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Structural investigation of N , N ′‐methylenebisacrylamide via X‐ray diffraction assisted by crystal structure prediction
Author(s) -
Graiff Claudia,
Pontiroli Daniele,
Bergamonti Laura,
Cavallari Chiara,
Lottici Pier Paolo,
Predieri Giovanni
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of applied crystallography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.429
H-Index - 162
ISSN - 1600-5767
DOI - 10.1107/s1600576715004161
Subject(s) - monoclinic crystal system , lattice energy , crystallography , crystal structure , crystal twinning , diffraction , rietveld refinement , molecule , crystal (programming language) , powder diffraction , materials science , x ray crystallography , density functional theory , chemistry , physics , computational chemistry , computer science , microstructure , optics , programming language , organic chemistry
The crystal structure of N , N ′‐methylenebisacrylamide was determined through the geometry optimization of the molecular unit with density functional theory and conformational analysis, and then through the calculation of the packing via a crystal structure prediction protocol, based on lattice energy minimization. All the calculated structures were ranked, comparing their powder pattern with the laboratory low‐quality X‐ray diffraction data. Rietveld refinement of the best three proposed structures allowed the most probable crystal arrangement of the molecules to be obtained. This approach was essential for disentangling the twinning problems affecting the single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction data, collected on samples obtained via recrystallization of powder, which definitely confirmed the predicted model. It was found that N , N ′‐methylenebisacrylamide shows a monoclinic structure in the space group C 2/ c , with lattice parameters a = 17.822 (12), b = 4.850 (3), c = 19.783 (14) Å, β = 102.370 (9)°, V = 1670 (2) Å 3 . Two strong interactions between the amide protons and the carbonyl groups of neighbouring molecules were found along the b axis, determining the crystal growth in the form of wires in this direction. This work provides a further example of how computational methods may help to investigate low‐quality molecular crystals with standard diffraction techniques.