Notes. The crystal structure of diaquadichlorodimethyltin(IV)–purine (1/4)
Abstract
The structure of the compound Sn(CH3)2Cl2(H2O)2·4C5H4N4 has been determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods. The compound crystallizes in the monoclinic system, space group P21/a, with unit-cell dimensions a= 11.218(4), b= 18.374(5), c= 7.193(3)Å, β= 101.9(4)°, and Z= 2. The structure is centrosymmetric at the all-trans Sn(CH3)2Cl2(H2O)2 octahedral units, which are surrounded by four purine molecules hydrogen bonded to the H2O ligands. Each purine also makes hydrogen bonds with purines adjacent to different Sn(CH3)2Cl2(H2O)2 units to form a three-dimensional network. The purine molecules are present in tautomeric pairs: in one isomer a hydrogen atom is attached to the atom N(7) of the imidazole ring, as found in crystals of free purine, and in the other one to the atom N(9). Proton n.m.r. measurements on the system Sn(CH3)2Cl2–purine in acetone show that also in solution direct co-ordination of the base to tin does not occur.