research communications
of 4-bromo-3-[(5-bromothiophen-2-yl)methylidene]-2-(dicyanomethylidene)-5,6-difluoro-2,3-dihydroinden-1-one
aInstitutes of Physical Science and Information Technology, Anhui University, Hefei, People's Republic of China, and bZhejiang University, Hangzhou, People's Republic of China
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected], [email protected]
In the molecular structure of the title compound, C17H4Br2F2N2OS, the indenone moiety is close to planar [the dihedral angle between the phenyl and the five-membered ring plane is 4.2 (4)°], and the thiophene ring is only slightly inclined to this fragment. In the extended structure, a short Br⋯O contact considered as a halogen bond and a weak C—H⋯N interaction contribute to the crystal packing.
Keywords: crystal structure; dicyanomethylene indenone; bromothiophene; pi-conjugated system; halogen bond (Br⋯O); C—H⋯N hydrogen bond.
CCDC reference: 2543339
1. Chemical context
Polyhalogenation is a convenient strategy for tuning the properties of π-conjugated organic building blocks, because halogen substituents can be introduced without altering the underlying conjugated framework while still allowing systematic modulation of the electronic structure and crystal packing (Baker et al., 2012
; Facchetti, 2011
). In particular, combinations of heavier and lighter halogens (e.g. Br and F) can influence the molecular electrostatic potential and polarizability, and may facilitate directional intermolecular contacts, including halogen bonding, which contribute to the definition of packing motifs (Metrangolo & Resnati, 2001
; Cavallo et al., 2016
; Desiraju et al., 2013
). Such effects are especially relevant for donor⋯acceptor-type conjugated molecules, in which optical and charge-transport properties can be sensitive to subtle changes in the intermolecular arrangement (Coropceanu et al., 2007
; Sirringhaus, 2014
).
The title compound, C17H4Br2F2N2OS, comprises an electron-withdrawing dicyanomethylene fragment and a carbonyl group within a conjugated indanone-based framework, together with a multi-halogenated substitution pattern that is frequently employed in the design of electron-deficient chromophores (Lin & Zhan, 2016
). Although no device performance data are reported here, determination of the crystal structure is useful for assessing the conformational preferences of the conjugated skeleton and for identifying the intermolecular contacts promoted by the Br/F substitution.
2. Structural commentary
The molecular structure of the title compound is shown in Fig. 1
. The molecule consists of a dicyanomethylene-substituted 2,3-dihydro-1H-inden-1-one (indenone) unit that is connected to a 5-bromothiophene ring through an exocyclic C=C linkage involving atoms C1, C10 and C12. In the resulting π-conjugated molecule, the indenone carbonyl group and the dicyanomethylene fragment form an electron-deficient core, while the thienyl substituent further extends the conjugation. In line with the materials-guided use of multi-halogenation, the presence of two bromine and two fluorine atoms may provide electronic tuning as well as potential sites for structure-directing intermolecular contacts in the solid state.
| Figure 1 The molecular structure of the title compound with displacement ellipsoids drawn at the 50% probability level. H atoms are shown as small spheres of arbitrary radius. C—H⋯N hydrogen bonds are shown as blue dashed lines. |
The indenone ring system is close to planar. The phenyl ring (C3–C8; r.m.s. deviation = 0.011 Å) and the five-membered ring (C1/C2/C3/C8/C9; r.m.s. deviation = 0.008 Å) form a dihedral angle of 4.2 (4)°. The thiophene ring P (S11/C12–C15; r.m.s. deviation = 0.005 Å) is slightly twisted with respect to the indenone core, making dihedral angles of 7.5 (3)° with the phenyl ring and 5.4 (3)° with the five-membered ring. The near-coplanar arrangement across the linking fragments is supported by the torsion angles C9—C1—C10—C12 [–176.6 (7)°] and C1—C10—C12—S1 [3.7 (13)°]. In the dicyanomethylene substituent, torsion angles C1—C9—C21—C22 [173.2 (7)°] and C1—C9—C21—C24 [–6.3 (11)°] indicate an overall nearly planar conjugated skeleton with a small asymmetry in the orientations of the two cyano groups. The molecular conformation is stabilized by two weak C—H⋯N intramolecular hydrogen bonds (entries 1 and 2 in Table 1
).
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3. Supramolecular features
In the extended structure, a short and highly directional intermolecular Br⋯O contact involving the carbonyl O atom is present. As shown in Fig. 2
, this halogen bond (Cavallo et al., 2016
; Desiraju et al., 2013
) is nearly linear [Br17⋯O20i = 3.141 (5) Å; C4—Br17⋯O20i = 177.6 (2)°; symmetry code: (i) 1 − x, −y, 1 − z] and connects adjacent molecules into a centrosymmetric dimer.
| Figure 2 Crystal packing of the title compound viewed approximately along the b axis. Intermolecular Br⋯O contacts are shown as red lines, and intermolecular C—H⋯N interactions as blue lines. |
In addition, a weak C—H⋯N interaction involving the phenyl ring and one of the cyanomethylene N atoms is present (entry 3 in Table 1
) that may help to consolidate the crystal packing.
4. Database survey
A search of the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD: version 2026.1; Groom et al., 2016
) was carried out for neutral molecules containing the same conjugated indenone/dicyanomethylene framework as the title compound. The search returned 51 hits. Representative closely related structures include CAPYUN (Popova et al., 1983
), IDOYUW (Palusiak et al., 2006
), RAZMEM and RAZLUB (Capobianco et al., 2012
), TETVAT (Shao et al., 2023
), PAWMUZ (Terenti et al., 2022
), SOFPOT and SOFPUZ (Masuda et al., 2008
) and XAKJAX (Francos et al., 2016
).
Structural variations are mainly associated with the substituents on the indenone ring and the exocyclic aryl(heteroaryl)methylidene fragment, including differences in halogen substitution. In comparison with these related compounds, the title molecule bears two Br atoms (on the indenone ring and the thiophene ring) together with two F atoms on the fused benzene ring. Such substitutions change the steric demand and the distribution of electron density around the carbonyl and nitrile groups, which can influence the balance of weak intermolecular contacts. Consistent with this, the crystal structure of the title compound is primarily stabilized by C—H⋯N interactions involving the nitrile N atoms and by a directional Br⋯O contact involving the carbonyl O atom; the latter interaction is enabled by the presence and orientation of the bromine substituent and is not necessarily present in all related structures lacking an appropriately positioned halogen donor.
5. Synthesis and crystallization
The synthesis scheme to obtain the title compound is given in Fig. 3
. Starting material 1 (40 mg, 0.129 mmol) and 5-bromothiophene-2-carbaldehyde (31 mg, 0.162 mmol) were dissolved in 1,2-dichloroethane (12 ml). Trifluoroboric acid diethyl etherate (BF3·Et2O, 0.10 ml) and acetic anhydride (Ac2O, 0.10 ml) were added, and the reaction mixture was stirred at room temperature for 30 min. The mixture was then extracted with dichloromethane and the combined organic layers dried over anhydrous Na2SO4 and concentrated under reduced pressure. The crude product was purified by using chloroform as to afford the title compound as an orange–red solid (44 mg, 0.091 mmol, 71% based on starting material 1. The product was characterized by 1H NMR spectroscopy (details given in the electronic supplementary information). Single crystals suitable for X-ray diffraction were obtained by gas-liquid diffusion of n-hexane into a dichloromethane solution of the product over 2 d at room temperature.
| | Figure 3 Synthesis scheme of the title compound. |
6. Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure details are summarized in Table 2
. Hydrogen atoms were placed in calculated positions and refined using a riding model [C—H = 0.93 Å, Uiso(H) = 1.2Ueq(C)]. Six reflections, −20 4 18, 14 2 12, −5 3 21, −8 2 25, −9 1 28 and 12 4 11, were omitted as clear outliers. The maximum and minimum residual electron-density peaks are 1.70 and 0.97 Å, respectively, from atom Br17.
|
Supporting information
CCDC reference: 2543339
contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989026004469/wm5797sup1.cif
Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989026004469/wm5797Isup2.hkl
1H NMR spectra. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989026004469/wm5797sup4.tif
Supporting information file. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989026004469/wm5797Isup4.cml
| C17H4Br2F2N2OS | F(000) = 1856 |
| Mr = 482.08 | Dx = 2.013 Mg m−3 |
| Monoclinic, C2/c | Cu Kα radiation, λ = 1.54184 Å |
| a = 22.9059 (8) Å | Cell parameters from 4587 reflections |
| b = 5.6693 (2) Å | θ = 3.6–76.1° |
| c = 25.9096 (9) Å | µ = 7.98 mm−1 |
| β = 108.971 (4)° | T = 293 K |
| V = 3181.9 (2) Å3 | Block, orange-red |
| Z = 8 | 0.25 × 0.20 × 0.20 mm |
| XtaLAB Synergy R, HyPix diffractometer | 2432 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
| Detector resolution: 10.0000 pixels mm-1 | Rint = 0.047 |
| ω scans | θmax = 78.8°, θmin = 3.6° |
| Absorption correction: multi-scan (CrysAlisPro; Rigaku OD, 2024) | h = −27→28 |
| Tmin = 0.116, Tmax = 1.000 | k = −5→7 |
| 9183 measured reflections | l = −32→32 |
| 3095 independent reflections |
| Refinement on F2 | Primary atom site location: iterative |
| Least-squares matrix: full | Hydrogen site location: inferred from neighbouring sites |
| R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.042 | H-atom parameters constrained |
| wR(F2) = 0.132 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.015P)2 + 49.4493P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
| S = 1.15 | (Δ/σ)max < 0.001 |
| 3095 reflections | Δρmax = 0.77 e Å−3 |
| 226 parameters | Δρmin = −1.15 e Å−3 |
| 0 restraints |
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 | ||
| Br17 | 0.54902 (3) | 0.06639 (13) | 0.57194 (3) | 0.0452 (2) | |
| Br16 | 0.25776 (5) | 0.26446 (16) | 0.29651 (3) | 0.0663 (3) | |
| S11 | 0.33207 (7) | 0.4103 (3) | 0.41385 (6) | 0.0407 (4) | |
| F18 | 0.62344 (18) | 0.2168 (8) | 0.68610 (17) | 0.0589 (11) | |
| F19 | 0.6063 (2) | 0.5718 (9) | 0.74651 (17) | 0.0664 (13) | |
| O20 | 0.4295 (2) | 0.3420 (9) | 0.5018 (2) | 0.0554 (13) | |
| C1 | 0.3949 (3) | 0.6807 (11) | 0.5405 (3) | 0.0357 (13) | |
| C3 | 0.4832 (3) | 0.4643 (11) | 0.5943 (3) | 0.0370 (14) | |
| C4 | 0.5329 (3) | 0.3126 (11) | 0.6139 (3) | 0.0376 (14) | |
| N25 | 0.3078 (3) | 1.2489 (12) | 0.5599 (3) | 0.0602 (17) | |
| C2 | 0.4346 (3) | 0.4760 (11) | 0.5400 (3) | 0.0384 (14) | |
| C9 | 0.4182 (3) | 0.7844 (11) | 0.5951 (3) | 0.0358 (13) | |
| C21 | 0.3949 (3) | 0.9738 (11) | 0.6149 (3) | 0.0402 (15) | |
| C12 | 0.3154 (3) | 0.6618 (11) | 0.4446 (3) | 0.0362 (13) | |
| C8 | 0.4730 (3) | 0.6469 (11) | 0.6271 (2) | 0.0357 (13) | |
| C10 | 0.3448 (3) | 0.7501 (11) | 0.4982 (3) | 0.0376 (14) | |
| H10 | 0.325749 | 0.883990 | 0.505978 | 0.045* | |
| C24 | 0.3456 (3) | 1.1198 (11) | 0.5828 (3) | 0.0399 (14) | |
| C13 | 0.2659 (3) | 0.7793 (12) | 0.4081 (3) | 0.0451 (16) | |
| H13 | 0.249940 | 0.918681 | 0.416920 | 0.054* | |
| C7 | 0.5150 (3) | 0.6862 (13) | 0.6790 (3) | 0.0459 (16) | |
| H7 | 0.509451 | 0.809712 | 0.700609 | 0.055* | |
| C5 | 0.5740 (3) | 0.3538 (13) | 0.6655 (3) | 0.0443 (16) | |
| C15 | 0.2725 (3) | 0.4711 (12) | 0.3549 (3) | 0.0429 (15) | |
| C14 | 0.2420 (3) | 0.6726 (13) | 0.3572 (3) | 0.0464 (16) | |
| H14 | 0.209246 | 0.732103 | 0.328524 | 0.056* | |
| C6 | 0.5642 (3) | 0.5386 (13) | 0.6972 (3) | 0.0460 (16) | |
| N23 | 0.4306 (4) | 1.1109 (15) | 0.7145 (3) | 0.082 (2) | |
| C22 | 0.4170 (3) | 1.0470 (13) | 0.6707 (3) | 0.0498 (17) |
| U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
| Br17 | 0.0427 (4) | 0.0407 (4) | 0.0553 (4) | 0.0068 (3) | 0.0203 (3) | 0.0006 (3) |
| Br16 | 0.0885 (7) | 0.0584 (5) | 0.0404 (4) | −0.0060 (5) | 0.0049 (4) | −0.0067 (4) |
| S11 | 0.0414 (8) | 0.0371 (8) | 0.0388 (8) | 0.0041 (7) | 0.0064 (7) | −0.0021 (7) |
| F18 | 0.047 (2) | 0.070 (3) | 0.051 (2) | 0.015 (2) | 0.0043 (19) | 0.004 (2) |
| F19 | 0.063 (3) | 0.075 (3) | 0.045 (2) | 0.004 (2) | −0.006 (2) | −0.001 (2) |
| O20 | 0.054 (3) | 0.054 (3) | 0.048 (3) | 0.017 (2) | 0.001 (2) | −0.011 (2) |
| C1 | 0.035 (3) | 0.032 (3) | 0.039 (3) | 0.002 (3) | 0.011 (3) | 0.000 (3) |
| C3 | 0.032 (3) | 0.033 (3) | 0.045 (3) | −0.002 (3) | 0.011 (3) | 0.003 (3) |
| C4 | 0.036 (3) | 0.038 (3) | 0.041 (3) | 0.002 (3) | 0.016 (3) | 0.005 (3) |
| N25 | 0.064 (4) | 0.047 (4) | 0.076 (5) | 0.011 (3) | 0.031 (4) | 0.003 (4) |
| C2 | 0.033 (3) | 0.035 (3) | 0.044 (4) | −0.003 (3) | 0.008 (3) | −0.005 (3) |
| C9 | 0.038 (3) | 0.030 (3) | 0.040 (3) | −0.003 (3) | 0.014 (3) | 0.000 (3) |
| C21 | 0.046 (4) | 0.033 (3) | 0.045 (4) | −0.004 (3) | 0.020 (3) | −0.007 (3) |
| C12 | 0.032 (3) | 0.037 (3) | 0.037 (3) | −0.003 (3) | 0.007 (2) | 0.000 (3) |
| C8 | 0.038 (3) | 0.036 (3) | 0.034 (3) | 0.000 (3) | 0.014 (3) | 0.000 (3) |
| C10 | 0.034 (3) | 0.032 (3) | 0.046 (4) | 0.003 (3) | 0.011 (3) | 0.006 (3) |
| C24 | 0.047 (4) | 0.031 (3) | 0.046 (4) | 0.002 (3) | 0.022 (3) | −0.002 (3) |
| C13 | 0.042 (4) | 0.038 (4) | 0.053 (4) | 0.009 (3) | 0.012 (3) | 0.008 (3) |
| C7 | 0.054 (4) | 0.045 (4) | 0.041 (4) | 0.000 (3) | 0.019 (3) | 0.001 (3) |
| C5 | 0.036 (3) | 0.046 (4) | 0.047 (4) | 0.002 (3) | 0.009 (3) | 0.010 (3) |
| C15 | 0.045 (4) | 0.040 (4) | 0.038 (3) | −0.007 (3) | 0.006 (3) | −0.001 (3) |
| C14 | 0.049 (4) | 0.047 (4) | 0.039 (3) | 0.002 (3) | 0.008 (3) | 0.007 (3) |
| C6 | 0.040 (3) | 0.052 (4) | 0.038 (3) | −0.004 (3) | 0.002 (3) | 0.006 (3) |
| N23 | 0.096 (6) | 0.090 (6) | 0.057 (4) | 0.026 (5) | 0.018 (4) | −0.022 (4) |
| C22 | 0.058 (4) | 0.045 (4) | 0.047 (4) | 0.008 (4) | 0.017 (3) | −0.008 (3) |
| Br17—C4 | 1.877 (7) | C9—C8 | 1.480 (9) |
| Br16—C15 | 1.855 (7) | C21—C24 | 1.428 (9) |
| S11—C12 | 1.735 (7) | C21—C22 | 1.428 (9) |
| S11—C15 | 1.720 (7) | C12—C10 | 1.422 (9) |
| F18—C5 | 1.333 (8) | C12—C13 | 1.389 (9) |
| F19—C6 | 1.341 (7) | C8—C7 | 1.395 (9) |
| O20—C2 | 1.223 (8) | C10—H10 | 0.9300 |
| C1—C2 | 1.477 (9) | C13—H13 | 0.9300 |
| C1—C9 | 1.464 (8) | C13—C14 | 1.391 (9) |
| C1—C10 | 1.362 (8) | C7—H7 | 0.9300 |
| C3—C4 | 1.385 (9) | C7—C6 | 1.359 (10) |
| C3—C2 | 1.485 (9) | C5—C6 | 1.394 (10) |
| C3—C8 | 1.405 (9) | C15—C14 | 1.352 (10) |
| C4—C5 | 1.382 (9) | C14—H14 | 0.9300 |
| N25—C24 | 1.142 (9) | N23—C22 | 1.136 (9) |
| C9—C21 | 1.372 (9) | ||
| C15—S11—C12 | 90.8 (3) | C7—C8—C9 | 130.5 (6) |
| C9—C1—C2 | 106.9 (5) | C1—C10—C12 | 133.8 (6) |
| C10—C1—C2 | 125.5 (6) | C1—C10—H10 | 113.1 |
| C10—C1—C9 | 127.6 (6) | C12—C10—H10 | 113.1 |
| C4—C3—C2 | 130.4 (6) | N25—C24—C21 | 175.0 (8) |
| C4—C3—C8 | 121.1 (6) | C12—C13—H13 | 122.6 |
| C8—C3—C2 | 108.5 (5) | C12—C13—C14 | 114.9 (6) |
| C3—C4—Br17 | 122.9 (5) | C14—C13—H13 | 122.6 |
| C5—C4—Br17 | 119.1 (5) | C8—C7—H7 | 121.0 |
| C5—C4—C3 | 117.9 (6) | C6—C7—C8 | 118.0 (7) |
| O20—C2—C1 | 126.7 (6) | C6—C7—H7 | 121.0 |
| O20—C2—C3 | 125.7 (6) | F18—C5—C4 | 120.7 (6) |
| C1—C2—C3 | 107.5 (5) | F18—C5—C6 | 118.7 (6) |
| C1—C9—C8 | 107.8 (5) | C4—C5—C6 | 120.5 (6) |
| C21—C9—C1 | 127.7 (6) | S11—C15—Br16 | 118.7 (4) |
| C21—C9—C8 | 124.4 (6) | C14—C15—Br16 | 127.6 (5) |
| C9—C21—C24 | 124.4 (6) | C14—C15—S11 | 113.7 (5) |
| C9—C21—C22 | 123.5 (6) | C13—C14—H14 | 124.5 |
| C22—C21—C24 | 112.0 (6) | C15—C14—C13 | 111.1 (6) |
| C10—C12—S11 | 129.2 (5) | C15—C14—H14 | 124.5 |
| C13—C12—S11 | 109.5 (5) | F19—C6—C7 | 120.2 (7) |
| C13—C12—C10 | 121.3 (6) | F19—C6—C5 | 117.6 (6) |
| C3—C8—C9 | 109.1 (5) | C7—C6—C5 | 122.2 (6) |
| C7—C8—C3 | 120.1 (6) | N23—C22—C21 | 175.2 (8) |
| Br17—C4—C5—F18 | −2.0 (9) | C2—C3—C8—C7 | −175.3 (6) |
| Br17—C4—C5—C6 | 178.5 (5) | C9—C1—C2—O20 | 179.2 (7) |
| Br16—C15—C14—C13 | 179.4 (5) | C9—C1—C2—C3 | −2.0 (7) |
| S11—C12—C10—C1 | 3.7 (11) | C9—C1—C10—C12 | −176.6 (7) |
| S11—C12—C13—C14 | 0.0 (8) | C9—C8—C7—C6 | −175.4 (6) |
| S11—C15—C14—C13 | −1.4 (8) | C21—C9—C8—C3 | 179.2 (6) |
| F18—C5—C6—F19 | 1.7 (10) | C21—C9—C8—C7 | −7.0 (11) |
| F18—C5—C6—C7 | 179.8 (6) | C12—S11—C15—Br16 | −179.5 (4) |
| C1—C9—C21—C24 | −6.3 (11) | C12—S11—C15—C14 | 1.2 (6) |
| C1—C9—C21—C22 | 173.2 (7) | C12—C13—C14—C15 | 0.9 (9) |
| C1—C9—C8—C3 | −0.6 (7) | C8—C3—C4—Br17 | −179.8 (5) |
| C1—C9—C8—C7 | 173.2 (7) | C8—C3—C4—C5 | −3.3 (9) |
| C3—C4—C5—F18 | −178.6 (6) | C8—C3—C2—O20 | −179.5 (7) |
| C3—C4—C5—C6 | 1.9 (10) | C8—C3—C2—C1 | 1.7 (7) |
| C3—C8—C7—C6 | −2.2 (10) | C8—C9—C21—C24 | 174.0 (6) |
| C4—C3—C2—O20 | 1.9 (12) | C8—C9—C21—C22 | −6.5 (10) |
| C4—C3—C2—C1 | −176.9 (6) | C8—C7—C6—F19 | 178.8 (6) |
| C4—C3—C8—C9 | 178.1 (6) | C8—C7—C6—C5 | 0.8 (11) |
| C4—C3—C8—C7 | 3.5 (9) | C10—C1—C2—O20 | 1.6 (11) |
| C4—C5—C6—F19 | −178.8 (6) | C10—C1—C2—C3 | −179.7 (6) |
| C4—C5—C6—C7 | −0.7 (11) | C10—C1—C9—C21 | −0.6 (11) |
| C2—C1—C9—C21 | −178.1 (6) | C10—C1—C9—C8 | 179.2 (6) |
| C2—C1—C9—C8 | 1.6 (7) | C10—C12—C13—C14 | 179.8 (6) |
| C2—C1—C10—C12 | 0.5 (12) | C13—C12—C10—C1 | −176.0 (7) |
| C2—C3—C4—Br17 | −1.3 (10) | C15—S11—C12—C10 | 179.6 (6) |
| C2—C3—C4—C5 | 175.2 (6) | C15—S11—C12—C13 | −0.7 (5) |
| C2—C3—C8—C9 | −0.7 (7) |
| D—H···A | D—H | H···A | D···A | D—H···A |
| C7—H7···N23 | 0.93 | 2.59 | 3.394 (12) | 145 |
| C10—H10···N25 | 0.93 | 2.61 | 3.489 (10) | 159 |
| C13—H13···N25i | 0.93 | 2.48 | 3.405 (11) | 171 |
| Symmetry code: (i) −x+1/2, −y+5/2, −z+1. |
Footnotes
‡Cao Sunyu and Chen Xiaofeng contributed equally to this work and share first authorship.
Funding information
Funding for this research was provided by: Anhui University Scientific Research Start-up Fund (grant No. S020318006/005).
References
Baker, R. J., Colavita, P. E., Murphy, D. M., Platts, J. A. & Wallis, J. D. (2012). J. Mater. Chem. 22, 217–234. CrossRef Google Scholar
Bourhis, L. J., Dolomanov, O. V., Gildea, R. J., Howard, J. A. K. & Puschmann, H. (2015). Acta Cryst. A71, 59–75. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Capobianco, A., Esposito, A., Caruso, T., Borbone, F., Carella, A., Centore, R. & Peluso, A. (2012). Eur J Org Chem, pp. 2980–2989. Google Scholar
Cavallo, G., Metrangolo, P., Milani, R., Pilati, T., Priimagi, A., Resnati, G. & Terraneo, G. (2016). Chem. Rev. 116, 2478–2601. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Coropceanu, V., Cornil, J., da Silva Filho, D. A., Olivier, Y., Silbey, R. & Brédas, J.-L. (2007). Chem. Rev. 107, 926–952. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed CAS Google Scholar
Desiraju, G. R., Ho, P. S., Kloo, L., Legon, A. C., Marquardt, R., Metrangolo, P., Politzer, P., Resnati, G. & Rissanen, K. (2013). Pure Appl. Chem. 85, 1711–1713. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Dolomanov, O. V., Bourhis, L. J., Gildea, R. J., Howard, J. A. K. & Puschmann, H. (2009). J. Appl. Cryst. 42, 339–341. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Facchetti, A. (2011). Chem. Mater. 23, 733–758. CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Francos, J., García-Garrido, S. E., Borge, J., Suárez, F. J. & Cadierno, V. (2016). RSC Adv. 6, 6858–6867. CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Groom, C. R., Bruno, I. J., Lightfoot, M. P. & Ward, S. C. (2016). Acta Cryst. B72, 171–179. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Lin, Y. & Zhan, X. (2016). Mater. Horiz. 3, 470–488. Google Scholar
Masuda, D., Wakabayashi, H., Miyamae, H., Teramae, H. & Kobayashi, K. (2008). Tetrahedron Lett.,49, 4342–4345. Google Scholar
Metrangolo, P. & Resnati, G. (2001). Chem. Eur. J. 7, 2511–2519. CrossRef PubMed CAS Google Scholar
Palusiak, M., Plażuk, D. & Zakrzewski, J. (2006). Acta Cryst. E62, o3052–o3053. CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Popova, E. G., Chetkina, L. A., Bel'skii, V. K., Bespalov, B. P. & Abolin, A. G. (1983). Zh. Strukt. Khim. 24, 128–133. CAS Google Scholar
Rigaku OD (2024). CrysAlis PRO. Rigaku Oxford Diffraction, Yarnton, England. Google Scholar
Shao, L., Meng, F., Chen, J. & Fu, Y. (2023). J. Mater. Chem. A, 11, 5027–5036. CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Sheldrick, G. M. (2015). Acta Cryst. C71, 3–8. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Sirringhaus, H. (2014). Adv. Mater. 26, 1319–1335. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Terenti, N., Giurgi, G.., Crişan, A. P., Anghel, C., Bogdan, A., Pop, A., Stroia, I., Terec, A., Szolga, L., Grosu, I. & Roncali, J. (2022). J. Mater. Chem. C, 10, 5716–5726. CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Westrip, S. P. (2010). J. Appl. Cryst. 43, 920–925. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.

journal menu
access



