Hydrogen bonding in crystal structures of N,N′-bis(3-pyridyl)urea. Why is the N-H⋯O tape synthon absent in diaryl ureas with electron-withdrawing groups?

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2006-01-01
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Reddy, L. Sreenivas
Basavoju, Srinivas
Vangala, Venu R.
Nangia, Ashwini
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Abstract
The urea tape α-network of bifurcated N-H⋯O hydrogen bonds is a common motif in diaryl ureas and their molecular complexes. We analyzed the X-ray crystal structures of N,N′-bis(3-pyridyl)urea 3 and some of its derivatives: hydrates of stoichiometry 3·(4/3)H2O and 3·2H2O, cocrystals 3·SA and 3·FA·H 2O with succinic acid and fumaric acid, bis pyridine N-oxide 8, and bis N-methylpyridinium iodide 9. Crystal packing in pyridyl urea structures is directed by N-H⋯Npyridyl, N-H⋯Owater, N-H⋯OaCid, and N-H⋯I- hydrogen bonds instead of the common one-dimensional N-H⋯Ourea tape. We postulated that the urea tape is absent in these structures because the C=O acceptor is weakened by two intramolecular C-H⋯Ourea interactions (synthon III) in a planar molecular conformation. Electrostatic surface potential (ESP) charges (DFT-B3LYP/6-31G*) showed that the C-H⋯O interactions sufficiently reduce the electron density at the urea O, and so other electronegative atoms, such as pyridyl N, H2O, COOH, and I -, become viable hydrogen-bond acceptors for the strong NH donors. 1H NMR difference nOe confirmed that the planar conformation of dipyridyl urea 3 in the solid-state persists in solution. Interestingly, even though the strong hydrogen-bond motifs changed in structures of 3, the C-C⋯O interactions of synthon III (energy 4.6-5.0 kcal/mol) occurred throughout the family. In addition to dipyridyl urea, other electron-withdrawing diaryl ureas, e.g., those with phenylpyridyl and phenyl-nitrophenyl groups, also deviated from the prototype N-H⋯O tape because of the interference from weak C-H⋯O hydrogen bonds. Therefore, when one or both aryl rings have hydrogen-bond acceptor groups (e.g., pyridine, PhNO2), the NH donor(s) preferentially bond to pyridyl N, nitro O, or solvent O atom instead of the urea C=O acceptor. We classify supramolecular organization in diaryl ureas into those with the α-network (twisted molecular conformation) or non-urea tape structures (stable, planar conformation) depending on the substituent group. Our results suggest a model to steer urea crystal structures toward the tape synthon (Ph and electron-donating groups) or with non-urea hydrogen-bond motifs and a high probability for urea⋯solvent hydrogen bonding (electron-withdrawing groups) by appropriate selection of functional aryl and heterocyclic groups. © 2006 American Chemical Society.
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Crystal Growth and Design. v.6(1)