research communications
2-Cyano-2-isonitrosoacetamide–3,4-dimethylpyrazole (1/1): a
of two molecules with agrochemical activitiesaInorganic Chemistry Department, National Taras Shevchenko University of Kyiv, Volodymyrska Str. 64/13, 01601 Kyiv, Ukraine, and bInstitute of Inorganic Chemistry, Leipzig University, Johannisallee 29, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
*Correspondence e-mail: dk@univ.kiev.ua
In the structure of the title 3H3N3O2·C5H8N2, the components are linked by a set of directional O—H⋯N, N—H⋯O, N—H⋯N and C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds to yield a two-dimensional mono-periodic arrangement. The structure propagates in the third dimension by extensive π–π stacking interactions of nearly parallel molecules of the two components, following an alternating sequence. The primary structure-defining interaction is very strong oxime-OH donor to pyrazole-N acceptor hydrogen bond [O⋯N = 2.587 (2) Å], while the significance of weaker hydrogen bonds and π–π stacking interactions is comparable. The distinct structural roles of different kinds of interactions agree with the results of a Hirshfeld surface analysis and calculated interaction energies. The title compound provides insights into co-crystals of active agrochemical molecules and features the rational integration in one structure of a fungicide, C3H3N3O2, and a second active component, C5H8N2, known for alleviation the toxic effects of fungicides on plants. The material appears to be well suited for practical uses, being non-volatile, air-stable, water-soluble, but neither hygroscopic nor efflorescent.
CKeywords: crystal structure; 2-cyano-2-isonitrosoacetamide; 3,4-dimethylpyrazole; co-crystals; hydrogen bonding.
CCDC reference: 2343837
1. Chemical context
Co-crystallization provides valuable possibilities to enhance the properties of materials, particularly with regard to melting point and volatility, solubility, hygroscopicity and long-term storage stability (Karimi-Jafari et al., 2018). This strategy is important primarily to the chemistry of pharmaceuticals (Duggirala et al., 2016), but the significance of co-crystals may be recognized in a broader context of applications, including the preparation of solid explosives (Bolton et al., 2012) and pigments (Bučar et al., 2013). In addition, the development of co-crystals is of significant interest to the field of agrochemistry (Sekhon, 2015) since many agrochemically active agents are organic species closely resembling pharmaceuticals and their usability and efficacy may be essentially improved taking into account the above factors. However, co-crystals are still relatively uncommon in the agrochemical industry (Nauha, 2012). Recently, co-crystallization technology, with a particular attention to the hierarchy of supramolecular bonding, was successfully applied for modulating the properties of urea fertilisers (Sandhu et al., 2018).
In the case of N-heterocyclic bases when combined with acidic components, the formation of co-crystals is particularly well predictable. The properties of these materials may be superior to the ionic salts, which are often deliquescent and need co-utilization of anti-caking additives. Known examples of such agrochemical formulations include co-crystals of carboxylic acids with anilinopyrimidine fungicide cyprodinil (Panikkattu, 2013) and aminopyridine pesticides (Weiss et al., 2012) and, vice versa, pyridine base adducts with widely used NH-acidic thiophanate fungicides (Nauha et al., 2011). The co-crystallization of two complementary active components is also feasible and this possibility could present a special extension of the approach. Such co-crystals facilitate the combination of two agrochemical species for a more efficient management and prevention of resistance (Galloway, 2008). Mixed systems involving the fungicides pyraclostrobin, flusilazole and thiophanate-methyl have been reported recently (Qu et al., 2020). Another important issue may concern the alleviation of the toxic effects of fungicides on plants and soil bacterial populations. Such an effect was disclosed with the utilization of 3,4-dimethylpyrazole (Zhang et al., 2017), which itself is a powerful inhibitor used in the form of a phosphate salt (Subbarao et al., 2006). Taking into account the rich hydrogen-bonding functionality of the free base, one can also recognize 3,4-dimethylpyrazole as a well-suited partner for acidic fungicides. In this way, two desirable and complementary activities may be united in a single material. We have explored the co-crystallization of 3,4-dimethylpyrazole (C5H8N2) and 2-cyano-2-isonitrosoacetamide [nitrosocarbamoylcyanomethanide, H(nccm), C3N3H3O2], which is a growth regulation agent (Hubele & Kühne, 1977) and is particularly effective for the control of fungal plant diseases (Davidson, 1976); in the present work we report the synthesis and structure of the 1/1 molecular (1) formed by these agrochemically active molecules. The highly acidic oxime and heterocyclic N-base could be viewed as an excellent duo for sustaining the structure of the co-crystals (Aakeröy et al., 2009).
2. Structural commentary
The molecular structure of the title compound is shown in Fig. 1, with the comprising one oxime and one pyrazole molecule. The main geometrical parameters of H(nccm) suggest some degree of conjugation within its molecular framework: its atoms are almost coplanar within 0.04 Å, while the dihedral angle between the cyanoxime O1/N1/C1/C2/N2 and amide C3/O2/N3 fragments is 2.9 (2)°. However, this conjugation is only partial, unlike ionic species involving highly conjugated nitroso anions (nccm)− (Domasevitch et al., 2023) or more complicated H(nccm)2− systems (Domasevitch et al., 1998). Although the N—O bonds in such systems are particularly sensitive to protolytic effects (Domasevitch et al., 2021), very strong O—H⋯N bonding to the pyrazole-N acceptors causes only minor shortening of the N1—O1 bond [1.345 (2) Å] in the title compound compared to the structure of H(nccm) itself [1.359 (3) Å; Arulsamy & Bohle, 2000]. At the same time, the N1—C1 bonds [1.283 (3) and 1.288 (2) Å, respectively] and C1—C2 bonds [1.451 (4) and 1.445 (3) Å, respectively] are almost identical for the two H(nccm) species. This is consistent with a neutral oxime structure of H(nccm) in the title compound. In contrary, essential delocalization of π-electron density in (nccm)− anions usually results in nearly identical bond lengths within the C—N—O fragments, for example C—N = 1.3084 (18) and N—O = 1.3081 (17) Å for the ethylenediammonium salt (Domasevitch et al., 2023). A clear differentiation of the angles at the ring N atoms is the most remarkable feature for the pyrazole component of the title compound: C4—N4—N5 = 111.53 (17)° and C6—N5—N4 = 105.36 (17)°. This suggests a neutral structure with ordered and immobile H atoms (Domasevitch, 2008), whereas equalization of these parameters might be a good sign of proton transfer with the formation of a pyrazolium cation or disorder of the H atoms.
3. Supramolecular features
The title compound adopts the structure of a two-dimensional mono-periodic hydrogen-bonded polymer (Fig. 2). Its rich bonding landscape is very illustrative of Etter's hydrogen-bonding rule (Etter, 1990), since ‘all good proton donors and acceptors are used in hydrogen bonding’. Moreover, one can note the appreciable discrimination of the binding sites as the stronger donors tend to interact with the stronger acceptors. In this way, the oxime group establishes a particularly strong and highly directional bond to the pyrazole-N atoms [O1—O1H⋯N5 = 2.587 (2) Å; O1H⋯N5 = 176 (3)°] (Table 1). This interaction is comparable with the shortest bonds reported for acidic Ar—C(CN)NOH species and heterocyclic N-acceptors [O⋯N = 2.587 (2)–2.774 (2) Å; Aakeröy et al., 2006]. Mutual bonding of the amide groups is weaker [N3⋯O2i = 2.890 (2) Å; symmetry code: (i) −x, y + , −z + ]. However, it is still highly directional with the angle at the H atom being 174 (2)° (Table 1) and it is responsible for arranging the H(nccm) molecules into a catemer arrangement propagating along the b-axis direction (Fig. 3). This motif represents one of two most frequent patterns dominating the extended structures of with mean N⋯O separations of 2.96 (8) Å (McMahon et al., 2005) indicating relatively strong hydrogen bonding. The pyrazole NH donors and less sterically accessible amide NH donor establish more distal bonds to the nitrile groups [N⋯N = 3.154 (3) and 3.085 (3) Å, respectively], whereas the weakest polarized CH donors at the pyrazole ring are bound to oxime O atoms related by a translation along the b-axis [C4⋯O1ii = 3.413 (3) Å; symmetry code: (ii) x, y + 1, z]. In spite of the relative weakness of this interaction, the directionality is again completely preserved, with the angle at the H atom being 156 (2)° (Table 1).
The resulting motif represents a hydrogen-bonded tape with an inner double chain of H(nccm) molecules accommodating outer pyrazole moieties (Fig. 2). Methyl groups from two adjacent tapes face each other and a series of such tapes constitute flat layers, which lie parallel to the (104) plane, with an interplanar distance of 3.272 Å (Fig. 3). Along the c-axis, the oxime (A) and pyrazole (B) moieties from successive layers are situated almost exactly on top of each other, affording infinite A/B/A/B stacks with two kinds of slipped π–π interactions between the components. The interaction of the type A⋯Biv [symmetry code: (iv) −x + 1, y − , –z + ] is particularly dense, with a short centroid–centroid distance of 3.302 (2) Å and slippage angle of 9.36 (5)° (Table 2). For the second A⋯Bv pair [symmetry code (v) –x + 1, −y + 1, −z] the overlap is slightly less, as indicated by the slippage angle of 33.23 (5)°. This interaction is likely restricted mostly to the O1—N1—C1 group of the oxime, with the midpoint of the O1—N1 bond situated at 3.402 (2) Å and almost exactly above the centroid of the pyrazole ring [slippage angle = 3.81 (5)°]. Previously reported examples for axial interactions of the related species concerned mutual stacking of conjugated cyano/nitroso anions with typical interplanar distances of 3.15–3.40 Å (Chesman et al., 2014). In the present case, π–π interactions evidently contribute to the relatively high packing index of 68.1, which is at the midpoint of 65–75% range expected for organic solids (Dunitz, 1995).
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4. Hirshfeld analysis
The supramolecular interactions in the title structure were further assessed by Hirshfeld surface analysis (Spackman & Byrom, 1997; McKinnon et al., 2004; Hirshfeld, 1977; Spackman & McKinnon, 2002) performed with CrystalExplorer17 (Turner et al., 2017). The two-dimensional fingerprint plots and the contributions of some types of inter-atomic contacts to the Hirshfeld surfaces of the individual oxime (a) and pyrazole (b) molecules (Fig. 4) suggest the dominant role of interactions with the H atoms.
The hydrogen bonds with O-atom acceptors are not the strongest interactions. They appear in the O⋯H/H⋯O plot for oxime as nearly symmetrical (about the diagonal where di = de) pairs of features with the shortest contacts being 1.90 Å. Therefore, either the donor or acceptor sites of such bonds are found within the individual oxime moieties. For the additional and much weaker C—H⋯O bonds, the donor parts are present in the plot for pyrazole, including a short spike (2.45 Å), and it has a complementary diffuse acceptor part at the lower right of the plot for oxime. The plots for N⋯H/H⋯N contacts are even more informative. They contribute as much as 37.6% to the surface area of oxime and are reflected by asymmetric spikes. The shortest contact of this type (1.60 Å) corresponds to the strongest primary O—H⋯N bond of oxime donors and pyrazole acceptors, as it evidenced by the complementary parts of two plots. The H⋯N contacts with the pyrazole donor are markedly longer (2.15 Å). In total, the contributions of the contacts with H-atoms account for 71.9% and 57.6% of the entire number of contacts for individual oxime and pyrazole, respectively. An overlap between nearly parallel molecules, due to the slipped π–π stacking, is clearly indicated by the plots, in the form of the blue–green area centred at ca de = di = 1.80 Å and with a shortest contact of 3.25 Å (Fig. 4). The total contributions of the corresponding C⋯N/N⋯C, C⋯C and N⋯N contacts to the surface areas of the components are 9.8% (oxime) and 9.4% (pyrazole). The shapes of the combined C,N⋯C,N areas in the two plots are again complementary to reflect the formation of heteromolecular oxime/pyrazole stacks (see Fig. 3). This witnesses the intrinsic importance of the axial interactions, which rationally complement interactions of the partners by conventional hydrogen bonding.
The intermolecular interaction energies were calculated using the CE B3LYP/6 31G(d,p) energy model in CrystalExplorer17 (Turner et al., 2017). With a cut-off of |Etot| > 3.0 kJ mol−1, nine symmetry-independent paths were considered for the closest environment of the H(nccm) molecules, two of which represent mutual interactions (A⋯A) and seven other ones are different kinds of oxime–pyrazole interactions (A⋯B) (Table 3). The highest energy Etot = −53.4 kJ mol−1 corresponds to the formation of heteromolecular pair due to a particularly short O1—H1O⋯N5 hydrogen bond. This interaction is as strong as the O—H⋯N hydrogen bond adopted by acetic acid and pyridine (–49.2 kJ mol−1; Gavezzotti, 2016), with the electrostatic component being a far more dominant contributor (–97.8 kJ mol−1) to the entire energy. Such a situation is reflective of the appreciable acidity of the oxime substrate (pKa = 5.03; Domasevitch et al., 2021). Other hydrogen-bond interactions are medium in strength. For example, the energy of mutual amide–amide bonding according to the path A⋯Ai [symmetry code: (i) −x, y + , −z + ] is −23.1 kJ mol−1 and it actually reproduces the energy of similar bonds for the model acetamide dimer (−24.9 kJ mol−1; Mahadevi et al., 2011), while two types of N—H⋯N bonds are even weaker (Table 3). The most interesting observation concerns axial bonding of the oxime molecules, since the energies of two kinds of stacking interactions are −20.5 and −25.0 kJ mol−1 and they slightly exceed the energies of medium-strength hydrogen bonds. This is generally associated with the relatively large intermolecular contact areas (Fig. 5) and the primary contributor here is London dispersion (Edis = −32.9 and −28.2 kJ mol−1, respectively), as expected for π–π interactions. These energies are larger than in the case of comparable (imino)malonaldehyde/benzene systems (up to −14.8 kJ mol−1; Blagojević-Filipović et al., 2020) and therefore an additional role of the methyl groups at the pyrazole backbone may be also involved. In fact, some of the contacts accompanying the stack may be regarded as very weak C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds, for example C8⋯O2iv = 3.451 (3) Å [symmetry code: (iv) −x + 1, y − , −z + ] (Fig. 3, Table 1). These interactions may be essential for the stabilization of the array, similarly to C—H⋯O bonding in caffeine stacks (Carlucci & Gavezzotti, 2005). Therefore, beyond the strongest primary O1—H1O⋯N5 bonds, the contribution of the axial interactions may be estimated as nearly equivalent to conventional hydrogen bonding in the title co-crystal.
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5. Synthesis and crystallization
2-Cyano-2-isonitrosoacetamide, H(nccm), m.p. = 456 K, was prepared in 70% yield by nitrosation of cyanoacetamide with the action of 20–50% excess amounts NaNO2 and aqueous acetic acid (Hubele & Kühne, 1977). For the preparation of a 15N (50%) labelled sample, the modified semi-microchemical method was used for the optimization of the yield with respect to nitrite.
To a stirred solution of 1.009 g (12 mmol) of cyanoacetamide and 0.834 g (12 mmol) of Na15NO2 in 12 ml of water, three 250 µl portions of acetic acid (13 mmol) were added at 2 h intervals, at 278–283 K. The stoppered flask was then left for 10 d at 278 K. The voluminous precipitate of sodium oxime salt was dissolved by addition of 30 ml of water and then a solution of 1.870 g (11 mmol) of AgNO3 in 10 ml of water was added with stirring. The mixture was left for 5 h and the yellow–orange precipitate of Ag(nccm) (2.270 g) was filtered and washed with 10 ml portions of water and methanol. The dried material was suspended in 20 ml of methanol, 900 µl of 38% aqueous HCl solution was added (excess 10%) and the mixture was stirred for 3 h, after which the colourless deposit of AgCl was filtered off. Evaporation of the filtrate in vacuum yields 1.156 g of colourless hydroxyimino-15N labelled H(nccm), or 86% with respect to the consumed Na15NO2.
For the preparation of the title compound, 0.4524 g (4 mmol) of H(nccm) and 0.3844 g (4 mmol) of 3,4-dimethylpyrazole were dissolved in 5 ml of methanol and the resulting yellowish solution was slowly evaporated to dryness leaving large colourless crystals of the product in quantitative yield. The 15N-labelled specimen was prepared similarly, starting with 0.5 mmol of the corresponding labelled oxime. The material is stable when exposed to ambient air for months and is neither volatile, hygroscopic nor efflorescent. M.p. = 414–415 K.
Analysis (%) calculated for C8H11N5O2: C 45.92, H 5.30, N 33.48; found: C 45.67, H 5.21, N 33.72. IR (KBr, cm−1): 420 w, 512 w, 566 w, 610 w, 674 w, 778 w, 928 w, 1010 m, 1084 s, 1168 s, 1204 w, 1388 m br, 1456 w, 1506 m, 1604 m, 1674 vs, 1704 m, 2236 w, 2854 w, 2926 m, 3188 m, 3264 s, 3318 s, 3386 vs, 3436 s.
The FT–IR spectrum reveals a distinctive pattern. It agrees with a structure of the ). In particular, ν(C=O) and ν(C≡N) absorption bands appear at 1674 and 2236 cm−1, respectively, and they are nearly invariant when compare with the data for H(nccm) (1672 and 2240 cm−1, respectively). A very low intensity of the ν(C≡N) band is typical for neutral cyanoximes, unlike the very intense absorptions observed in the case of conjugated cyanoximate anions. The unambiguous assignment of the ν(N—O) frequency is based upon the effect of an isotope shift in the spectrum of the 15N (50%) labelled compound (Fig. 6). This peak, at 1084 cm−1, is evidently overlapped with a second contributor since ν(15N—O) appears as a minor band, instead of the equal splitting anticipated for the present 50% enriched sample. Nevertheless, one can note a perceptible blue shift of ν(N—O) in the spectrum of (1) relatively to the one for H(nccm) [1062 cm−1]. This is in line with the shortening of the N—O bond length in (1) [1.345 (2) Å versus 1.359 (3) Å for H(nccm); Arulsamy & Bohle, 2000], as a result of the very strong hydrogen bonding of the CNOH group. Therefore, the IR data may be well reflective for protolytic effects in the structure of the co-crystals adopted by H(nccm) and related hydroxyimino fungicides and nitrogen bases.
with the neutral molecular components, while retaining most characteristic features of the spectrum for the parent H(nccm) (Fig. 66. Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure . The CH, OH and NH hydrogen atoms were located and then freely refined with isotropic displacement parameters. The hydrogen atoms of two methyl groups are disordered over two orientations. They were constrained with C—H = 0.98 Å, considering two idealized unequally populated orientations [0.44 (3)/0.56 (3) for C7 and 0.31 (3)/0.69 (3) for C8] and then refined as riding with Uiso = 1.5Ueq (carrier C-atom).
details are summarized in Table 4
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Supporting information
CCDC reference: 2343837
https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989024002809/hb8093sup1.cif
contains datablocks global, I. DOI:Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989024002809/hb8093Isup2.hkl
Supporting information file. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989024002809/hb8093Isup3.cml
C3H3N3O2·C5H8N2 | F(000) = 440 |
Mr = 209.22 | Dx = 1.331 Mg m−3 |
Monoclinic, P21/c | Cu Kα radiation, λ = 1.54186 Å |
a = 10.7082 (8) Å | Cell parameters from 5398 reflections |
b = 7.0270 (6) Å | θ = 4.1–70.6° |
c = 13.882 (1) Å | µ = 0.84 mm−1 |
β = 91.679 (10)° | T = 183 K |
V = 1044.12 (14) Å3 | Prism, colorless |
Z = 4 | 0.09 × 0.05 × 0.04 mm |
Stoe Stadivari diffractometer | 1998 independent reflections |
Radiation source: GeniX 3D HF Cu | 1392 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Graded multilayer mirror monochromator | Rint = 0.047 |
Detector resolution: 5.81 pixels mm-1 | θmax = 70.6°, θmin = 4.1° |
rotation method, ω scans | h = −12→12 |
Absorption correction: multi-scan (Stoe LANA; Koziskova et al., 2016) | k = −3→8 |
Tmin = 0.882, Tmax = 0.989 | l = −16→16 |
5398 measured reflections |
Refinement on F2 | Primary atom site location: structure-invariant direct methods |
Least-squares matrix: full | Secondary atom site location: difference Fourier map |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.047 | Hydrogen site location: mixed |
wR(F2) = 0.128 | H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement |
S = 0.99 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.075P)2] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
1998 reflections | (Δ/σ)max = 0.001 |
158 parameters | Δρmax = 0.18 e Å−3 |
0 restraints | Δρmin = −0.20 e Å−3 |
Geometry. All esds (except the esd in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell esds are taken into account individually in the estimation of esds in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between esds in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell esds is used for estimating esds involving l.s. planes. |
x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | Occ. (<1) | |
O1 | 0.47628 (12) | 0.2592 (2) | 0.13800 (12) | 0.0444 (4) | |
O2 | 0.06840 (12) | 0.2007 (2) | 0.22050 (11) | 0.0436 (4) | |
N1 | 0.36927 (14) | 0.3468 (2) | 0.16054 (13) | 0.0362 (4) | |
N2 | 0.30041 (17) | −0.1313 (2) | 0.15993 (15) | 0.0496 (5) | |
N3 | 0.14496 (16) | 0.5006 (3) | 0.20669 (15) | 0.0429 (5) | |
C1 | 0.27806 (16) | 0.2332 (3) | 0.17733 (14) | 0.0325 (4) | |
C2 | 0.28894 (18) | 0.0290 (3) | 0.16873 (16) | 0.0385 (5) | |
C3 | 0.15325 (17) | 0.3127 (3) | 0.20409 (14) | 0.0347 (4) | |
N4 | 0.56206 (15) | 0.7290 (3) | 0.10506 (14) | 0.0452 (5) | |
N5 | 0.61296 (16) | 0.5532 (3) | 0.10271 (13) | 0.0432 (5) | |
C4 | 0.6459 (2) | 0.8632 (3) | 0.08572 (17) | 0.0446 (5) | |
C5 | 0.75761 (17) | 0.7737 (3) | 0.06964 (15) | 0.0372 (5) | |
C6 | 0.73161 (17) | 0.5800 (3) | 0.08100 (15) | 0.0370 (5) | |
C7 | 0.8177 (2) | 0.4129 (3) | 0.07148 (19) | 0.0528 (6) | |
H7A | 0.901106 | 0.458051 | 0.055338 | 0.079* | 0.44 (3) |
H7B | 0.822636 | 0.343092 | 0.132575 | 0.079* | 0.44 (3) |
H7C | 0.785521 | 0.328565 | 0.020306 | 0.079* | 0.44 (3) |
H7D | 0.771736 | 0.295088 | 0.083475 | 0.079* | 0.56 (3) |
H7E | 0.850206 | 0.410046 | 0.006237 | 0.079* | 0.56 (3) |
H7F | 0.887321 | 0.424574 | 0.118507 | 0.079* | 0.56 (3) |
C8 | 0.88103 (19) | 0.8605 (3) | 0.04654 (17) | 0.0459 (5) | |
H8A | 0.943120 | 0.759503 | 0.039086 | 0.069* | 0.31 (3) |
H8B | 0.872516 | 0.933059 | −0.013578 | 0.069* | 0.31 (3) |
H8C | 0.908151 | 0.945634 | 0.099005 | 0.069* | 0.31 (3) |
H8D | 0.872738 | 0.999294 | 0.043923 | 0.069* | 0.69 (3) |
H8E | 0.943342 | 0.825738 | 0.096587 | 0.069* | 0.69 (3) |
H8F | 0.907707 | 0.813163 | −0.015996 | 0.069* | 0.69 (3) |
H1O | 0.532 (3) | 0.368 (5) | 0.125 (2) | 0.087 (10)* | |
H1N | 0.075 (2) | 0.555 (3) | 0.2284 (15) | 0.040 (6)* | |
H2N | 0.212 (2) | 0.581 (3) | 0.1930 (15) | 0.043 (6)* | |
H3N | 0.481 (2) | 0.751 (3) | 0.1189 (16) | 0.056 (7)* | |
H4 | 0.619 (2) | 0.984 (4) | 0.0875 (17) | 0.053 (7)* |
U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
O1 | 0.0261 (7) | 0.0348 (8) | 0.0732 (11) | −0.0007 (6) | 0.0148 (6) | −0.0021 (7) |
O2 | 0.0296 (7) | 0.0362 (8) | 0.0655 (10) | −0.0039 (6) | 0.0101 (6) | 0.0016 (7) |
N1 | 0.0285 (8) | 0.0301 (9) | 0.0503 (10) | 0.0004 (6) | 0.0078 (7) | −0.0011 (7) |
N2 | 0.0397 (10) | 0.0278 (10) | 0.0820 (14) | 0.0000 (8) | 0.0125 (9) | −0.0009 (9) |
N3 | 0.0301 (9) | 0.0304 (10) | 0.0689 (13) | 0.0040 (8) | 0.0124 (8) | 0.0012 (9) |
C1 | 0.0288 (9) | 0.0239 (10) | 0.0452 (11) | −0.0005 (7) | 0.0047 (8) | 0.0000 (8) |
C2 | 0.0289 (9) | 0.0333 (12) | 0.0538 (13) | 0.0007 (8) | 0.0076 (8) | 0.0023 (9) |
C3 | 0.0280 (9) | 0.0313 (11) | 0.0450 (11) | −0.0008 (8) | 0.0042 (8) | 0.0022 (9) |
N4 | 0.0265 (8) | 0.0463 (11) | 0.0632 (13) | 0.0059 (8) | 0.0092 (8) | 0.0001 (9) |
N5 | 0.0315 (9) | 0.0385 (11) | 0.0601 (12) | −0.0040 (7) | 0.0066 (8) | 0.0019 (8) |
C4 | 0.0428 (12) | 0.0345 (12) | 0.0567 (14) | 0.0028 (10) | 0.0058 (10) | −0.0010 (10) |
C5 | 0.0313 (9) | 0.0348 (11) | 0.0457 (12) | −0.0003 (8) | 0.0073 (8) | −0.0017 (9) |
C6 | 0.0254 (9) | 0.0377 (12) | 0.0483 (12) | −0.0022 (8) | 0.0065 (8) | −0.0007 (9) |
C7 | 0.0445 (12) | 0.0380 (13) | 0.0764 (17) | 0.0034 (9) | 0.0091 (11) | −0.0016 (11) |
C8 | 0.0389 (11) | 0.0391 (12) | 0.0602 (14) | −0.0073 (9) | 0.0108 (10) | −0.0018 (10) |
O1—N1 | 1.345 (2) | C5—C6 | 1.399 (3) |
O1—H1O | 0.99 (3) | C5—C8 | 1.499 (3) |
O2—C3 | 1.229 (2) | C6—C7 | 1.501 (3) |
N1—C1 | 1.288 (2) | C7—H7A | 0.9800 |
N2—C2 | 1.140 (3) | C7—H7B | 0.9800 |
N3—C3 | 1.323 (3) | C7—H7C | 0.9800 |
N3—H1N | 0.90 (2) | C7—H7D | 0.9800 |
N3—H2N | 0.94 (2) | C7—H7E | 0.9800 |
C1—C2 | 1.445 (3) | C7—H7F | 0.9800 |
C1—C3 | 1.505 (2) | C8—H8A | 0.9800 |
N4—C4 | 1.334 (3) | C8—H8B | 0.9800 |
N4—N5 | 1.351 (2) | C8—H8C | 0.9800 |
N4—H3N | 0.91 (3) | C8—H8D | 0.9800 |
N5—C6 | 1.328 (3) | C8—H8E | 0.9800 |
C4—C5 | 1.376 (3) | C8—H8F | 0.9800 |
C4—H4 | 0.90 (3) | ||
N1—O1—H1O | 102.0 (18) | N5—C6—C5 | 111.01 (18) |
C1—N1—O1 | 114.49 (16) | N5—C6—C7 | 120.2 (2) |
C3—N3—H1N | 119.3 (14) | C5—C6—C7 | 128.78 (19) |
C3—N3—H2N | 123.0 (14) | C6—C7—H7A | 109.5 |
H1N—N3—H2N | 117 (2) | C6—C7—H7B | 109.5 |
N1—C1—C2 | 122.47 (17) | H7A—C7—H7B | 109.5 |
N1—C1—C3 | 119.90 (17) | C6—C7—H7C | 109.5 |
C2—C1—C3 | 117.60 (16) | H7A—C7—H7C | 109.5 |
N2—C2—C1 | 177.9 (2) | H7B—C7—H7C | 109.5 |
O2—C3—N3 | 125.71 (18) | H7D—C7—H7E | 109.5 |
O2—C3—C1 | 118.34 (18) | H7D—C7—H7F | 109.5 |
N3—C3—C1 | 115.95 (17) | H7E—C7—H7F | 109.5 |
C4—N4—N5 | 111.53 (17) | C5—C8—H8A | 109.5 |
C4—N4—H3N | 125.1 (15) | C5—C8—H8B | 109.5 |
N5—N4—H3N | 123.3 (15) | H8A—C8—H8B | 109.5 |
C6—N5—N4 | 105.36 (17) | C5—C8—H8C | 109.5 |
N4—C4—C5 | 107.7 (2) | H8A—C8—H8C | 109.5 |
N4—C4—H4 | 116.6 (16) | H8B—C8—H8C | 109.5 |
C5—C4—H4 | 135.7 (16) | H8D—C8—H8E | 109.5 |
C4—C5—C6 | 104.44 (18) | H8D—C8—H8F | 109.5 |
C4—C5—C8 | 128.7 (2) | H8E—C8—H8F | 109.5 |
C6—C5—C8 | 126.83 (18) | ||
O1—N1—C1—C2 | −2.4 (3) | N4—C4—C5—C6 | 0.1 (3) |
O1—N1—C1—C3 | 179.55 (16) | N4—C4—C5—C8 | −179.1 (2) |
N1—C1—C3—O2 | −179.37 (19) | N4—N5—C6—C5 | 0.2 (2) |
C2—C1—C3—O2 | 2.5 (3) | N4—N5—C6—C7 | −179.6 (2) |
N1—C1—C3—N3 | 1.4 (3) | C4—C5—C6—N5 | −0.2 (3) |
C2—C1—C3—N3 | −176.80 (19) | C8—C5—C6—N5 | 179.0 (2) |
C4—N4—N5—C6 | −0.2 (3) | C4—C5—C6—C7 | 179.6 (2) |
N5—N4—C4—C5 | 0.0 (3) | C8—C5—C6—C7 | −1.2 (4) |
D—H···A | D—H | H···A | D···A | D—H···A |
O1—H1O···N5 | 0.99 (3) | 1.60 (3) | 2.587 (2) | 176 (3) |
N3—H1N···O2i | 0.90 (2) | 1.99 (2) | 2.890 (2) | 174 (2) |
N3—H2N···N2ii | 0.94 (2) | 2.28 (2) | 3.154 (3) | 154.0 (19) |
N4—H3N···N2ii | 0.91 (3) | 2.20 (3) | 3.085 (3) | 167 (2) |
C4—H4···O1ii | 0.90 (3) | 2.58 (3) | 3.413 (3) | 156 (2) |
C8—H8E···O2iii | 0.98 | 2.69 | 3.451 (3) | 134 |
Symmetry codes: (i) −x, y+1/2, −z+1/2; (ii) x, y+1, z; (iii) −x+1, y+1/2, −z+1/2. |
Cg is a group centroid; plane···Cg2 is the distance between the H(nccm) mean plane and the centroid of the interacting pyrazole ring; IPA is the interplanar angle; SA is the slippage angle, which is the angle of the Cg1···Cg2 axis to the H(ccnm) mean plane normal. |
Group 1 | Group 2 | Shortest contacts | Cg1···Cg2 | Plane···Cg2 | IPA | SA |
C1/C2/C3/N1/N2/N3/O1/O2 | (N4/N5/C4/C5/C6)iv | 3.268 (3) | 3.302 | 3.258 (2) | 2.34 (6) | 9.36 (5) |
C1/C2/C3/N1/N2/N3/O1/O2 | (N4/N5/C4/C5/C6)v | 3.388 (2) | 3.883 | 3.248 (3) | 7.02 (6) | 33.23 (5) |
Symmetry codes: (iv) -x + 1, y - 1/2, -z + 1/2; (v) -x + 1, -y + 1, -z. |
Interaction energies were calculated employing the CE-B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) functional/basis set combination. The scale factors used to determine Etot are: kele = 1.057, kpol = 0.740, kdis = 0.871, and krep = 0.618 (Mackenzie et al., 2017). For details of the interaction modes, see Fig. 5; R is the distance between the centroids of the interacting molecules. |
Path | Type | R (Å) | Eele | Epol | Edis | Erep | Etot |
A···Ai | N—H···O | 7.03 | –23.1 | –4.0 | –5.1 | 14.1 | –23.1 |
A···Aii | N—H···N | 6.95 | –23.8 | –6.5 | –5.0 | 28.8 | –16.6 |
A···B | O—H···N | 6.01 | –97.8 | –25.4 | –11.6 | 127.9 | –53.4 |
A···Bvi | N—H···N, C—H···O | 6.39 | –19.8 | –5.0 | –9.5 | 26.6 | –16.5 |
A···Biv | π–π | 3.36 | –3.6 | –3.7 | –32.9 | 23.8 | –20.5 |
A···Bv | π–π | 3.67 | –9.4 | –2.5 | –28.2 | 18.4 | –25.0 |
A···Bvii | dispersion | 7.09 | –0.2 | –0.9 | –2.9 | 0.4 | –3.2 |
A···Bviii | dispersion | 6.75 | 1.3 | –1.5 | –7.8 | 4.9 | –3.5 |
A···Bix | dispersion | 7.48 | –2.4 | –0.6 | –2.5 | 0.3 | –4.9 |
Symmetry codes: (i) -x, y + 1/2, -z + 1/2; (ii) x, y + 1, z; (iv) -x + 1, y - 1/2, -z + 1/2; (v) -x + 1, -y + 1, -z; (vi) x, y - 1, z; (vii) x - 1, y - 1, z; (viii) x - 1, y, z; (ix) -x + 1, y + 1/2, -z + 1/2. |
Funding information
This work was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine (Project No. 22BF037–11).
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