4.7 Article

Polyhalogenated aminobenzonitriles vs. their co-crystals with 18-crown-6: amino group position as a tool to control crystal packing and solid-state fluorescence

Journal

CRYSTENGCOMM
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages 987-1001

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ce01469b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [121031700313-8]

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The study investigated the supramolecular structure of co-crystals formed by para- and ortho-aminobenzonitriles with 18-crown-6 ether, revealing changes in the solid-state fluorescence characteristics of the aminobenzonitriles upon co-crystallization. Advanced TD-DFT calculations provided insights into the molecular interactions during co-crystallization and their impact on photophysical properties. The research proposed a quantitative model to distinguish the behavior of ortho- and para-substituted molecules and suggested the importance of the arrangement of H-bond functionalities in modifying the molecular packing and tuning the solid-state photophysical properties.
A series of para- and ortho-aminobenzonitriles differing in the nature and number of halogen substituents were used to synthesize 2:1 co-crystals with 18-crown-6 ether. The supramolecular structure of the obtained co-crystals as well as aminobenzonitrile crystals was studied in detail using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Incorporation of the crown ether into the crystal matrix of arylamine results in the replacement of the H-bonds between amine molecules (N-H center dot center dot center dot N C and N-H center dot center dot center dot F) by the bond with a crown oxygen atom (N-H center dot center dot center dot O-cr). The crystal packing rearrangement modifies the pi-electron interactions between aminobenzonitrile molecules both in the type of contact (C-F center dot center dot center dot pi, C-Cl center dot center dot center dot pi, C N center dot center dot center dot pi, pi center dot center dot center dot pi) and mutual arrangement of the stacked molecules (parallel/anti-parallel, displaced/rotated). These transformations cause a change in the solid-state fluorescence characteristics of aminobenzonitriles: co-crystallization is accompanied by a bathochromic shift of the fluorescence maximum in the case of para-isomers and by a hypsochromic shift in the case of ortho-isomers; the magnitude of this effect depends on the number of halogen substituents. Exploration of the nature of the intra- and intermolecular interactions, along with the excited states of the molecules in the gas phase, in aminobenzonitrile crystals and their co-crystals, using state-of-the-art TD-DFT calculations evidences that, depending on the NH2 group position, insertion of the crown ether causes either an increase in the change of the dipole moment upon photo excitation/emission with a subsequent increase in the Stokes shifts (para-aminobenzonitriles) or a decrease in these characteristics (ortho-aminobenzonitriles). This is consistent with the strengthening or weakening of pi-electron aggregation in pairs of para- or ortho-aminobenzonitrile molecules, respectively, upon co-crystallization. A quantitative model that can clearly distinguish the different behaviours of ortho- and para-substituted molecules and provides an analytical tool of wide-ranging validity was proposed. The central importance of the mutual arrangement of the functions playing the role of the H-bond donor and acceptor was established; this finding may be exploited as a design tool to purposefully modify the molecular packing and tune the solid-state photophysical properties. Using DSC, the co-crystals' structure was found to self-organize in the same way upon crystallization from solution and from the melt and to regenerate in the melting-crystallization cycle.

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