Structural examination of halogen-bonded co-crystals of tritopic acceptors was written by Andree, Stefan N. L.;Sinha, Abhijeet S.;Aakeroy, Christer B.. And the article was included in Molecules in 2018.Application of 172606-26-7 The following contents are mentioned in the article:
A series of tritopic N-heterocyclic compounds containing electrostatically and geometrically equivalent binding sites were synthesized and subjected to systematic co-crystallizations with selected perfluoroiodoarenes in order to map out their structural landscapes. More than 70% of the attempted reactions produced a co-crystal as indicated by IR spectroscopy. Four new crystal structures were reported and in all of them, at least one potential binding site on the acceptor was left vacant. The absence of halogen bonds to all sites was ascribed primarily due to deactivation of the σ-hole on the iodo-arene donors and partially due to steric hindrance. The tritopic acceptors containing 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole derivatives yield discrete tetrameric aggregates in the solid state, whereas the pyrazole and imidazole analogs assemble into halogen-bonded 1-D chains. This study involved multiple reactions and reactants, such as 1,1′,1”-((2,4,6-Trimethylbenzene-1,3,5-triyl)tris(methylene))tris(1H-pyrazole) (cas: 172606-26-7Application of 172606-26-7).
1,1′,1”-((2,4,6-Trimethylbenzene-1,3,5-triyl)tris(methylene))tris(1H-pyrazole) (cas: 172606-26-7) belongs to pyrazole derivatives. Pyrazole has two ring nitrogen atoms in which N1 is pyrrolic and N2 is pyridine-like. The N1 nitrogen is not reactive but is deprotonated in the presence of a base-forming anion. The presence of both electronegative nitrogen atoms in the pyrazole ring reduces the electron density of the C3- and C5-positions leaving electron density of C4-position unaltered. Thus the C4-position is vulnerable to electrophilic attack. The C3 electrophilic-position may undergo deprotonation in the presence of a strong base leading to ring opening.Application of 172606-26-7
Referemce:
Pyrazole – Wikipedia,
Pyrazoles – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics