Issue 1, 2021

Increasing the structural boundary of quasiracemate formation: 4-substituted naphthylamides

Abstract

Quasiracemates – materials consisting of pairs of near enantiomers – form crystalline motifs that mimic the inversion relationships observed for their racemic counterparts. Recent investigations from our group explored a family of chiral (N-benzoyl)methylbenzylamines to understand the structural boundary of cocrystallization. This investigation extends these earlier studies to include naphthylamide quasiracemates, where the molecular framework is ∼20% larger by volume than the previous diarylamides. A family of naphthylamides was prepared where the pendant functional group differs incrementally in size (i.e., H to C6H5) to give 55 possible unique pairs of racemic and quasiracemic combinations. Data collected from these materials using X-ray crystallography, thermal analysis methods and lattice energy calculations offer important insight into how a spatially larger naphthylamide molecular framework promotes greater structural variance of substituents during the pairwise assembly of quasienantiomers.

Graphical abstract: Increasing the structural boundary of quasiracemate formation: 4-substituted naphthylamides

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Sep 2020
Accepted
16 Nov 2020
First published
17 Nov 2020

CrystEngComm, 2021,23, 210-215

Author version available

Increasing the structural boundary of quasiracemate formation: 4-substituted naphthylamides

D. E. Craddock, M. J. Parks, L. A. Taylor, B. L. Wagner, M. Ruf and K. A. Wheeler, CrystEngComm, 2021, 23, 210 DOI: 10.1039/D0CE01331E

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