INTERMOLECULAR INTERACTIONS IN THE CRYSTAL-CHEMISTRY OF N,N-DIPHENYLISOPHTHALAMIDE, PYRIDINE-2,6-DICARBOXYLIC ACID BISPHENYLAMIDE, AND RELATED-COMPOUNDS
Jf. Malone et al., INTERMOLECULAR INTERACTIONS IN THE CRYSTAL-CHEMISTRY OF N,N-DIPHENYLISOPHTHALAMIDE, PYRIDINE-2,6-DICARBOXYLIC ACID BISPHENYLAMIDE, AND RELATED-COMPOUNDS, Chemistry of materials, 9(12), 1997, pp. 2983-2989
The synthesis, characterization, and crystal chemistry of N,N'-dipheny
lisophthalamide (1) and pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid bisphenylamide
(2) are described. Through a combination of single-crystal X-ray diffr
action and molecular orbital and crystal packing calculations, the imp
ortant intermolecular interactions have been determined. The structure
s have been compared with the closely related structures, N,N'-bis(3-h
ydroxyphenyl)isophthalamide (3) and N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-diphenylisophth
alam (4). Crystalline 1 and 2 are isostructural, but there are subtle
differences in the conformations and packing as a consequence of intra
molecular hydrogen bonding in 2. This reduces the deviation from plana
rity in the molecular conformation of 2 and consequently lengthens the
intermolecular hydrogen bonding distances. This is reflected in the l
attice energies of 1 and 2 (-40.9 and -38.7 kcal/mol, respectively) an
d in the stacking energies of these compounds. For the compounds that
do not contain an N atom in the central ring the progression 3, 1, 4 r
epresents a reduction in the hydrogen-bonding options, reflected in th
e respective lattice energies: -51.3, -40.9, and -33.3 kcal/mol. The d
ifference between 3 and 1 is in excellent agreement with predictions b
ased on group contributions in structure 3. In 4 there are no hydrogen
bonding options and so C-H ... O interactions play a much more import
ant role.