12)0.0410 (5)
H20.10760.21190.02320.049*
C30.1943 (3)0.26512 (17)0.06748 (13)0.0497 (6)
H30.21390.32660.04950.060*
C50.2009 (3)0.15719 (17)0.15810 (12)0.0444 (6)
H50.22390.14180.20480.053*
C60.1392 (2)0.08705 (15)0.11497 (11)0.0314 (4)
C70.1054 (2)0.01598 (14)0.13424 (11)0.0308 (4)
S100.30289 (7)0.07843 (5)0.11977 (3)0.04407 (19)
O100.4075 (3)0.1563 (2)0.12653 (13)0.0913 (8)
O110.2040 (2)0.06537 (15)0.17885 (9)0.0657 (5)
O120.2302 (2)0.07279 (14)0.05245 (8)0.0560 (5)
C100.4188 (5)0.0307 (4)0.1209 (2)0.0909 (12)
F100.5260 (4)0.0222 (3)0.0741 (2)0.1633 (16)
F110.4921 (3)0.0372 (3)0.1791 (2)0.1665 (14)
F120.3395 (5)0.1058 (2)0.1120 (2)0.199 (2)
H1B0.171 (3)0.0123 (18)0.2264 (15)0.038 (7)*
H1A0.121 (3)0.109 (2)0.2014 (14)0.049 (8)*
H2B0.486 (4)0.238 (3)0.2174 (17)0.083 (12)*
Atomic displacement parameters (Å2) top
U11U22U33U12U13U23
Cu10.0485 (3)0.0261 (2)0.0283 (2)0.00458 (15)0.00822 (15)0.00020 (13)
O10.0467 (8)0.0272 (7)0.0311 (8)0.0013 (6)0.0067 (6)0.0007 (6)
O20.0707 (19)0.0436 (15)0.0512 (17)0.0000.0115 (14)0.000
N10.0369 (9)0.0286 (9)0.0319 (9)0.0028 (7)0.0022 (7)0.0010 (6)
N20.0557 (13)0.0310 (10)0.0327 (10)0.0034 (9)0.0088 (9)0.0012 (8)
N40.0833 (17)0.0378 (12)0.0482 (12)0.0169 (11)0.0156 (11)0.0006 (8)
C20.0519 (14)0.0359 (11)0.0352 (11)0.0078 (10)0.0035 (10)0.0050 (9)
C30.0667 (16)0.0322 (12)0.0502 (14)0.0130 (11)0.0067 (12)0.0047 (10)
C50.0587 (14)0.0394 (12)0.0351 (12)0.0095 (11)0.0100 (10)0.0003 (9)
C60.0325 (10)0.0311 (10)0.0305 (10)0.0004 (9)0.0004 (8)0.0009 (8)
C70.0308 (10)0.0303 (10)0.0314 (10)0.0030 (8)0.0002 (8)0.0004 (8)
S100.0451 (3)0.0534 (4)0.0338 (3)0.0106 (3)0.0002 (2)0.0030 (2)
O100.0956 (17)0.0975 (18)0.0809 (17)0.0526 (15)0.0113 (13)0.0001 (13)
O110.0740 (13)0.0813 (15)0.0419 (10)0.0027 (11)0.0177 (9)0.0049 (9)
O120.0518 (11)0.0777 (13)0.0386 (9)0.0065 (9)0.0064 (8)0.0100 (8)
C100.077 (3)0.117 (3)0.078 (3)0.032 (3)0.006 (2)0.002 (2)
F100.134 (2)0.224 (4)0.131 (3)0.089 (3)0.050 (2)0.009 (2)
F110.132 (2)0.243 (4)0.124 (3)0.070 (2)0.0428 (18)0.057 (3)
F120.210 (4)0.0652 (17)0.322 (5)0.043 (2)0.100 (3)0.021 (2)
Geometric parameters (Å, º) top
Cu1—O11.9445 (14)C2—H20.9300
Cu1—N11.9680 (17)C3—H30.9300
Cu1—O122.4871 (17)C5—C61.378 (3)
O1—C71.253 (2)C5—H50.9300
O2—H2B0.79 (3)C6—C71.496 (3)
N1—C21.323 (3)S10—O121.4291 (17)
N1—C61.341 (3)S10—O111.4330 (18)
N2—C71.299 (3)S10—O101.426 (2)
N2—H1B0.81 (3)S10—C101.824 (5)
N2—H1A0.84 (3)C10—F121.264 (6)
N4—C31.327 (3)C10—F111.281 (5)
N4—C51.332 (3)C10—F101.306 (5)
C2—C31.383 (3)
O1i—Cu1—O1180.00 (8)N4—C5—C6121.6 (2)
O1i—Cu1—N197.17 (6)N4—C5—H5119.2
O1—Cu1—N182.83 (6)C6—C5—H5119.2
N1—Cu1—N1i180.00 (11)N1—C6—C5120.26 (19)
O1—Cu1—O12i88.01 (6)N1—C6—C7112.74 (17)
N1—Cu1—O12i95.90 (7)C5—C6—C7127.0 (2)
O1—Cu1—O1291.99 (6)O1—C7—N2122.17 (19)
N1—Cu1—O1284.10 (7)O1—C7—C6117.09 (18)
O12i—Cu1—O12180.00 (12)N2—C7—C6120.7 (2)
C7—O1—Cu1114.37 (13)O12—S10—O11114.07 (12)
C2—N1—C6118.82 (18)O12—S10—O10114.60 (13)
C2—N1—Cu1128.53 (15)O11—S10—O10115.21 (14)
C6—N1—Cu1112.50 (13)O12—S10—C10102.81 (17)
C7—N2—H1B119.0 (17)O11—S10—C10103.59 (17)
C7—N2—H1A113.6 (18)O10—S10—C10104.5 (2)
H1B—N2—H1A127 (3)S10—O12—Cu1138.56 (10)
C3—N4—C5117.1 (2)F12—C10—F11110.0 (5)
N1—C2—C3119.9 (2)F12—C10—F10113.1 (5)
N1—C2—H2120.1F11—C10—F10102.4 (4)
C3—C2—H2120.1F12—C10—S10110.9 (3)
N4—C3—C2122.3 (2)F11—C10—S10110.8 (4)
N4—C3—H3118.8F10—C10—S10109.4 (4)
C2—C3—H3118.8
Symmetry code: (i) x, y, z.
Hydrogen-bond geometry (Å, º) top
D—H···AD—HH···AD···AD—H···A
N2—H1B···O11ii0.81 (3)2.11 (3)2.898 (3)164 (3)
N2—H1A···O2iii0.84 (3)2.16 (3)2.936 (3)153 (2)
O2—H2B···O100.79 (3)2.17 (3)2.945 (3)169 (3)
Symmetry codes: (ii) x, y, z+1/2; (iii) x+1/2, y1/2, z+1/2.

Experimental details

Crystal data
Chemical formula[Cu(C5H5N3O)2(CF3SO3)2]·H2O
Mr625.94
Crystal system, space groupOrthorhombic, Pbcn
Temperature (K)295
a, b, c (Å)8.9014 (7), 13.7809 (11), 18.8910 (15)
V3)2317.3 (3)
Z4
Radiation typeMo Kα
µ (mm1)1.23
Crystal size (mm)0.30 × 0.25 × 0.18
Data collection
DiffractometerBruker SMART CCD
diffractometer
Absorption correctionMulti-scan
(SADABS; Bruker, 1998)
Tmin, Tmax0.710, 0.809
No. of measured, independent and
observed [I > 2σ(I)] reflections
13434, 2738, 1907
Rint0.035
(sin θ/λ)max1)0.661
Refinement
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)], wR(F2), S 0.037, 0.105, 0.89
No. of reflections2738
No. of parameters179
H-atom treatmentH atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement
Δρmax, Δρmin (e Å3)0.53, 0.54

Computer programs: SMART (1998), SMART and SAINT (1998), SAINT, SHELXTL (1998), SHELXTL.

Selected geometric parameters (Å, º) top
Cu1—O11.9445 (14)O1—C71.253 (2)
Cu1—N11.9680 (17)N2—C71.299 (3)
Cu1—O122.4871 (17)C6—C71.496 (3)
O1i—Cu1—N197.17 (6)N1—Cu1—O1284.10 (7)
O1—Cu1—N182.83 (6)C7—O1—Cu1114.37 (13)
O1—Cu1—O12i88.01 (6)O1—C7—N2122.17 (19)
N1—Cu1—O12i95.90 (7)O1—C7—C6117.09 (18)
O1—Cu1—O1291.99 (6)
Symmetry code: (i) x, y, z.
Hydrogen-bond geometry (Å, º) top
D—H···AD—HH···AD···AD—H···A
N2—H1B···O11ii0.81 (3)2.11 (3)2.898 (3)164 (3)
N2—H1A···O2iii0.84 (3)2.16 (3)2.936 (3)153 (2)
O2—H2B···O100.79 (3)2.17 (3)2.945 (3)169 (3)
Symmetry codes: (ii) x, y, z+1/2; (iii) x+1/2, y1/2, z+1/2.
 

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