Title: StructureProperty Relationships in Crystal Structures of Polar Molecules
1Structure-Property Relationships in Crystal
Structures of Polar Molecules
Graham Tizzard Supervisor Mike Hursthouse
2Background
- No. of different attractive forces determine
packing in molecular crystals - London forces, multipolar forces, H- bonding, CT
forces - Complex interplay of these repulsion E ? many
local minima in crystal lattice E - ? Polymorphism - the existence of more than one
crystalline form in a substance
3Polymorphism H-bonding
- H-bonds
- Highest E interactions in molecular crystals ?
most important attractive force - Multiple H-bonding sites ? different H-bonding
topologies ? polymorphism - However
- Polymorphism also in systems w.out strong H-bonds
(D H A D N, O, S A N, O, S, Hal) - Weak H-bonds may exist (C H A, C H p)
- Importance of H-bonding in defining polymorphism
greatly reduced
4Aims
- Detailed study of weak or non H-bonding systems
- Especially those w. non-centrosymmetric
polymorphs - V. important for development of materials w. NLO
properties - Electrostatic interactions expected to exert
greater influence on xtal structure
5Dataset
- Constructed from Cambridge Structural Database1
(CSD) v5.25 (November 2003) - CSD mined for polymorphic clusters with one
non-centrosymmetric member - 835 hits made up of 258 polymorphic clusters
each comprising of 2-3 different polymorphs
1 F. H. Allen, Acta Crystallogr., B58, 380-388,
2002..
6Analyses
- XPac2
- Many polymorphic families of a compound show no
similarity when analysed - For those that do structure-forming motif may
be able to be elucidated from results - Short contact analysis (Mercury v1.2.13)
modelling of electrostatic charges (Spartan04
for windows4) - Correlation between short contact distances
matching of potentials would suggest these are
important in a crystal structure
2 XPac T. Gelbrich 2002 University of
Southampton, UK. 3 Mercury v1.2.1 CCDC,
Cambridge, UK. 4 Spartan04 Wavefunction,
Inc. Irvine, CA, USA.
74-Bromo-trans-1,4-dihydro-4-tritylbiphenyl
(BAWSAT)
BAWSAT01
BAWSAT
CSD code
monoclinic
orthorhombic
Crystal System
Pc (7)
Pnam (62)
Space Group (No.)
9.011
13.012
a / Å
16.187
17.264
b / Å
8.463
10.431
c / Å
90
90
a / º
108.98
90
ß / º
90
90
? / º
1167.309
2343.211
Cell Volume / Å3
2
4
Z
1.0
0.5
Z
5
5
Reference
- 2 polymorphs identified from CSD BAWSAT
BAWSAT01 - BAWSAT01 is non-centrosymmetric
5 A. K. Cheetham, M. C. Grossel, J. M. Newsam
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103 5363 1981.
8XPac Analysis of BAWSAT
- Views of BAWSAT along the c-axis (top) BAWSAT01
between the a and c axes (bottom) - XPac reveals 1d chain along these respective axes
common to both crystal structures (green) - In both structures the same chain motif is
interspaced (in different ways) between the
original (dark green) - Is this a structure-forming motif?...
9Short Contact Electrostatic Charge Analyses of
BAWSAT
- Each molecule in BAWSAT01 (top) BAWSAT (bottom)
has short contacts w. 8 neighbours - None of these is particularly strong
- ESC SC data correlation 4/10 wrt. BAWSAT01 0
wrt. BAWSAT - Suggests electrostatic interactions unimportant
in crystal formation - Other interactions e.g. simple space-filling may
dictate these structures.
BAWSAT01
Length-VdW / Å
Length / Å
Electrostatic charge 2
Atom2
Electrostatic charge 1
Atom1
-0.086
2.314
0.136779
H24 1
0.130679
H8
-0.086
2.314
0.130679
H8 2
0.136779
H24
-0.08
2.97
-0.117756
Br1 3
0.097207
H3
-0.08
2.97
0.097207
H3 4
-0.117756
Br1
-0.058
2.342
0.120092
H19 5
0.104592
H13
-0.058
2.342
0.104592
H13 6
0.120092
H19
-0.056
2.844
-0.191035
C28 7
0.155091
H4
-0.056
2.844
0.155091
H4 8
-0.191035
C28
-0.041
2.359
0.155091
H4 8
0.136788
H22
-0.041
2.359
0.136788
H22 7
0.155091
H4
BAWSAT
Length-VdW / Å
Length / Å
Electrostatic charge 2
Atom2
Electrostatic charge 1
Atom1
-0.12
2.28
0.155091
H4 1
0.104592
H13
-0.12
2.28
0.104591
H18 2
0.155091
H4
-0.12
2.28
0.104592
H13 3
0.155091
H4
-0.12
2.28
0.155091
H4 4
0.104591
H18
-0.102
2.298
0.097216
H5 5
0.097207
H3
-0.102
2.298
0.097207
H3 6
0.097216
H5
-0.03
2.37
0.104591
H18 7
0.104592
H13
-0.03
2.37
0.104592
H13 8
0.104591
H18
-0.002
2.898
0.078511
C3 5
0.097216
H5
-0.002
2.898
0.097207
H3 5
0.078478
C5
-0.002
2.898
0.097216
H5 4
0.078511
C3
-0.002
2.898
0.078478
C5 4
0.097207
H3
102-(a-p-Bromophenyl-ß-nitroethyl)-cyclohexanone
(BPNECH)
BPNECH01
BPNECH
CSD code
orthorhombic
monoclinic
Crystal System
P212121 (19)
P21/c (14)
Space Group (No.)
5.539
5.630
a / Å
8.495
8.560
b / Å
30.777
30.570
c / Å
90
90
a / º
90
90.30
ß / º
90
90
? / º
1448.175
1473.234
Cell Volume / Å3
4
4
Z
1.0
1.0
Z
7
6
Reference
- 2 polymorphs identified from CSD BPNECH
BPNECH01 - BPNECH01 is non-centrosymmetric
6 M. Calligaris, F. Giordano, L. Randaccio
Ric. Sci., Parte 1 36 1333 1966. 7 D.
Seebach, I. M. Lyapkalo, R. Dahinden Helv Chim
Acta 82 1829 1999.
11XPac Analysis of BPNECH
- Views of BPNECH (top) and BPNECH01 (bottom) along
the b-axis - XPac reveals 2d sheet along these respective axes
common to both crystal structures (green) - In BPNECH both highlighted sheets (green dark
green) are identical - In BPNECH01 second sheet highlighted (red) is
same sheet structure after a 21 screw operation
12Short Contact Electrostatic Charge Analyses of
BPNECH
BPNECH01
Length-VdW
Length
Electrostatic charge 2
Atom2
Electrostatic charge 1
Atom1
- Each molecule in BPNECH01 (top) and BPNECH
(bottom) has short contacts w. 8 / 9 neighbours
respectively - Short contacts are stronger on the whole than in
BAWSAT BAWSAT01 - ESC SC data correlate in both polymorphs
- Suggests that electrostatic interactions may be
significant in formation of both crystal systems
-0.222
2.498
0.166816
H13 1
-0.434661
O2
-0.222
2.498
-0.434661
O2 2
0.166816
H13
-0.212
2.508
-0.434661
O2 2
0.203696
H12
-0.212
2.508
0.203696
H12 1
-0.434661
O2
-0.124
2.596
0.130828
H1 3
-0.434661
O2
-0.124
2.596
-0.434661
O2 4
0.130828
H1
-0.084
2.636
0.106818
H7 5
-0.447545
O1
-0.084
2.636
-0.447545
O1 6
0.106818
H7
-0.063
2.987
-0.05641
Br1 7
0.093177
H5
-0.063
2.987
0.093177
H5 8
-0.05641
Br1
-0.059
2.661
0.12995
H2 1
-0.451598
O3
-0.059
2.661
-0.451598
O3 2
0.12995
H2
BPNECH
Length-VdW
Length
Electrostatic charge 2
Atom2
Electrostatic charge 1
Atom1
-0.326
2.394
-0.434661
O2 1
0.130828
H1
-0.326
2.394
0.130828
H1 2
-0.434661
O2
-0.27
2.45
0.1308283
H13 3
-0.434661
O2
-0.27
2.45
-0.434661
O2 4
0.1308283
H13
-0.224
2.496
-0.434661
O2 4
0.1308282
H12
-0.224
2.496
0.1308282
H12 3
-0.434661
O2
-0.145
2.575
-0.451598
O3 4
0.12995
H2
-0.145
2.575
0.12995
H2 3
-0.451598
O3
-0.096
2.624
-0.447545
O1 5
0.106818
H7
-0.096
2.624
0.106818
H7 6
-0.447545
O1
-0.057
3.313
-0.05641
Br1 7
-0.447545
O1
-0.057
3.313
-0.447545
O1 7
-0.05641
Br1
-0.048
2.672
-0.434661
O2 4
0.06238
H9
-0.048
2.672
0.06238
H9 3
-0.434661
O2
-0.029
2.691
0.062736
H3 8
-0.451598
O3
-0.029
2.691
-0.451598
O3 9
0.062736
H3
13Comments I
- Several points worth noting
- Overall analysis involves several techniques -
hard to draw conclusions using them in isolation - XPac analysis uses top-down approach - data
derived from polymorph crystal structures - Modelling of electrostatic charges is bottom-up
approach - data derived from molecule - One goal of Comb-e-Chem project - combine data
from different analyses to derive novel data
develop it into meaningful knowledge
14Comments II
- Major bottlenecks throughout project have been
workflow related - Data transfer from one application to another
- Driving applications to obtain the data
- Methods of automation investigated
- perl to write data-transfer scripts
- Spreadsheets to automate calculations
- Ultimate aim of providing complete analysis of
electrostatic interactions of a molecule in
context of its crystal packing as a single
callable process
15Acknowledgements
- Prof. Mike Hursthouse
- The Group Dr. Simon Coles, Dr. Mark Light, Dr.
Peter Horton, Dr. Ann Bingham, Dr. Thomas
Gelbrich, Dr. Stefan Christensen, Dr. Yang Li,
Dr. David Hughes, Suzanna Ward - EPSRC E-Science project (GR/R67729, Comb-e-Chem)