Salts of barbituric and 2-thiobarbituric acids with imidazole: polymorphism, supramolecular structure, thermal stability and water solubility

Literature Information

Publication Date 2023-11-17
DOI 10.1039/D3NJ04516A
Impact Factor 3.591
Authors

Taisiya S. Sukhikh, Irina A. Kurzina, Natalia M. Korotchenko, Dmitriy S. Nikitin


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Abstract

Barbituric acids are a useful tool for the construction of various supramolecular compounds with intriguing physicochemical properties. Also, barbiturates play a significant role in biology and medicine. The same is true for imidazole derivatives. Herein, three novel salts of barbituric (H2BA) and 2-thiobarbituric (H2TBA) acids with imidazole (Im), namely imidazolium barbiturate in two polymorphic modifications, HIm(HBA) (1) (pale yellow) and (2) (pale orange), and imidazolium 2-thiobarbiturate, HIm(HTBA) (3), were synthesized and characterized by CHNS elemental analysis, single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction, FT-IR and UV-Vis spectroscopy techniques. Crystal structure analysis revealed that the compounds feature three different supramolecular architectures with the formula unit count (Z′) varying from 1 for 3 to 4 for 1, which is governed by an unusual geometry of hydrogen bonding motifs. Intermolecular interactions in crystals 1–3 were analyzed using 2D-fingerprint plots derived from the Hirshfeld surfaces. According to the TG-DSC analysis, compounds 1–3 were thermally stable up to ∼100 °C in air. The solubility studies (solubility product constants and solubility at a fixed pH value were determined) showed that salts 2 and 3 were more soluble in water than H2(T)BA. To the best of our knowledge, this is one of the first reports on the phenomenon of polymorphism among organic salts with barbiturate moieties. Thus, the present findings broaden our understanding of the supramolecular organization of barbiturates, complement the systematic studies of the correlation between their crystal structure and physicochemical properties and lay the foundation for the further development of novel materials based on imidazolium (2-thio)barbiturates.

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New Journal of Chemistry
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NJC (New Journal of Chemistry) is a broad-based primary journal encompassing all branches of chemistry and its sub-disciplines. It contains full research articles, communications, perspectives and focus articles. This well-established journal, owned by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) of France, has been co-published with the Royal Society of Chemistry since January 1998. NJC is the forum for the publication of high-quality, original and significant work that opens new directions in chemistry or other scientific disciplines. In addition to having a significant chemical component, work published in NJC must demonstrate that it will have an impact on areas of research other than that of the reported work.

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