RESUMEN
Scientific interest in orthopoxvirus infections and search for new highly effective compounds possessing antiviral activity against orthopoxviruses have significantly increased as a result of worldwide mpox outbreak in 2022. The present work deals with the synthesis of new 2-arylimidazoles exhibiting in vitro activity not only against the vaccinia virus, cowpox virus and ectromelia (mousepox) virus but also against the variola virus. Among the imidazole derivatives under consideration (1-hydroxyimidazoles, 1-methoxyimidazoles, 1-benzyloxyimidazoles, and imidazole N-oxides), the most promising antiviral activity is demonstrated by 1-hydroxyimidazoles, which may exist as two prototropic tautomers. Both of these tautomers may be manifested in different crystal structures of these compounds, according to single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, while predominantly one of them (N-hydroxy-tautomeric form) is present in DMSO-d 6 solutions and in the gaseous state, as shown by NMR spectroscopy and quantum-chemical calculations. The leader compound 1-hydroxy-2-(4-nitrophenyl)imidazole 4a demonstrated the highest selectivity indices against the vaccinia virus (SI = 1072) and the variola virus (SI = 373).
RESUMEN
The crystal structure of potassium guaninate hydrate, K+·C5H4N5O-·H2O, was studied in the pressure range of 1â atm to 7.3â GPa by single-crystal diffraction using synchrotron radiation and a laboratory X-ray diffraction source. Structural strain was compared to that of the same salt hydrate on cooling, and in 2Na+·C5H3N5O2-·7H2O under hydrostatic compression and on cooling. A polymorphic transition into a new, incommensurately modulated, phase was observed at â¼4-5â GPa. The transition was reversible with a hysteresis: the satellite reflections disappeared on decompression to â¼1.4â GPa.
RESUMEN
Monohydrate sulfate kieserites (M 2+SO4·H2O) and their solid solutions are essential constituents on the surface of Mars and most likely also on Galilean icy moons in our solar system. Phase stabilities of end-member representatives (M 2+ = Mg, Fe, Co, Ni) have been examined crystallographically using single-crystal X-ray diffraction at 1â bar and temperatures down to 15â K, by means of applying open He cryojet techniques at in-house laboratory instrumentation. All four representative phases show a comparable, highly anisotropic thermal expansion behavior with a remarkable negative thermal expansion along the monoclinic b axis and a pronounced anisotropic expansion perpendicular to it. The lattice changes down to 15â K correspond to an 'inverse thermal pressure' of approximately 0.7â GPa, which is far below the critical pressures of transition under hydro-static compression (Pc ≥ 2.40â GPa). Consequently, no equivalent structural phase transition was observed for any compound, and neither dehydration nor rearrangements of the hydrogen bonding schemes have been observed. The M 2+SO4·H2O (M 2+ = Mg, Fe, Co, Ni) end-member phases preserve the kieserite-type C2/c symmetry; hydrogen bonds and other structural details were found to vary smoothly down to the lowest experimental temperature. These findings serve as an important basis for the assignment of sulfate-related signals in remote-sensing data obtained from orbiters at celestial bodies, as well as for thermodynamic considerations and modeling of properties of kieserite-type sulfate monohydrates relevant to extraterrestrial sulfate associations at very low temperatures.
RESUMEN
Thermal evolution of an organic ferroelectric, namely, glycinium phosphite, was probed by multi-temperature single-crystal diffraction using synchrotron radiation and also by a similar experiment with a laboratory X-ray diffractometer. Both series of measurements showed a transition from the paraelectric to the ferroelectric state at nearly the same temperature, Tc = 225â K. Temperature evolution of the unit-cell parameters and volume are drastically different for the synchrotron and laboratory data. The latter case corresponds to previous reports and shows an expected contraction of the cell on cooling. The data collected with the synchrotron beam show an abnormal nonlinear increase in volume on cooling. Structure analysis shows that this volume increase is accompanied by a suppression of scattering at high angles and an apparent increase of the anisotropic displacement parameters for all atoms; we therefore link these effects to radiation damage accumulated during consecutive data collections. The effects of radiation on the formation of the polar structure of ferroelectric glycinium phosphite is discussed together with the advantages and drawbacks of synchrotron experimentation with fine temperature sampling.
RESUMEN
The variation of charge density of two-electron multicentre bonding (pancake bonding) between semi-quinone radicals with pressure and temperature was studied on a salt of 5,6-di-chloro-2,3-di-cyano-semi-quinone radical anion (DDQ) with 4-cyano-N-methyl-pyridinium cation (4-CN) using the Transferable Aspheric Atom Model (TAAM) refinement. The pancake-bonded radical dimers are stacked by non-bonding π-interactions. With rising pressure, the covalent character of interactions between radicals increases, and above 2.55â GPa, the electron density indicates multicentric covalent interactions throughout the stack. The experimental charge densities were verified and corroborated by periodic DFT computations. The TAAM approach has been tested and validated for atomic resolution data measured at ambient pressure; this work shows this approach can also be applied to diffraction data obtained at pressures up to several gigapascals.
RESUMEN
The effects of temperature (100-370â K) and pressure (0-6â GPa) on the non-localized two-electron multicentric covalent bonds (`pancake bonding') in closely bound radical dimers were studied using single-crystal X-ray diffraction on a 4-cyano-N-methylpyridinium salt of 5,6-dichloro-2,3-dicyanosemiquinone radical anion (DDQ) as the sample compound. On cooling, the anisotropic structural compression was accompanied by continuous changes in molecular stacking; the discontinuities in the changes in volume and b and c cell parameters suggest that a phase transition occurs between 210 and 240â K. At a pressure of 2.55â GPa, distances between radical dimers shortened to 2.9â Å, which corresponds to distances observed in extended π-bonded polymers. Increasing pressure further to 6â GPa reduced the interplanar separation of the radicals to 2.75â Å. This may indicate that the covalent component of the interaction significantly increased, in accordance with the results of DFT calculations reported elsewhere [Molcanov et al. (2019), Cryst. Growth Des. 19, 391-402].