| Literature DB >> 26344849 |
Chad R Maheux1, Idralyn Q Alarcon1, Catherine R Copeland1, T Stanley Cameron2, Anthony Linden3, J Stuart Grossert2.
Abstract
Ethylone, a syntheticEntities:
Keywords: designer drugs; ethylone; new psychoactive substances; polymorphism; synthetic cathinones
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26344849 PMCID: PMC5049635 DOI: 10.1002/dta.1859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Test Anal ISSN: 1942-7603 Impact factor: 3.345
Figure 1Chemical structures of ethylone 1, MDMA 2 and cathinone 3.
Various Customs declarations or labelling for shipments found to contain 1 hydrochloride
| Ocean Snow Ultra | Acrylic paint | Facial mask powder |
| Iron Oxide Black | Sodium isethionate | Mandy Brown |
| Zeolite | Food materials | Salt rock |
| Geolite | Phenolic resin | Gelatin |
Figure 2The molecular structures of polymorphs 1A (left) and 1B (right) from the single crystal structure determinations, showing the different conformations of the cationic fused ring system relative to the alkyl chain.
Scheme 1Synthetic pathway used to prepare 1A and 1B.
Figure 3Keyence images of recrystallized 1A (left) and 1B (right).
Figure 4ATR‐FTIR spectra of 1A and 1B.
Figure 5FT‐Raman spectra of 1A and 1B.
Figure 6ATR‐FTIR spectra (650–2000 cm‐1) of Ocean Snow Ultra. Top: Ocean Snow Ultra (blue trace) shown with 1B (red trace). Middle: Ocean Snow Ultra with 1B subtracted (blue trace) shown with methylone hydrochloride (red trace). Bottom: Ocean Snow Ultra with 1B and methylone hydrochloride subtracted (blue trace) shown with 1A (red trace).
Figure 7Overlaid measured powder X‐ray diffractograms of 1A and 1B.
Figure 8Simulated and measured powder X‐ray diffractograms of 1A and 1B.
Figure 9Solid‐state 13C CPMAS NMR spectra of 1A (bottom) and 1B (top). The smaller peaks marked with an asterisk (*) are spinning sidebands.
NMR assignments for 1 hydrochloride
| Position | Solid‐state 13C CPMAS NMR | Solution‐state NMR (CD3OD) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| δ | δ | δ 13C | δ 1H, m, | |
| 1 | 193.98 | 194.11 | 195.0 | ‐ |
| 2 | 59.88 | 59.15 | 58.9 | 5.08, 1H, q, 7.2 |
| 3 | 18.87 | 16.54 | 16.9 | 1.57, 3H, d, 7.2 |
| 1’, 6’ | 127.84 | 128.50, 127.25 | 128.7 (C‐1’) | ‐ |
| 127.2 (C‐6’) | 7.72, 1H, dd, 1.8, 8.2 (H‐6’) | |||
| 2’, 5’ | 108.63, 106.05 | 110.59, 109.36 | 109.0 (C‐2’) | 7.50, 1H, d, 1.8 (H‐2’) |
| 109.5 (C‐5’) | 7.01, 1H, d, 8.2 (H‐5’) | |||
| 3’ | 149.26 | 149.00 | 150.3 | ‐ |
| 4’ | 153.16 | 153.03 | 155.0 | ‐ |
| 7’ | 102.61 | 103.24 | 104.0 | 6.12, 2H, s |
| 1” | 42.77 | 42.54 | 42.4 | 3.11, 2H, ABX3, 7.3, 12.3 |
| 2” | 13.30 | 10.55 | 11.7 | 1.37, 3H, app t, 7.3 |
Figure 10Product ion spectra on a linear ion trap for 1: MS2 on m/z 222 (top); MS3 on m/z 222, 204 (middle); and MS3 on m/z 222, 174 (bottom).
Proposed assignment of the primary fragments from the product ion spectra of 1
| MS | Selected precursor ion ( | Product ion ( | Mass accuracy (ppm) | Proposed Formula | Proposed source of fragment from precursor ion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MS2 | 222.11 | 204.10185 | ‐0.26 | C12H14NO2 + | loss of water |
| 177.05457 | ‐0.31 | C10H9O3 + | loss of ethylamine | ||
| 174.09132 | ‐0.10 | C11H12NO+ | loss of CH2O | ||
| 72.08064 | ‐1.95 | C4H10N+ | iminium ion | ||
| MS3 | 204.10 | 174.09129 | ‐0.27 | C11H12NO+ | loss of CH2O |
| MS3 | 174.09 | 159.06790 | +0.22 | C10H9NO +• | loss of methyl radical |
| 146.09643 | +0.01 | C10H12N+ | loss of CO | ||
| 131.07290 | ‐0.38 | C9H9N+• | loss of methyl radical (subsequent to loss of CO) | ||
| MS5* | 146.10 | 131.07296 | +0.09 | C9H9N+• | loss of methyl radical |
same result obtained by either MS4 or MS5
Figure 11EI‐MS data for 1.