research communications
accessCrystal structures, Hirshfeld surface analysis and interaction energies of (Z)-2-(4-methylbenzylidene)- and (Z)-2-(furfurylidene)-2H-benzo[b][1,4]thiazin-3(4H)-one
aLaboratory of Heterocyclic Organic Chemistry, Medicines Science Research Center, Pharmacochemistry Competence Center, Mohammed V University in Rabat, Faculté des Sciences, Av. Ibn Battouta, BP 1014, Rabat, Morocco, bNational Center for Nuclear Energy, Science and Technology, Rabat, Morocco, cInorganic Chemistry Department, National Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyïv, Volodymyrska Str. 64/13, Kyïv 01601, Ukraine, dDepartment of Chemistry, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70118, USA, and eScience and Technology of Lille USR 3290, Villeneuve d'ascq cedex, France
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]
Two new 2-arylmethylidene derivatives of benzo-1,4-thiazin-3-one, namely, (Z)-2-(4-methylbenzylidene)-2H-benzo[b][1,4]thiazin-3(4H)-one, C16H13NOS, 1, and (Z)-2-(furan-2-ylmethylidene)-2H-benzo[b][1,4]thiazin-3(4H)-one, C13H9NO2S, 2, are rare examples of a nearly planar structure of the 1,4-thiazin-3-one core stabilized by conjugation. Their supramolecular structures are very similar, being dominated by assembly of inversion dimers through highly directional reciprocal N—H⋯O bonds [N⋯O = 2.822 (2) Å for 1; 2.881 (3) Å for 2]. Weaker forces are represented by C—H⋯O, C—H⋯π and stacking interactions, with more interactions in the case of furfurylidene 2, and they are important for consolidation of the structures. This is consistent with the results of Hirshfeld surface analysis and calculated interaction energies. Doubling the number of O atoms, when moving from 1 to 2, results in even larger increase in fractions of O⋯H/H⋯O contacts [7.6 to 18.6%] due to extensive interactions with the furyl-O acceptor and this contributes to higher packing index in the case of 2. The far superior energetics in the structures are related with the formation of hydrogen-bonded dimers [−73.3 and −72.9 kJ mol−1, for 1 and 2, respectively], followed by dispersion forces and weak C—H⋯O bonding. Identification of reliable 1,4-thiazin-3-one based supramolecular synthons is important for selective targeting for biomedical applications.
1. Chemical context
containing both sulfur and nitrogen atoms have garnered considerable interest due to their wide range of biological activities (Sebbar et al., 2016a
, 2020a
; Armenise et al., 2012
). Among these, the 1,4-benzothiazine ring system stands out as a privileged scaffold in medicinal chemistry (Trapani et al., 1985
; Gupta et al., 1985
). Its distinctive physicochemical properties allow for versatile chemical modifications and intense interactions with biological targets (Tawada et al., 1990
; Sebbar et al., 2020b
). As a result, numerous 1,4-benzothiazine derivatives have exhibited significant pharmacological properties, including anti-oxidant (Zia-ur-Rehman et al., 2009
), antipyretic (Warren et al., 1987
), anti-cancer (Gupta et al., 1991
) and anti-inflammatory activities (Gowda et al., 2011
). 1,4-Benzothiazine compounds have also demonstrated their effectiveness as intermediates in the synthesis of new bioactive and anti-corrosion derivatives (Sebbar et al., 2015
; Ellouz et al., 2017a
; Hni et al., 2019a
) possessing anti-diabetic (Tawada et al., 1990
) and anti-corrosion activities (Sebbar et al., 2016b
; Hni et al., 2019b
; Ellouz et al., 2017b
, 2018
). Given the promising applications of 1,4-benzothiazine derivatives, we undertook the synthesis of new compounds belonging to this class. To this end 3,4-dihydro-2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3-one were condensed with 4-methylbenzaldehyde, 2a, or furan-2-carbaldehyde, respectively, in the presence of excess sodium methoxide in dimethylformamide (DMF). The resulting products (Z)-2-(4-methylbenzylidene)-2-H-benzo[b][1,4]thiazin-3(4H)-one, 1, and (Z)-2-(furfurylidene)-3,4-dihydro-2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3-one, 2, were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and Hirshfeld surface analysis.
2. Structural commentary
The molecular structures of the title compounds 1 and 2 are shown in Figs. 1
and 2
, respectively. Both of them adopt a Z-configuration about the ethene bond. In 1, the planes of the two aromatic counterparts, namely 1,4-benzothiazin-3(4H)-one and tolyl, sustain a relatively small dihedral angle of 11.09 (10)°, whereas in 2 the coplanar configuration of two ring systems is violated more significantly and an appreciable interplanar angle of 26.85 (9)° is developed due to the twist about C9—C10 bond with torsion angle C8—C9—C10—C11 being 18.1 (4)°. The most salient feature of the molecular frameworks is the nearly planar geometries of the benzothiazinone cores themselves. The r.m.s. deviations from the S1/N1/C1/C6–C8 planes are 0.0247 (13) Å for 1 and 0.0482 (15) Å for 2, and such flattening has only few precedents, for example 2-(nitromethylidene)-2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3(4H)-one (Berestovskaya et al., 2006
). Any analogs with sp3 ring atoms C2 adopt a half-chair conformation due to loss of conjugation along S1—C2—C3(O)—N4 chain and they exist rather as cyclic e.g. the 2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3(4H)-one with a dihedral angle between the S1/C9/C10 and N4/C3/O/C2 planes φ = 22.7° (Mague & Ouzidan, 2024
). The latter parameter is more informative than the usually considered bent angle along the S1⋯N4 axis, being indicative of the amide group involvement in the conjugation. For the title compounds 1 and 2, the angles φ subtended by the S1/C1/C6 and N1/C7/O1/C8 planes are 3.36 (12) and 5.75 (14)°, respectively, and they suggest nearly coplanar arrangements. More interesting that N-substitution of 2-(methylidene)-species has the same destructive impact on conjugation as the involvement of the ring Csp3 atom. In this way, the heteroring in the 4-hexyl analog of 1 is non-planar to the same extent as in the above non-aromatic 2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3(4H)-one [φ = 20.85°; Sebbar et al., 2020b
]. One can postulate that the essential penalty to the conjugation in these 4-R-substituted species originates in steric peri-interaction with the 4-R group, similarly to dearomatization of 1-methyl-2-quinolones by peri-substituents (Chen et al., 2013
). In the present case, the ring may be more sensitive to such factor since even 5-H species experience this effect and therefore the category of planar 1,4-benzothiazin-3(4H)-ones is restricted to 2-(methylidene)- and N-unsubstituted species. The appreciable enhancement of conjugation in the title compounds when compared to their 4-substituted analogs is also visible from bond lengths in the C6—N1—C7—O1 chain. In particular, the C6—N1 and N1—C7 bonds [1.401 (2), 1.350 (3) and 1.409 (3), 1.342 (3) Å for 1 and 2, respectively] are both shorter than in the 4-hexyl analog of 1 [1.4207 (17) and 1.3687 (17) Å; Sebbar et al., 2020a
], and this coincides with a certain elongation of the C7=O1 bonds, which are 1.2310 (15) in the latter case, but 1.242 (2) and 1.242 (3) Å in 1 and 2, respectively.
| | Figure 1 The molecular structure of compound 1, with atom labelling and displacement ellipsoids drawn at the 50% probability level. |
| Figure 2 The molecular structure of compound 2, with atom labelling and displacement ellipsoids drawn at the 50% probability level. |
3. Supramolecular features
The closely related supramolecular structures of the title compounds are primarily governed by relatively strong hydrogen bonding accompanied with a set of weak hydrogen bonds and stacking interactions. Two mutual N1—H⋯O1i bonds complemented by a pair of secondary C5—H⋯O1i bonds assemble the molecules into the inversion dimers [symmetry code (i) for 1: −x + 1, −y, −z + 1; for 2: −x + , −y +
, −z +
] (Fig. 3
). The formation of such dimers dominates the crystal chemistry of many amide-related species, with a median of N⋯O length distribution at 2.95 Å (McMahon et al., 2005
). In the present cases these distances are shorter [2.822 (2) and 2.881 (3) Å for 1 and 2, respectively; Tables 1
and 2
], as a consequence of stronger interactions between more polarized donors and acceptors NHδ+ C Oδ-, similarly to an even stronger bonding of 2-pyridone in its monoclinic polymorph [2.745 (2) and 2.792 (2) Å; Arman et al., 2009
]. With respect to the combined N—H⋯O and C—H⋯O bonding, the observed dimers may be best related to a similar motif in α-thiazine-indigo [N⋯O = 2.828 (3) and C⋯O = 3.492 (5) Å; Buchsbaum et al., 2011
]. At the same time, the comparable molecular configurations of 2H-benzo[b][1,4]thiazin-3(4H)-one 1,1-dioxide (Irrou et al., 2023
) and thiomorpholin-3-one (Ramasubbu et al., 1988
) do not support formation of dimers. These hydrogen-bonding preferences of benzothiazinones are interesting in view of their selective targeting of Ser293 in the active region of acetylcholine esterase (Haji Ali et al., 2022
).
|
|
| Figure 3 (a) Inversion-related hydrogen-bonded dimers in the structure of 1; (b) Slipped stacking of the dimers generates columns along the b-axis direction, with a set of π–π and C—H⋯π interactions indicated in red and blue, respectively. [Symmetry codes: (i) −x + 1, −y, −z + 1; (iii) x, y + 1, z; (v) −x + 1, −y + 1, −z + 1; (vi) x, y − 1, z.] |
In 1, the dimers are further stacked into the columns along the b-axis direction (Fig. 3
). Within the column, one can distinguish mutual interactions of carbonyl groups, which are similar to lone-pair–π hole bonding in [C7⋯O1iv = 3.173 (3) Å; symmetry code: (iv) −x + 1, −y + 1, −z + 1] and π–π interactions of ethylene fragments and outer tolyl rings with a shortest contact C8⋯C11vi = 3.447 (3) Å and a Cg3⋯Cg2vi distance of 3.680 (2) Å [Cg2 and Cg3 are the centroids of the C10–C15 and C8/C9 groups, respectively; symmetry code (vi) x, y − 1, z]. In addition, two tolyl groups of translationally related molecules afford very weak, but directional C—H⋯π bonds [C16⋯Cg2iii = 3.813 (3) Å, C—H⋯Cg2iii = 158 (2)°; symmetry code: (iii) x, y + 1, z]. Similar in nature C—H⋯π interactions between carbo rings of the benzothiazinone moieties [C4⋯Cg(C1–C6) = 3.687 (3) Å; Table 1
] generate 21-helices along the b-axis direction, which connect the above columns into the layers parallel to the (10) plane (Fig. 4
).
| Figure 4 Projection of the structure 1 on the ac plane, showing mutual C—H⋯π bonding between columns of stacked dimers (which are orthogonal to the drawing plane) and weak interlayer C—H⋯S interactions. Both kinds of bonds generate helical motifs identified here by orthogonal 21 axes. [Symmetry codes: (i) −x + 1, −y, −z + 1; (ii) −x + |
The supramolecular morphology of 2 is very comparable, with some variations conditioned by specific bonding preferences of the furyl ring. Stacking of the dimers yields similar columns, propagating down the b-axis direction (Fig. 5
). Instead of the C=O/C=O interactions seen in 1, the molecules afford inversion thiazinone stacks, with O1⋯Cg(S1/N1/C1/C6–C8)vii and O1⋯planevii distances of 3.2937 (19) and 3.226 (2) Å, respectively [symmetry code: (vii) −x + , −y +
, −z +
]. That the O1 atoms are mutually situated above the adjacent ring centroids is witnessed by the angle between the O1⋯Cgvii axis and the ring normal of 11.7 (2)°. This interaction is accompanied by C—H⋯π bonding between the furyl donors and thiazinone acceptors (Fig. 5
, Table 2
). Similarly to 1, the columns are linked into layers (parallel to the ab plane) due to C—H⋯π bonds between carbo rings of the benzothiazinone moieties [C4⋯Cg(C1–C6) = 3.688 (3) Å], while two additional C—H⋯O bonds occur also with the furyl-O acceptor from a second part of the dimer [C⋯O = 3.420 (3), 3.446 (3) Å; Table 2
]. However, the most notable structural function inherent to the furyl rings is the mutual C—H⋯O bonding, giving inversion dimers with C⋯O = 3.359 (3) A (Fig. 6
). This cyclic pattern itself represents the lowest energy furan dimer calculated for the gas phase (Majerz, 2018
). Such interactions provide the connection of the layers into a three-dimensional framework and are particularly essential for structural cohesion as the shortest of the weak hydrogen bonds present with CH donors. One can suppose that a set of supramolecular interactions involving furyl groups may be primarily responsible for the relatively high packing index of 73.4 [vs. 71.5 for 1], which approaches the upper limit of the 65–75% range expected for organic solids (Dunitz, 1995
).
| Figure 5 (a) Inversion-related hydrogen-bonded dimers in the structure of 2; (b) Columns of stacked dimers, which feature importance of axial interactions at the thiazinone core (red: CO⋯π; blue: C—H⋯π). [Symmetry codes: (i) −x + |
| Figure 6 The structure of 2 viewed in a projection on the ac plane, showing layers of stacked dimers (orthogonal to the drawing plane) and their connection through mutual C—H⋯O bonding of furyl groups. The orthogonal 21 axes identify helicate configuration of C—H⋯π bonding motif. [Symmetry codes: (i) −x + |
4. Hirshfeld analysis
The supramolecular interactions in the title structures were further assessed by Hirshfeld surface analysis (McKinnon et al., 2007
; Hirshfeld, 1977
; Spackman et al., 2021
) performed with CrystalExplorer17 (Turner et al., 2017
). The two-dimensional fingerprint plots suggest the dominant role of interactions with the H atoms, which account for 71.7 and 65.2% of the contacts in 1 and 2, respectively. At the same time, there are essential differences due to the replacement of tolyl for furyl groups. Thus, the fractions of C⋯H/H⋯C and O⋯H/H⋯O are expanded from 27.2 and 7.6% in 1 to 35.2 and 18.6% in 2, primarily at the expense of H⋯H contacts (Fig. 7
). Although this is in line with a larger number of the available O-atom acceptors in the latter case, the ability of the furyl group to maintain multiple weak C—H⋯O interactions is also important. The contributions of S⋯H/H⋯S are nearly the same for both compounds and are relatively minor. However, in the case of 1, one can identify a pair of short spikes pointing to the lower left with de + di = 2.95 Å. These features are similar in nature to the short spikes for C⋯H/H⋯C contacts and they likely indicate very weak C—H⋯S hydrogen bonding. For 2, the S⋯H/H⋯S plot represents rather a collection of points at large de and di distances and moreover, a scarcely populated extended area above de + di = 4.0 Å suggests the existence of small voids around the S atoms. This observation is supported by the volumes of the Dirichlet–Voronoi domains associated with the S1 atoms, which are 48.05 Å3 for 1 and 61.41 Å3 for 2 and therefore the S1 environment in the latter case is less crowded. Finally, an overlap between nearly parallel molecules, due to the slipped π–π ethene/tolyl stacking, is clearly indicated by the C⋯C plots for 1 (5.0%), in the form of the blue area centred at ca. de = di = 1.80 Å and with a shortest contact of 3.50 Å (Fig. 7
). This feature is only minor in the case of 2, with a small fraction of slightly shorter C⋯C contacts (1.5%) associated with carbonyl/thiazine stacking.
| | Figure 7 Two-dimensional fingerprint plots for 1 (a) and 2 (b) for all contacts and delineated into the principal contributions of individual contacts. Other contributions, which account for more than 1.0%, are N⋯H/H⋯N (2.0 and 1.8% for 1 and 2, respectively) and S⋯C/C⋯S (1.8 and 2.8%). |
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| > 10 kJ mol−1, five symmetry-independent paths were considered for the closest environment of the molecules in 1 (Table 3
) and the far dominant energy of Etot = −73.3 kJ mol−1 corresponds to the reciprocal N—H⋯O and C—H⋯O interactions within the basic dimer (path A⋯B, Fig. 8
). This pairing is governed essentially by the electrostatic component (Eele = −98.2 kJ mol−1) and is very close in energy to interactions in 2-pyridone dimers [−68.2 kJ mol−1; Inuzuka & Fujimoto, 1982
]. Other structure-defining interactions originate in London dispersion, while the most prominent ones are also restricted to the columns of stacked dimers. First, the B⋯C pair combines tolyl C—H⋯π bonds and π–π stacking within a very large interaction area. The appreciable resulting energy of −39.4 kJ mol−1 is a reflection of a significant dispersion contributor [Edis = −62.0 kJ mol−1]. Second, mutual antiparallel stacks of the carbonyl groups (path A⋯C) are also very favorable with Etot = −22.3 kJ mol−1, which exactly coincides with the value for model 2-propanone dimers (Allen et al., 1998
).
|
| Figure 8 The principal pairwise intermolecular interactions for 1, identified with a cut-off limit of 10 kJ mol−1. The interaction energies are given in kJ mol−1. |
The landscape of interaction energies for 2 is apparently more rich, with nine unique paths above |Etot| > 10 kJ mol−1 (Fig. 9
). In fact, beyond the primary interaction in the form of electrostatically dominated strong hydrogen bonding (pair A⋯B, Etot = −73.9 kJ mol−1), most intermolecular paths converge in the interaction energies falling into the −10 to −25 kJ mol−1 range (Table 3
). The most prominent interactions within this group are mutual carbonyl–π stacking of path A⋯F and dispersion and C—H⋯π driven path B⋯F [Etot = −25.3 and −23.6 kJ mol−1, respectively]. Both of them are also found within the column of stacked dimers. At the same time, the growing importance of bonding between the subconnectivities of lower dimensionality is best illustrated by the energetics of the furyl dimers established between the layers. The interaction within the path A⋯C has comparable electrostatic and dispersion contributors and it results in Etot = −12.7 kJ mol−1, which is superior to most pairwise interactions between the layers in the structure of 1. The latter value reproduces an energy of −13.0 kJ mol−1, found for the doubly C—H⋯O-bonded furan dimer in the gas phase (Majerz, 2018
). One can suppose that the specific behavior of furyl groups in 2, either as a donor or acceptor of weak C—H⋯O bonding (as may be compared with tolyl groups in 1) contributes not only to the larger fraction of O⋯H/H⋯O contacts, but also enhances the interaction energies. Even in spite the possible presence of small crystal voids around the S1 atoms in 2, the furyl derivative develops a perceptibly higher packing index.
| Figure 9 The principal pathways of intermolecular interactions for 2, identified with a cut-off limit of 10 kJ mol−1, which involve different kinds of stacking and hydrogen bonding. The interaction energies are given in kJ mol−1. |
5. Database survey
A search of the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD, updated to July 2025; Groom et al., 2016
) for 1,4-benzothiazin-3-one derivatives bearing a substituted methylidene fragment at the C2-atom and with no substitution at benzo-ring C atoms revealed 18 hits. The group of closest 4-H analogs is represented by (Z)-2-(1-bromoethylidine) (CSD refcode BOLDOV; Bates et al., 1982
) and (Z)-2-(nitromethylene) compounds (GETNOJ; Berestovskaya et al., 2006
) and two polymorphs of structurally related thiazine-indigo (SAJMOH and SAJMOH01; Buchsbaum et al., 2011
), whereas the larger family of 4-R derivatives features the incorporation of 2-benzylidene and derived fragments, including one example of a 4-methylbenzylidene compound related to the structure of 1 (RURBEO; Sebbar et al., 2020a
). All these compounds follow the trend established above: the 1,4-thiazin-3-one core is essentially flat in the case of 4-H species, but even 4-methyl substitution (VUXWES; Ellouz et al., 2015
) causes loss of planarity. An appreciable bend of the heteroring may be assessed with values of dihedral angles between the S1C9C10 and N4C3OC2 planes, which are nearly uniform for all 4-R compounds within the range 19.2–24.3°. They are systematically much larger than the parameters for 4-H species: 5.70 (BOLDOV); 5.82 (GETNOJ); 1.71 (SAJMOH) and 1.51° (SAJMOH01). From a supramolecular perspective, the comparable examples are restricted to the category of N -species and every such 1,4-benzothiazin-3-one sustains dimeric motifs of reciprocal N—H⋯O interactions, which are similar to those in the title structures.
6. Synthesis and crystallization
To 300 mg (2.84 mmol) of 3,4-dihydro-2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3-one and 5.68 mmol of either 4-methylbenzaldehyde (for the synthesis of 1) or furan-2-carbaldehyde (for the synthesis of 2) dissolved in 10 ml of anhydrous DMF, 383.4 mg (7.1 mmol) of sodium methoxide were added. The mixture was refluxed for 18 h while being stirred vigorously with a magnetic stirrer. After cooling, the precipitate was filtered out and the filtrate was concentrated under reduced pressure. The resulting crude residue was purified by column chromatography on silica gel using ethyl acetate/hexane (10:90, v/v) as eluent. Slow evaporation of the collected fractions afforded the pure products: (Z)-2-(4-methylbenzylidene)-2H-benzo[b][1,4]thiazin-3(4H)-one (1), obtained as colorless plate-like crystals in 85% yield or 2-(furfurylidene)-3,4-dihydro-2H-1,4-benzothiazin-3-one (2), obtained as colorless column-like crystals in 79% yield. 1H NMR (300 MHz, DMSO-d6), δ, ppm for 1: 2.40 (s, 3H, CH3), 7.02–7.63 (m, 8H, Ar–H), 7.80 (s, 1H, ethene CH), 11.00 (s, 1H, NH). 1H NMR (300 MHz, DMSO-d6), δ, ppm For 2: 7.63–6.77 (m, 7H, Ar–H), 7.98 (s, 1H, ethene CH), 11.03 (s, 1H, NH).
7. Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure details are summarized in Table 4
. All hydrogen atoms were located and then freely refined with isotropic displacement parameters, which results in N—H = 0.87 (3) and 0.89 (3); C—H = 0.90 (3)–0.99 (3) and C—H (CH3) = 0.94 (4)–0.98 (3) Å.
|
Supporting information
contains datablocks global, 1, 2. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989025008904/yy2019sup1.cif
Structure factors: contains datablock 1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989025008904/yy20191sup2.hkl
Structure factors: contains datablock 2. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989025008904/yy20192sup3.hkl
Supporting information file. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989025008904/yy20191sup4.cml
Supporting information file. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989025008904/yy20192sup5.cml
| C16H13NOS | F(000) = 560 |
| Mr = 267.33 | Dx = 1.401 Mg m−3 |
| Monoclinic, P21/n | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å |
| a = 14.418 (3) Å | Cell parameters from 2851 reflections |
| b = 5.1901 (9) Å | θ = 2.4–27.0° |
| c = 17.425 (3) Å | µ = 0.25 mm−1 |
| β = 103.541 (2)° | T = 150 K |
| V = 1267.7 (4) Å3 | Plate, colourless |
| Z = 4 | 0.31 × 0.21 × 0.03 mm |
| Bruker SMART APEX CCD diffractometer | 3106 independent reflections |
| Radiation source: fine-focus sealed tube | 2192 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
| Graphite monochromator | Rint = 0.048 |
| Detector resolution: 8.3333 pixels mm-1 | θmax = 28.3°, θmin = 1.7° |
| φ and ω scans | h = −19→19 |
| Absorption correction: multi-scan (SADABS; Krause et al., 2015) | k = −6→6 |
| Tmin = 0.83, Tmax = 0.99 | l = −23→22 |
| 11287 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)] = 0.051 | Hydrogen site location: difference Fourier map |
| wR(F2) = 0.131 | All H-atom parameters refined |
| S = 1.04 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0561P)2 + 0.425P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
| 3106 reflections | (Δ/σ)max < 0.001 |
| 224 parameters | Δρmax = 0.53 e Å−3 |
| 0 restraints | Δρmin = −0.37 e Å−3 |
Experimental. The diffraction data were collected in three sets of 363 frames (0.5° width in ω) at φ = 0, 120 and 240°. A scan time of 80 sec/frame was used. |
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. |
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 > 2sigma(F2) is used only for calculating R-factors(gt) etc. and is not relevant to the choice of reflections for 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. |
| x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | ||
| S1 | 0.55852 (4) | 0.55290 (11) | 0.30333 (3) | 0.03071 (18) | |
| O1 | 0.58296 (11) | 0.2623 (3) | 0.51760 (8) | 0.0307 (4) | |
| N1 | 0.48480 (13) | 0.1456 (4) | 0.40334 (10) | 0.0268 (4) | |
| C1 | 0.46507 (14) | 0.3340 (4) | 0.27280 (12) | 0.0236 (4) | |
| C2 | 0.41636 (16) | 0.3409 (4) | 0.19356 (12) | 0.0276 (5) | |
| C3 | 0.34365 (16) | 0.1682 (4) | 0.16488 (13) | 0.0310 (5) | |
| C4 | 0.31880 (16) | −0.0129 (4) | 0.21486 (14) | 0.0308 (5) | |
| C5 | 0.36606 (15) | −0.0184 (4) | 0.29363 (13) | 0.0284 (5) | |
| C6 | 0.43919 (14) | 0.1572 (4) | 0.32306 (11) | 0.0233 (4) | |
| C7 | 0.55369 (15) | 0.2991 (4) | 0.44557 (12) | 0.0241 (4) | |
| C8 | 0.59591 (15) | 0.5073 (4) | 0.40564 (12) | 0.0242 (4) | |
| C9 | 0.66788 (15) | 0.6442 (4) | 0.45071 (12) | 0.0253 (4) | |
| C10 | 0.72877 (14) | 0.8460 (4) | 0.43109 (12) | 0.0246 (4) | |
| C11 | 0.71411 (16) | 0.9745 (4) | 0.35848 (13) | 0.0277 (5) | |
| C12 | 0.77792 (16) | 1.1582 (4) | 0.34453 (13) | 0.0298 (5) | |
| C13 | 0.85867 (16) | 1.2238 (4) | 0.40155 (12) | 0.0290 (5) | |
| C14 | 0.87274 (17) | 1.1000 (5) | 0.47383 (13) | 0.0336 (5) | |
| C15 | 0.80970 (16) | 0.9165 (5) | 0.48863 (13) | 0.0314 (5) | |
| C16 | 0.9272 (2) | 1.4253 (5) | 0.38564 (15) | 0.0366 (6) | |
| H1N | 0.466 (2) | 0.019 (5) | 0.4291 (17) | 0.056 (9)* | |
| H2 | 0.4369 (16) | 0.468 (4) | 0.1593 (14) | 0.030 (6)* | |
| H3 | 0.3106 (17) | 0.170 (4) | 0.1096 (14) | 0.036 (6)* | |
| H4 | 0.2677 (15) | −0.136 (4) | 0.1952 (12) | 0.023 (5)* | |
| H5 | 0.3464 (15) | −0.137 (4) | 0.3269 (13) | 0.026 (6)* | |
| H9 | 0.6836 (16) | 0.600 (4) | 0.5040 (14) | 0.028 (6)* | |
| H11 | 0.6590 (17) | 0.940 (4) | 0.3189 (14) | 0.034 (6)* | |
| H12 | 0.7653 (16) | 1.240 (4) | 0.2961 (14) | 0.032 (6)* | |
| H14 | 0.9262 (19) | 1.134 (5) | 0.5113 (15) | 0.043 (7)* | |
| H15 | 0.8185 (17) | 0.837 (5) | 0.5372 (15) | 0.037 (7)* | |
| H16A | 0.989 (3) | 1.390 (7) | 0.417 (2) | 0.097 (13)* | |
| H16B | 0.909 (3) | 1.603 (8) | 0.389 (2) | 0.102 (13)* | |
| H16C | 0.937 (2) | 1.410 (6) | 0.3321 (19) | 0.066 (9)* |
| U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
| S1 | 0.0319 (3) | 0.0350 (3) | 0.0211 (3) | −0.0111 (2) | −0.0021 (2) | 0.0073 (2) |
| O1 | 0.0343 (9) | 0.0342 (8) | 0.0217 (7) | −0.0073 (7) | 0.0025 (6) | 0.0067 (6) |
| N1 | 0.0283 (9) | 0.0288 (10) | 0.0216 (9) | −0.0042 (8) | 0.0022 (7) | 0.0072 (7) |
| C1 | 0.0225 (10) | 0.0229 (10) | 0.0240 (10) | −0.0004 (8) | 0.0027 (8) | 0.0010 (8) |
| C2 | 0.0301 (11) | 0.0287 (11) | 0.0224 (10) | 0.0000 (9) | 0.0031 (9) | 0.0021 (8) |
| C3 | 0.0316 (12) | 0.0340 (12) | 0.0241 (11) | −0.0007 (10) | 0.0002 (9) | −0.0029 (9) |
| C4 | 0.0274 (12) | 0.0280 (12) | 0.0343 (12) | −0.0031 (9) | 0.0019 (10) | −0.0025 (9) |
| C5 | 0.0261 (11) | 0.0272 (11) | 0.0312 (11) | −0.0017 (9) | 0.0052 (9) | 0.0034 (9) |
| C6 | 0.0217 (10) | 0.0253 (10) | 0.0220 (10) | 0.0025 (8) | 0.0034 (8) | 0.0024 (8) |
| C7 | 0.0244 (10) | 0.0241 (10) | 0.0235 (10) | −0.0004 (8) | 0.0048 (8) | 0.0037 (8) |
| C8 | 0.0247 (10) | 0.0255 (11) | 0.0219 (10) | 0.0019 (8) | 0.0046 (8) | 0.0042 (8) |
| C9 | 0.0273 (11) | 0.0271 (11) | 0.0206 (10) | 0.0001 (9) | 0.0041 (8) | 0.0030 (8) |
| C10 | 0.0249 (10) | 0.0260 (11) | 0.0232 (10) | −0.0022 (9) | 0.0063 (8) | −0.0027 (8) |
| C11 | 0.0252 (11) | 0.0318 (12) | 0.0240 (10) | −0.0045 (9) | 0.0019 (9) | −0.0010 (9) |
| C12 | 0.0353 (12) | 0.0298 (11) | 0.0246 (11) | −0.0038 (10) | 0.0074 (9) | 0.0009 (9) |
| C13 | 0.0331 (12) | 0.0275 (11) | 0.0288 (11) | −0.0053 (9) | 0.0121 (10) | −0.0082 (9) |
| C14 | 0.0332 (13) | 0.0411 (13) | 0.0237 (11) | −0.0112 (10) | 0.0011 (10) | −0.0072 (9) |
| C15 | 0.0362 (13) | 0.0374 (13) | 0.0188 (10) | −0.0068 (10) | 0.0032 (9) | −0.0009 (9) |
| C16 | 0.0410 (15) | 0.0359 (14) | 0.0360 (13) | −0.0163 (12) | 0.0150 (12) | −0.0100 (11) |
| S1—C1 | 1.747 (2) | C8—C9 | 1.348 (3) |
| S1—C8 | 1.754 (2) | C9—C10 | 1.458 (3) |
| O1—C7 | 1.242 (2) | C9—H9 | 0.93 (2) |
| N1—C7 | 1.350 (3) | C10—C15 | 1.397 (3) |
| N1—C6 | 1.401 (2) | C10—C11 | 1.402 (3) |
| N1—H1N | 0.87 (3) | C11—C12 | 1.385 (3) |
| C1—C6 | 1.379 (3) | C11—H11 | 0.94 (2) |
| C1—C2 | 1.395 (3) | C12—C13 | 1.384 (3) |
| C2—C3 | 1.381 (3) | C12—H12 | 0.92 (2) |
| C2—H2 | 0.98 (2) | C13—C14 | 1.386 (3) |
| C3—C4 | 1.384 (3) | C13—C16 | 1.508 (3) |
| C3—H3 | 0.97 (2) | C14—C15 | 1.382 (3) |
| C4—C5 | 1.382 (3) | C14—H14 | 0.90 (3) |
| C4—H4 | 0.98 (2) | C15—H15 | 0.92 (2) |
| C5—C6 | 1.397 (3) | C16—H16A | 0.94 (4) |
| C5—H5 | 0.93 (2) | C16—H16B | 0.96 (4) |
| C7—C8 | 1.490 (3) | C16—H16C | 0.98 (3) |
| C1—S1—C8 | 104.68 (10) | C8—C9—C10 | 131.7 (2) |
| C7—N1—C6 | 129.24 (19) | C8—C9—H9 | 115.3 (14) |
| C7—N1—H1N | 116.1 (19) | C10—C9—H9 | 112.9 (14) |
| C6—N1—H1N | 114.7 (19) | C15—C10—C11 | 116.56 (19) |
| C6—C1—C2 | 119.82 (19) | C15—C10—C9 | 117.86 (19) |
| C6—C1—S1 | 122.91 (15) | C11—C10—C9 | 125.57 (19) |
| C2—C1—S1 | 117.27 (16) | C12—C11—C10 | 121.3 (2) |
| C3—C2—C1 | 120.3 (2) | C12—C11—H11 | 119.0 (14) |
| C3—C2—H2 | 121.9 (13) | C10—C11—H11 | 119.7 (14) |
| C1—C2—H2 | 117.7 (13) | C13—C12—C11 | 121.6 (2) |
| C2—C3—C4 | 120.0 (2) | C13—C12—H12 | 119.7 (15) |
| C2—C3—H3 | 120.5 (14) | C11—C12—H12 | 118.7 (15) |
| C4—C3—H3 | 119.5 (14) | C12—C13—C14 | 117.3 (2) |
| C5—C4—C3 | 119.9 (2) | C12—C13—C16 | 121.0 (2) |
| C5—C4—H4 | 119.4 (12) | C14—C13—C16 | 121.7 (2) |
| C3—C4—H4 | 120.7 (12) | C15—C14—C13 | 121.8 (2) |
| C4—C5—C6 | 120.3 (2) | C15—C14—H14 | 119.2 (16) |
| C4—C5—H5 | 118.7 (13) | C13—C14—H14 | 118.9 (17) |
| C6—C5—H5 | 120.9 (13) | C14—C15—C10 | 121.4 (2) |
| C1—C6—C5 | 119.61 (18) | C14—C15—H15 | 121.7 (15) |
| C1—C6—N1 | 121.97 (19) | C10—C15—H15 | 116.9 (15) |
| C5—C6—N1 | 118.41 (19) | C13—C16—H16A | 109 (2) |
| O1—C7—N1 | 119.53 (18) | C13—C16—H16B | 117 (2) |
| O1—C7—C8 | 120.28 (18) | H16A—C16—H16B | 112 (3) |
| N1—C7—C8 | 120.17 (18) | C13—C16—H16C | 111.5 (18) |
| C9—C8—C7 | 116.94 (18) | H16A—C16—H16C | 102 (3) |
| C9—C8—S1 | 122.19 (16) | H16B—C16—H16C | 104 (3) |
| C7—C8—S1 | 120.71 (15) | ||
| C8—S1—C1—C6 | −5.2 (2) | O1—C7—C8—S1 | 177.44 (16) |
| C8—S1—C1—C2 | 175.45 (17) | N1—C7—C8—S1 | −1.1 (3) |
| C6—C1—C2—C3 | −1.3 (3) | C1—S1—C8—C9 | −179.98 (18) |
| S1—C1—C2—C3 | 178.04 (17) | C1—S1—C8—C7 | 4.81 (19) |
| C1—C2—C3—C4 | 0.0 (3) | C7—C8—C9—C10 | 175.5 (2) |
| C2—C3—C4—C5 | 0.8 (3) | S1—C8—C9—C10 | 0.1 (4) |
| C3—C4—C5—C6 | −0.3 (3) | C8—C9—C10—C15 | −167.7 (2) |
| C2—C1—C6—C5 | 1.8 (3) | C8—C9—C10—C11 | 11.2 (4) |
| S1—C1—C6—C5 | −177.52 (16) | C15—C10—C11—C12 | 1.2 (3) |
| C2—C1—C6—N1 | −178.91 (19) | C9—C10—C11—C12 | −177.8 (2) |
| S1—C1—C6—N1 | 1.8 (3) | C10—C11—C12—C13 | −0.2 (3) |
| C4—C5—C6—C1 | −1.0 (3) | C11—C12—C13—C14 | −0.7 (3) |
| C4—C5—C6—N1 | 179.7 (2) | C11—C12—C13—C16 | −179.6 (2) |
| C7—N1—C6—C1 | 3.7 (3) | C12—C13—C14—C15 | 0.7 (4) |
| C7—N1—C6—C5 | −177.0 (2) | C16—C13—C14—C15 | 179.6 (2) |
| C6—N1—C7—O1 | 177.5 (2) | C13—C14—C15—C10 | 0.3 (4) |
| C6—N1—C7—C8 | −4.0 (3) | C11—C10—C15—C14 | −1.2 (3) |
| O1—C7—C8—C9 | 2.0 (3) | C9—C10—C15—C14 | 177.8 (2) |
| N1—C7—C8—C9 | −176.53 (19) |
| D—H···A | D—H | H···A | D···A | D—H···A |
| N1—H1N···O1i | 0.87 (3) | 1.95 (3) | 2.822 (2) | 177 (3) |
| C4—H4···Cg(C1–C6)ii | 0.98 (2) | 2.94 (2) | 3.687 (3) | 134 (2) |
| C5—H5···O1i | 0.93 (2) | 2.74 (2) | 3.440 (3) | 132.4 (16) |
| C16—H16B···Cg(C10–C15)iii | 0.96 (4) | 2.90 (4) | 3.813 (3) | 158 (2) |
| C16—H16C···S1iv | 0.98 (3) | 3.02 (3) | 3.865 (3) | 146 (2) |
| Symmetry codes: (i) −x+1, −y, −z+1; (ii) −x+1/2, y−1/2, −z+1/2; (iii) x, y+1, z; (iv) −x+3/2, y+1/2, −z+1/2. |
| C13H9NO2S | F(000) = 1008 |
| Mr = 243.27 | Dx = 1.517 Mg m−3 |
| Monoclinic, I2/a | Cu Kα radiation, λ = 1.54178 Å |
| a = 18.9170 (5) Å | Cell parameters from 7352 reflections |
| b = 5.4280 (2) Å | θ = 4.3–65.2° |
| c = 20.9874 (7) Å | µ = 2.60 mm−1 |
| β = 98.702 (1)° | T = 150 K |
| V = 2130.21 (12) Å3 | Column, colourless |
| Z = 8 | 0.13 × 0.05 × 0.02 mm |
| Bruker D8 VENTURE PHOTON 100 CMOS diffractometer | 1826 independent reflections |
| Radiation source: INCOATEC IµS micro–focus source | 1506 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
| Mirror monochromator | Rint = 0.069 |
| Detector resolution: 10.4167 pixels mm-1 | θmax = 65.2°, θmin = 4.3° |
| ω scans | h = −22→22 |
| Absorption correction: multi-scan (SADABS; Krause et al., 2015) | k = −6→6 |
| Tmin = 0.84, Tmax = 0.95 | l = −24→24 |
| 11794 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)] = 0.038 | Hydrogen site location: difference Fourier map |
| wR(F2) = 0.090 | All H-atom parameters refined |
| S = 1.10 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0382P)2 + 2.4209P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
| 1826 reflections | (Δ/σ)max < 0.001 |
| 190 parameters | Δρmax = 0.21 e Å−3 |
| 0 restraints | Δρmin = −0.28 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 | ||
| S1 | 0.31212 (3) | 0.10632 (11) | 0.11631 (3) | 0.02437 (19) | |
| O1 | 0.18959 (8) | 0.5139 (3) | 0.21259 (8) | 0.0278 (4) | |
| O2 | 0.08078 (8) | −0.0479 (3) | 0.04622 (8) | 0.0290 (4) | |
| N1 | 0.30581 (10) | 0.5594 (4) | 0.20528 (9) | 0.0207 (4) | |
| C1 | 0.38122 (12) | 0.3098 (4) | 0.14519 (10) | 0.0192 (5) | |
| C2 | 0.44861 (12) | 0.2685 (4) | 0.12735 (11) | 0.0221 (5) | |
| C3 | 0.50469 (12) | 0.4255 (5) | 0.14732 (11) | 0.0232 (5) | |
| C4 | 0.49456 (13) | 0.6284 (5) | 0.18555 (11) | 0.0249 (5) | |
| C5 | 0.42823 (12) | 0.6707 (4) | 0.20361 (11) | 0.0219 (5) | |
| C6 | 0.37169 (12) | 0.5111 (4) | 0.18414 (10) | 0.0192 (5) | |
| C7 | 0.24287 (12) | 0.4442 (4) | 0.18943 (10) | 0.0203 (5) | |
| C8 | 0.23628 (11) | 0.2355 (4) | 0.14215 (10) | 0.0188 (5) | |
| C9 | 0.17072 (13) | 0.1519 (4) | 0.11978 (11) | 0.0224 (5) | |
| C10 | 0.15189 (12) | −0.0431 (4) | 0.07434 (11) | 0.0219 (5) | |
| C11 | 0.18668 (13) | −0.2345 (4) | 0.05112 (11) | 0.0243 (5) | |
| C12 | 0.13564 (14) | −0.3639 (5) | 0.00687 (12) | 0.0291 (6) | |
| C13 | 0.07351 (14) | −0.2461 (5) | 0.00537 (12) | 0.0302 (6) | |
| H1N | 0.3056 (15) | 0.691 (6) | 0.2301 (15) | 0.046 (9)* | |
| H2 | 0.4560 (13) | 0.129 (5) | 0.1012 (12) | 0.030 (7)* | |
| H3 | 0.5534 (15) | 0.393 (5) | 0.1376 (13) | 0.034 (7)* | |
| H4 | 0.5335 (14) | 0.741 (5) | 0.1993 (12) | 0.029 (7)* | |
| H5 | 0.4188 (12) | 0.807 (5) | 0.2282 (12) | 0.020 (6)* | |
| H9 | 0.1318 (13) | 0.231 (5) | 0.1329 (11) | 0.021 (6)* | |
| H11 | 0.2378 (15) | −0.266 (5) | 0.0648 (13) | 0.033 (7)* | |
| H12 | 0.1460 (16) | −0.504 (6) | −0.0150 (15) | 0.046 (8)* | |
| H13 | 0.0271 (15) | −0.272 (5) | −0.0154 (14) | 0.040 (8)* |
| U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
| S1 | 0.0212 (3) | 0.0225 (3) | 0.0298 (3) | −0.0008 (2) | 0.0052 (2) | −0.0102 (2) |
| O1 | 0.0239 (9) | 0.0300 (10) | 0.0315 (9) | −0.0028 (7) | 0.0111 (7) | −0.0116 (7) |
| O2 | 0.0231 (9) | 0.0302 (10) | 0.0321 (9) | −0.0055 (7) | −0.0006 (7) | −0.0064 (7) |
| N1 | 0.0220 (10) | 0.0182 (10) | 0.0218 (10) | −0.0014 (8) | 0.0033 (8) | −0.0067 (8) |
| C1 | 0.0217 (11) | 0.0199 (12) | 0.0155 (10) | 0.0000 (9) | 0.0008 (9) | 0.0017 (9) |
| C2 | 0.0236 (12) | 0.0227 (12) | 0.0195 (11) | 0.0025 (10) | 0.0017 (9) | −0.0011 (10) |
| C3 | 0.0200 (12) | 0.0279 (13) | 0.0219 (12) | 0.0008 (10) | 0.0031 (9) | 0.0015 (10) |
| C4 | 0.0213 (12) | 0.0267 (13) | 0.0259 (12) | −0.0034 (11) | 0.0009 (10) | 0.0003 (10) |
| C5 | 0.0235 (12) | 0.0210 (12) | 0.0206 (11) | 0.0009 (10) | 0.0015 (10) | −0.0029 (10) |
| C6 | 0.0223 (11) | 0.0192 (11) | 0.0165 (11) | 0.0017 (10) | 0.0043 (9) | 0.0020 (9) |
| C7 | 0.0248 (12) | 0.0191 (12) | 0.0172 (11) | −0.0010 (10) | 0.0037 (9) | −0.0007 (9) |
| C8 | 0.0226 (11) | 0.0172 (12) | 0.0173 (11) | 0.0000 (9) | 0.0050 (9) | −0.0017 (9) |
| C9 | 0.0221 (12) | 0.0209 (12) | 0.0251 (12) | 0.0004 (10) | 0.0064 (10) | −0.0027 (10) |
| C10 | 0.0200 (11) | 0.0252 (13) | 0.0199 (11) | −0.0057 (10) | 0.0014 (9) | 0.0008 (10) |
| C11 | 0.0260 (12) | 0.0235 (13) | 0.0231 (12) | −0.0030 (11) | 0.0028 (10) | −0.0024 (10) |
| C12 | 0.0378 (15) | 0.0267 (14) | 0.0234 (12) | −0.0078 (12) | 0.0061 (11) | −0.0060 (11) |
| C13 | 0.0330 (14) | 0.0308 (15) | 0.0253 (13) | −0.0115 (12) | −0.0006 (11) | −0.0021 (11) |
| S1—C1 | 1.748 (2) | C4—C5 | 1.384 (3) |
| S1—C8 | 1.755 (2) | C4—H4 | 0.97 (3) |
| O1—C7 | 1.242 (3) | C5—C6 | 1.389 (3) |
| O2—C13 | 1.370 (3) | C5—H5 | 0.93 (3) |
| O2—C10 | 1.385 (3) | C7—C8 | 1.499 (3) |
| N1—C7 | 1.342 (3) | C8—C9 | 1.337 (3) |
| N1—C6 | 1.409 (3) | C9—C10 | 1.433 (3) |
| N1—H1N | 0.89 (3) | C9—H9 | 0.93 (2) |
| C1—C6 | 1.393 (3) | C10—C11 | 1.359 (3) |
| C1—C2 | 1.400 (3) | C11—C12 | 1.420 (3) |
| C2—C3 | 1.376 (3) | C11—H11 | 0.98 (3) |
| C2—H2 | 0.96 (3) | C12—C13 | 1.334 (4) |
| C3—C4 | 1.393 (3) | C12—H12 | 0.93 (3) |
| C3—H3 | 0.99 (3) | C13—H13 | 0.93 (3) |
| C1—S1—C8 | 104.12 (11) | C1—C6—N1 | 122.0 (2) |
| C13—O2—C10 | 106.29 (19) | O1—C7—N1 | 120.2 (2) |
| C7—N1—C6 | 129.0 (2) | O1—C7—C8 | 119.9 (2) |
| C7—N1—H1N | 116.2 (19) | N1—C7—C8 | 119.90 (19) |
| C6—N1—H1N | 114.7 (19) | C9—C8—C7 | 118.0 (2) |
| C6—C1—C2 | 119.1 (2) | C9—C8—S1 | 120.93 (17) |
| C6—C1—S1 | 122.87 (17) | C7—C8—S1 | 121.11 (16) |
| C2—C1—S1 | 118.01 (17) | C8—C9—C10 | 127.5 (2) |
| C3—C2—C1 | 120.7 (2) | C8—C9—H9 | 118.3 (15) |
| C3—C2—H2 | 119.5 (15) | C10—C9—H9 | 114.1 (15) |
| C1—C2—H2 | 119.8 (15) | C11—C10—O2 | 109.0 (2) |
| C2—C3—C4 | 119.9 (2) | C11—C10—C9 | 135.9 (2) |
| C2—C3—H3 | 121.7 (16) | O2—C10—C9 | 115.2 (2) |
| C4—C3—H3 | 118.3 (16) | C10—C11—C12 | 107.1 (2) |
| C5—C4—C3 | 119.9 (2) | C10—C11—H11 | 122.5 (16) |
| C5—C4—H4 | 119.7 (15) | C12—C11—H11 | 130.4 (16) |
| C3—C4—H4 | 120.4 (15) | C13—C12—C11 | 106.7 (2) |
| C4—C5—C6 | 120.4 (2) | C13—C12—H12 | 129 (2) |
| C4—C5—H5 | 122.7 (15) | C11—C12—H12 | 124 (2) |
| C6—C5—H5 | 116.9 (15) | C12—C13—O2 | 110.9 (2) |
| C5—C6—C1 | 120.0 (2) | C12—C13—H13 | 134.7 (18) |
| C5—C6—N1 | 118.0 (2) | O2—C13—H13 | 114.3 (18) |
| C8—S1—C1—C6 | 4.7 (2) | O1—C7—C8—C9 | 8.7 (3) |
| C8—S1—C1—C2 | −174.43 (17) | N1—C7—C8—C9 | −169.4 (2) |
| C6—C1—C2—C3 | −0.7 (3) | O1—C7—C8—S1 | −171.80 (17) |
| S1—C1—C2—C3 | 178.49 (18) | N1—C7—C8—S1 | 10.0 (3) |
| C1—C2—C3—C4 | −0.2 (3) | C1—S1—C8—C9 | 168.76 (19) |
| C2—C3—C4—C5 | 0.3 (4) | C1—S1—C8—C7 | −10.7 (2) |
| C3—C4—C5—C6 | 0.4 (4) | C7—C8—C9—C10 | 179.5 (2) |
| C4—C5—C6—C1 | −1.2 (3) | S1—C8—C9—C10 | 0.1 (4) |
| C4—C5—C6—N1 | 178.4 (2) | C13—O2—C10—C11 | −0.2 (2) |
| C2—C1—C6—C5 | 1.4 (3) | C13—O2—C10—C9 | −179.4 (2) |
| S1—C1—C6—C5 | −177.75 (17) | C8—C9—C10—C11 | 18.1 (4) |
| C2—C1—C6—N1 | −178.2 (2) | C8—C9—C10—O2 | −162.9 (2) |
| S1—C1—C6—N1 | 2.6 (3) | O2—C10—C11—C12 | 0.0 (3) |
| C7—N1—C6—C5 | 174.8 (2) | C9—C10—C11—C12 | 179.0 (3) |
| C7—N1—C6—C1 | −5.6 (4) | C10—C11—C12—C13 | 0.1 (3) |
| C6—N1—C7—O1 | −179.4 (2) | C11—C12—C13—O2 | −0.2 (3) |
| C6—N1—C7—C8 | −1.2 (3) | C10—O2—C13—C12 | 0.3 (3) |
| D—H···A | D—H | H···A | D···A | D—H···A |
| N1—H1N···O1i | 0.89 (3) | 2.00 (3) | 2.881 (3) | 177 (3) |
| C2—H2···O2ii | 0.96 (3) | 2.81 (2) | 3.446 (3) | 124.2 (19) |
| C3—H3···O1iii | 0.99 (3) | 2.85 (3) | 3.573 (3) | 130.2 (19) |
| C3—H3···O2ii | 0.99 (3) | 2.78 (3) | 3.420 (3) | 122.6 (19) |
| C4—H4···CgC1–C6)iv | 0.97 (3) | 3.07 (3) | 3.688 (3) | 123 (2) |
| C5—H5···O1i | 0.93 (3) | 2.73 (2) | 3.490 (3) | 138.8 (18) |
| C11—H11···Cg(S1/N1/C1/C6–C8)v | 0.98 (3) | 3.06 (3) | 3.749 (3) | 129 (2) |
| C13—H13···O2vi | 0.93 (3) | 2.68 (3) | 3.359 (3) | 130 (2) |
| Symmetry codes: (i) −x+1/2, −y+3/2, −z+1/2; (ii) x+1/2, −y, z; (iii) x+1/2, −y+1, z; (iv) −x+1, y+1/2, −z+1/2; (v) x, y−1, z; (vi) −x, −y, −z. |
| Interaction energies were calculated employing the CE-B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) functional/basis set combination. The scale factors used to determine Etot: kele = 1.057, kpol = 0.740, kdis = 0.871, and krep = 0.618 (Mackenzie et al., 2017). R is the distance between the centroids of the interacting molecules. |
| Path | Symmetry code | Typea | R (Å) | Eele | Epol | Edis | Erep | Etot |
| Compound 1 | ||||||||
| A···B | -x + 1, -y, -z + 1 | double N—H···O and C—H···O | 8.68 | -98.2 | -24.6 | -21.1 | 108.7 | -73.3 |
| A···C | -x + 1, -y + 1, -z + 1 | carbonyl stacking | 6.33 | -3.8 | -3.5 | -25.1 | 10.0 | -22.3 |
| B'···C | x, y - 1, z | π–π, C—H···π, dispersion | 5.19 | -8.6 | -2.4 | -62.0 | 41.3 | -39.4 |
| B···E | -x + 3/2, y + 1/2, -z + 1/2 | C—H···S, dispersion | 6.86 | -3.5 | -0.6 | -21.3 | 15.5 | -13.1 |
| C···D | -x + 1/2, y - 1/2, -z + 1/2 | C—H···π, dispersion | 10.31 | -4.0 | -0.8 | -17.2 | 14.6 | -10.8 |
| C···E | -x + 3/2, y + 3/2, -z + 1/2 | dispersion | 10.05 | -2.9 | -0.4 | -13.3 | 7.7 | -10.2 |
| Compound 2 | ||||||||
| A···B | -x + 1/2, -y + 3/2, -z + 1/2 | double N—H···O and C—H···O | 7.90 | -89.9 | -22.3 | -19.8 | 88.9 | -73.9 |
| A···C | -x, -y, -z | double C—H···O | 11.27 | -8.4 | -1.1 | -9.2 | 7.9 | -12.7 |
| A···D | -x + 1/2, y, -z | dispersion | 5.26 | -2.1 | -1.3 | -31.2 | 20.8 | -17.5 |
| A···E | -x + 1, y + 1/2, -z + 1/2 | C—H···π, dispersion | 9.60 | -3.1 | -0.9 | -18.0 | 14.8 | -10.5 |
| A···F | -x + 1/2, -y + 1/2, -z + 1/2 | C—H···π, dispersion | 5.43 | -6.6 | -1.9 | -41.0 | 30.4 | -25.3 |
| B···E | x - 1/2, -y + 1, z | C—H···O | 9.93 | -4.5 | -1.4 | -11.9 | 7.8 | -11.3 |
| B···F | x, y + 1, z | stacking | 5.44 | -3.1 | -3.7 | -28.9 | 12.3 | -23.6 |
| C···D | x - 1/2, -y, z | C—H···O, dispersion | 9.76 | -4.3 | -0.7 | -13.5 | 7.9 | -12.0 |
| Note: (a )For details of the interaction modes, see Figs. 8 and 9. |
Acknowledgements
We express our sincere gratitude to Tulane University for support of the Crystallography Laboratory.
Funding information
This work was supported by the Ministry of education and science of Ukraine (contract No. 25BF037-02).
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