Dynamic structural reconstruction of (guanidinium+)2(benzene-1,4-disulfonate2−) host crystal by guest adsorption†
Abstract
Guanidinium (G+) and benzene-1,4-disulfonate (BDS2−) form a rigid electrostatic cation–anion crystal lattice, which undergoes an interesting dynamic structural reconstruction through guest adsorption–desorption processes with H2O, pyrrole (Pyrr), pyrazine (Pyz), thiophene (TP), pyridine (Py), 1,4-dioxane (Diox), or aniline (Ani). The host lattice of bis(guanidinium)benzene-1,4-disulfonate, (G+)2(BDS2−), which does not contain void spaces initially, changed to host–guest crystals of (G+)2(BDS2−)·(guest)x upon guest adsorption (x = 1, 2, and 3). The cation–anion electrostatic N–H+⋯−O3S– hydrogen bonds between the G+ cation and BDS2− dianion formed tightly bound two-dimensional (2D) structures. These layers are connected by perpendicular BDS2− dianions, forming the guest adsorption crystalline pores. The adsorption–desorption isotherm for Diox at 298 K indicated the formation of (G+)2(BDS2−)·(Diox)3, which was consistent with the single-crystal X-ray structural analysis. Single crystals of (G+)2(BDS2−)·(Py–H2O)2 consist of two hydrogen-bonded [(G+)2(BDS2−)]2 bilayers connected by the BDS2− dianions, forming crystalline pores that accommodate 2 Py guest molecules. The H2O molecules in (G+)2(BDS2−)·(Py–H2O)2 are lodged in the intralayer, leading to the [(G+)2(BDS2−)⋯(H2O)2⋯(G+)2(BDS2−)] hydrogen-bonded bilayer. The electrostatic cation–anion host lattice of (G+)2(BDS2−) responded to the guest adsorption–desorption cycle by a dynamic structural reconstruction. A guest adsorption of polar Ani into (G+)2(BDS2−) host changed the crystal symmetry from centric P to acentric P21 of (G+)2(BDS2−)·(Ani)3.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Supramolecular & Polymorphism