# Synthesis, characterization, and theoretical study of new cocrystals and charge-transfer compounds

**Authors:** Zarife Sibel ŞAHİN, Zeki KARTAL

PMC · DOI: 10.55730/1300-0527.3766 · 2025-08-19

## TL;DR

This paper reports the synthesis and analysis of three new crystalline compounds using experimental and computational methods.

## Contribution

The study introduces three new cocrystals and charge-transfer compounds with detailed structural and computational characterization.

## Key findings

- The compounds were confirmed using X-ray diffraction, IR spectroscopy, and theoretical NMR and UV spectroscopy.
- Strong agreement was found between experimental and theoretical data, validating computational predictions.
- Hydrogen bonds and noncovalent interactions stabilize the molecular packing of the compounds.

## Abstract

This study used single-crystal X-ray diffraction, elemental analysis, infrared (IR) spectroscopy, theoretical nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and theoretical ultraviolet spectroscopy to characterize 3 newly synthesized crystalline compounds. Additionally, the nonlinear optical, highest occupied molecular orbital energies, lowest occupied molecular orbital energies, band gap, molecular electrostatic potential, and thermodynamic parameters of the 3 crystalline compounds were examined. The strong correlation between experimental IR spectra and theoretical NMR chemical shifts confirmed the accuracy of computational predictions. The molecular formulas of the 3 newly synthesized crystalline compounds, each containing different ligand molecules, were: C8H14O4·2(C6H4N2), C5H7N2·NCS, and Ni(CN)4·2(C5H7N2)·2(H2O) for compounds 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Crystallographic analysis showed that the compounds crystallize in the space groups P1̄, P21/n and C2/m, respectively. Their molecular packing is stabilized by a network of hydrogen bonds (C–H···O, O–H···N, N–H···N, N–H···S, O–H···N, and N–H···O) and noncovalent interactions (C–H···μ and μ···μ). Computational studies using Gaussian 03 and CrystalExplorer further elucidated their structural, magnetic, electrooptic, and electrochemical properties.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** H2O (MESH:D014867), hydrogen (MESH:D006859), C5H7N2 NCS (-)

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12779054/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12779054