Wide-dose-range 2D radiochromic films for radiotherapy, such as GAFchromic EBT, are based on the lithium salt of 10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid (Li-PCDA) as the photosensitive component. We show that there are two solid forms of Li-PCDA-a monohydrated form A and an anhydrous form B. The form used in commercial GAFchromic films is form A due to its short needle-shaped crystals, which provide favorable coating properties. Form B provides an enhanced photoresponse compared to that of form A, but adopts a long needle crystal morphology, which is difficult to process. The two forms were characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, CP-MAS 13C solid-state NMR spectroscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis. In sum, these data suggest a chelating bridging bidentate coordination mode for the lithium ions. The sodium salt of PCDA (Na-PCDA) is also reported, which is an ionic cocrystal with a formula of Na+PCDA-·3PCDA. The PCDA and PCDA- ligands display monodentate and bridging bidentate coordination to the sodium ion in contrast to the coordination sphere of the Li-PCDA forms. In contrast to its lithium analogues, Na-PCDA is photostable.
Wide-dose-range 2D radiochromic films for radiotherapy, such as GAFchromic EBT, are based on the lithium salt of 10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid (Li-PCDA) as the photosensitive component. We show that there are two solid forms of Li-PCDA-a monohydrated form A and an anhydrous form B. The form used in commercial GAFchromic films is form A due to its short needle-shaped crystals, which provide favorable coating properties. Form B provides an enhanced photoresponse compared to that of form A, but adopts a long needle crystal morphology, which is difficult to process. The two forms were characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, CP-MAS 13C solid-state NMR spectroscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis. In sum, these data suggest a chelating bridging bidentate coordination mode for the lithium ions. The sodium salt of PCDA (Na-PCDA) is also reported, which is an ionic cocrystal with a formula of Na+PCDA-·3PCDA. The PCDA and PCDA- ligands display monodentate and bridging bidentate coordination to the sodium ion in contrast to the coordination sphere of the Li-PCDA forms. In contrast to its lithium analogues, Na-PCDA is photostable.
Radiochromic films
are commercially important materials, especially
in medical physics, and provide reliable and accurate dose assessments.
Their mode of operation involves the polymerization of crystalline
diacetylene monomers (e.g., 10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid, PCDA) to
give a color change that is proportional to the radiation dose.[1,2] It is well understood that diacetylene monomers such as PCDA can
undergo a solid-state 1,4-addition polymerization reaction when exposed
to heat, ultraviolet, X-ray, or γ-radiation to yield a colored
polydiacetylene.[3−6] However, the reaction will only occur under optimal topochemical
conditions—the adjacent dialkyne moieties of the monomer must
be separated by a distance less than or equal to the van der Waals
contact distance (d) of 3.8 Å, have a translational
period repeat spacing (r) of 4.9 Å or less,
and have the monomers at an orientation angle (θ) to the crystal
axis close to 45° (Scheme ).[3,7,8] The X-ray structure
and topochemical parameters of PCDA were recently reported.[3] As PCDA exhibits some photoreactivity, it has
been incorporated into radiochromic films in the past (e.g., GAFchromic
MD-55);[9] however, the PCDA films are relatively
insensitive and can only be used to measure doses around 5 Gy.[9,10] More recently, sensitive self-developing films such as GAFchromicExternal
Beam Therapy (EBT) have been developed by Ashland that are based on
the lithium salt of PCDA (Li-PCDA)[11−18] and span dose ranges of 0.01–40 Gy.[1,2,19] As the more recent models of GAFchromic
EBT films (especially EBT3 and EBT-XD) exhibit high spatial resolutions,[20,21] near-tissue equivalence,[21,22] and dose rate and energy
dependence[23,24] along with being insensitive
to visible light,[25] they are routinely
employed in low-dose gradient (e.g., a quality assurance tool in intensity-modulated
radiation therapy)[25−28] and high-dose gradient settings (e.g., brachytherapy[29,30]).[18,23,31] Therefore,
continued research into photoactive ingredients with a tunable reactivity
is very important to improve dosimetry technologies for different
therapeutic uses. In this paper, we highlight the spectroscopic characterization
of lithium PCDA salts and the crystallographic and spectroscopic characterization
of a sodium PCDA salt and compare their photoreactivities, particularly
in the context of the impact of the solid-state crystal form.
Scheme 1
Parameters Required for the Topochemical Polymerization of Diacetylene
Monomers to Result in a Polydiacetylene
The C1–C4′ distance
(d) of the monomers must be ≤3.8 Å and
within the translational repeat distance (r) of ≤4.9
Å as well as at a tilt angle (θ) of 45°.
Parameters Required for the Topochemical Polymerization of Diacetylene
Monomers to Result in a Polydiacetylene
The C1–C4′ distance
(d) of the monomers must be ≤3.8 Å and
within the translational repeat distance (r) of ≤4.9
Å as well as at a tilt angle (θ) of 45°.
Results and Discussion
Lithium PCDA
The lithium salt of
PCDA is synthesized
by dissolving PCDA in a basic solution (e.g., aqueous tetraethylammonium
hydroxide) at elevated temperatures.[32] When
PCDA is dissolved, a 30 wt % aqueous solution of lithium hydroxide
is added to form nuclei that are then ripened by Ostwald ripening
to give the materials in a long needle-shaped crystal morphology.
Subsequent intense sonication gives shorter needle crystals that are
more suited to coating to produce GAFchromic EBT3 films. However,
the shorter needles are thought to have a lower radiation sensitivity.
In this work, we have examined the differences between the two crystal
morphologies of Li-PCDA by powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), which
revealed that the two different morphologies represent two different
crystalline forms. The short needle material, form A, is stable when
kept moist, while the initially prepared long needle samples are a
mixture of this form and a second crystal modification termed form
B. Interestingly, the PXRD pattern of form A closely resembles the
recently reported free acidPCDA[3] with
an almost identical lamellar spacing (Figure S1). The CP-MAS 13C solid-state NMR spectra (ssNMR) of the
two forms display two peaks for form A and a single peak for form
B in the carboxylate region in the range of 187–183 ppm (Figure S2), implying a lower symmetry for form
A. In addition, exposing form A to heat (100 °C for 1 h or 80
°C for 1 day) or vacuum (1 day) gives pure form B (Figure S3), indicating that a phase transition
occurred. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) experiments confirm that
the transition from form A to form B corresponds to a dehydration
of the monohydrated form A. TGA consistently shows a significant initial
weight loss due to the moist nature of the sample, followed by a distinct
weight loss step assigned to crystalline water that was calculated
to be the mass of one water molecule (Figure S4). The heat-induced transformation of form A to form B was replicated
in GAFchromic EBT3 films (consisting of form A). The films, based
on form A, change color in proportion to the amount of radiation they
are exposed to, initially starting as yellow and changing to almost
black after 100 Gy of X-ray radiation (Figure ). The PXRD patterns of the films both before
and after irradiation show low-angle peaks at 5.7° and 9.4°
that are indicative of the presence of form A. However, when the films
are heated to 80 °C for 1 day, the Li-PCDA in the films is dehydrated
and transforms to form B, as evidenced by the corresponding peaks
at 5.0° and 8.3° 2θ (Figure ).
Figure 1
Photographs of GAFchromic EBT3 films that were
irradiated with
increasing doses of X-rays, ranging from 1 to 100 Gy.
Figure 2
PXRD patterns of the GAFchromic EBT3 films containing form A before
and after X-ray irradiation (5.7° and 9.4°) and form B after
heating at 80 °C for one day (5.0° and 8.3°).
Photographs of GAFchromic EBT3 films that were
irradiated with
increasing doses of X-rays, ranging from 1 to 100 Gy.PXRD patterns of the GAFchromic EBT3 films containing form A before
and after X-ray irradiation (5.7° and 9.4°) and form B after
heating at 80 °C for one day (5.0° and 8.3°).Though neither X-ray crystal structure of monohydrated
nor anhydrous
Li-PCDA could be obtained as a result of the low solubility of the
material, the FTIR spectra of the two Li-PCDA forms reveal insights
into their structure (Figure ). The asymmetric and symmetric carboxylate stretching bands
between 1581 and 1558 cm–1 and 1443 and 1412 cm–1, respectively, are split as a result of the reduced
carboxyl symmetry due to the coordination with the lithium ion.[33,34] The carboxylate stretching bands reveal the type of coordination
of the metal center, which is evident from the difference in the wavenumber
of the asymmetric and symmetric stretching bands Δν =
ν(COO)asym – ν(COO)symm,[35,36] and can be calculated from the position of the first asymmetric
carboxylate stretching band minus the wavenumber of the first symmetric
carboxylate stretching band. For form A, Δν is 149 cm–1 (1581 – 1432 cm–1), and
that for form B Δν is 134 cm–1 (1577
– 1443 cm–1). These data are consistent with
previous reports of the lithium salts of propanoic and pentanoic acids
in which the Δν values are greater than the value expected
for chelating bidentate coordination but lower than the range expected
for bridging coordination. Therefore, a combination of chelating and
bridging bidentate coordination of the carboxylate to the lithium
ion is anticipated for both forms.[33,35,37] Additionally, short-chain lithium carboxylate salts
display almost identical FTIR spectra to those of Li-PCDA, with Δν
values averaging 142 cm–1.[34,38−40] The lithium centers of long-chain carboxylates also
show asymmetric chelating bidentate bonding, which implies a tetrahedral
environment of the lithium ion.[34,38,39] This lithium environment is also expected for the two Li-PCDA forms
because of the similar spectra. The proposed coordination environment
of the lithium ion in form B is displayed in Figure , while the water molecule is likely coordinated
to the lithium ion in form A. Interestingly, a progression of evenly
spaced methylene wagging bands was observed in the FTIR spectrum of
form B in the region of 1380–1100 cm–1, indicating
that all methylene groups crystallized in an all-trans conformation similar to lithium pentanoate.[33,34] However, form A displays additional wagging bands of a reduced intensity
compared to the anhydrous material (for example, the bands at 1277
and 1269 cm–1), suggesting that gauche conformational features are present in the monohydrate structure.
The Raman spectrum of form A irradiated with 100 Gy of X-ray radiation
also supports the FTIR interpretation.[3] The CH2 band with the greatest intensity is at approximately
722 cm–1 for both materials and is representative
of a methylene bending vibrational mode.[34,41] This methylene band is related to the hydrocarbon chain packing
and as a result can indicate what the crystal system may be. For instance,
a sharp peak without splitting (observed in form B) is indicative
of triclinic or hexagonal packing,[42] with
triclinic being the most likely crystal system;[43,44] this is in agreement with the P1 space group of the related Ag-docosanoate and long-chain lithium
alkanoates.[38,41] However, if the methylene band
is split (as observed in form A), a monoclinic or orthorhombic crystal
system is suggested, such as the P21/c space group of short-chain lithium alkanoates.[38,42]
Figure 3
FTIR
spectra of monohydrated (form A) and anhydrous (form B) Li-PCDA,
with the important regions labeled. Form A also contains surface water.
Figure 4
Hypothesized chelating bridging bidentate coordination
environment
of the lithium ion in the anhydrous form B of Li-PCDA, which was adapted
from ref (34). R =
C25H41.
FTIR
spectra of monohydrated (form A) and anhydrous (form B) Li-PCDA,
with the important regions labeled. Form A also contains surface water.Hypothesized chelating bridging bidentate coordination
environment
of the lithium ion in the anhydrous form B of Li-PCDA, which was adapted
from ref (34). R =
C25H41.While it is the monohydrated Li-PCDA (form A) material that is
currently used in GAFchromic EBT3 films, it can be assumed that both
form A and form B must conform to the topochemical postulate for photoreactivity,
since both display radiation sensitivity. This photoreactivity may
be demonstrated by placing the two powdered forms on filter paper
and exposing them to UV (254 nm) radiation for varying durations.
Both materials show an immediate darkening after 5 min of irradiation
(Figure ). The ssNMR
spectra of form A and form B after one day of UV irradiation reveal
the appearance of alkene peaks of the photopolymer as a result of
the conjugated ene–yne backbone in the range of 130–100
ppm, indicating a slow conversion from the monomer to the polymer
and implying a broad window of sensitivity, which is a desired property
from a dosimetry perspective (Figure ). In Ashland’s experience, a mixture of form
A and form B (the presonication long needle morphology material) is
more responsive to radiation in a film context; however, the short
needle morphology of form A provides favorable film-coating properties.
Therefore, as the different materials have altered monomer-to-polymer
conversions as a function of irradiation, tuning for a range of different
applications is possible.
Figure 5
Photographs of the monohydrated (form A) and
anhydrous (form B)
forms of Li-PCDA powdered samples before and after different durations
of UV irradiation (254 nm). As expected from the photoresponsive materials,
the sample gradually darkened with prolonged radiation exposure. Note
that the initial dark color of form B arises from surface coloration
during the drying needed to remove form A; however, ssNMR data confirm
that the bulk of the sample had not undergone appreciable photoreaction
before UV irradiation.
Figure 6
ssNMR of monohydrated
(form A) and anhydrous (form B) Li-PCDA irradiated
with UV (254 nm) for one day. The carboxylate region is 190–180
ppm, while the alkene peaks arising from photopolymer occur in the
130–100 ppm region. Alkyne and alkane peaks are shown in the
80–60 and 40–10 ppm regions, respectively. The x-axis has added breaks to compact the spectra.
Photographs of the monohydrated (form A) and
anhydrous (form B)
forms of Li-PCDA powdered samples before and after different durations
of UV irradiation (254 nm). As expected from the photoresponsive materials,
the sample gradually darkened with prolonged radiation exposure. Note
that the initial dark color of form B arises from surface coloration
during the drying needed to remove form A; however, ssNMR data confirm
that the bulk of the sample had not undergone appreciable photoreaction
before UV irradiation.ssNMR of monohydrated
(form A) and anhydrous (form B) Li-PCDA irradiated
with UV (254 nm) for one day. The carboxylate region is 190–180
ppm, while the alkene peaks arising from photopolymer occur in the
130–100 ppm region. Alkyne and alkane peaks are shown in the
80–60 and 40–10 ppm regions, respectively. The x-axis has added breaks to compact the spectra.
Sodium PCDA
To investigate group-one alternatives to
lithium salts that may adhere to the topochemical postulate of photoreactivity,
the sodium salt of PCDA (Na-PCDA) was synthesized by combining sodium
hydroxide and PCDA in a ball mill for 45 min in both 1:1 and 1:3 ratios.
Characterization of the 1:1 material revealed a mixture of PCDA and
a Na-PCDA salt, while the 1:3 material consisted of only Na-PCDA.
Serendipitous crystals of Na-PCDA were obtained from a mixture of
PCDA and 3-aminopyridine by slow evaporation under ambient conditions.
The resulting colorless plate crystals were analyzed at the I19 beamline
at the Diamond Light Source. It was assumed that the sodium present
was from contamination from the glass crystallization vial. The X-ray
structure of Na-PCDA reveals a PCDA sodium salt, which is a free-acid
cocrystal that crystallizes in space group P1, with the sodium cation bound to one deprotonated PCDA
(PCDA–) ligand and three neutral PCDA acid ligands
to give the formula Na+PCDA–·3PCDA
(Figure a). In addition,
the PCDA salt ligand has a disordered carboxylic acid proton; hence,
this site represents both an anion and a neutral molecule as the proton
has a site occupancy factor of 50%. The sodium cation displays a distorted
octahedral geometry (average O–Na–O bond angle of 85.7°)
with the sodium ion bound to the carbonyl oxygen atoms at distances
of 2.3580(13) and 2.3723(11) Å, and the Na–O distance
from the sodium ion to the carboxylic acid OH group of the PCDA ligands
is 2.6176(11) Å (Figure b). Two PCDA ligands coordinate to an adjacent sodium ion
by bridging bidentate (syn–anti) oxygen atoms from the carboxyl ligands to form a continuous chain,
while the remaining ligands have a monodentate bonding mode that differs
from the hypothesized coordination sphere of Li-PCDA. Hydrogen bonds
are also present within the structure, occurring from the hydrogen
atom of the carboxyl group to the neighboring carbonyl oxygen atom
at an O···O distance of 2.6290(16) Å. The long
PCDA aliphatic chains are in an all in the trans-conformation
and are packed in both a bilayer arrangement and tail-to-tail, which
is reflected by the long c-axis of the unit cell
at 54.510(6) Å. The previously reported structure of sodiumhydrogen
dihexadecanoate is similar to that of Na-PCDA in that there are two
aliphatic chains in the asymmetric unit, although the sodium ion coordination
sphere involves a total of five oxygen atoms.[45] Two of the ligands consist of hexadecenoic acid chains, while the
remaining three ligands are consist of hexadecanoate chains. Similar
to Na-PCDA, two oxygen atoms from adjacent hexadecanoate ligands bridge
a neighboring sodium ion to give both mono- and bidentate coordination
to the sodium ion.[45] Additionally, the
X-ray structure of Na-PCDA reveals that the dialkyne moieties in the
structure are not within the optimal topochemical parameters for photopolymerization
(r = 4.045(3) Å, d = 4.244(3)
Å, and θ = 33°); therefore, the material is expected
to be unreactive when exposed to radiation.
Figure 7
(a) The X-ray structure
of Na-PCDA in the crystallographic (100)
direction with the topochemical parameters added. (b) An enlarged
section of the Na-PCDA head groups to show the hydrogen bonds between
the PCDA acid ligands and the salt ligands (with a disordered proton).
(a) The X-ray structure
of Na-PCDA in the crystallographic (100)
direction with the topochemical parameters added. (b) An enlarged
section of the Na-PCDA head groups to show the hydrogen bonds between
the PCDA acid ligands and the salt ligands (with a disordered proton).As Na-PCDA does not adhere to the topochemical
postulate, the powder
was irradiated to investigate if the powder was useful as a dosimetry
material. The powder was placed on filter paper and exposed to different
durations of UV (254 nm) radiation. The powder was moved around the
paper and pressed with a spatula at approximately hourly intervals
to ensure the bulk of the powder was exposed to the radiation. The
color of the powder remained unchanged until after one day of UV irradiation,
where the powder darkened somewhat (Figure ). Because of the lack of photoreactivity
up until one day of irradiation, the powder darkening may be due to
minor photodegradation. To confirm the lack of polymerization and
investigate any changes in the structure upon prolonged irradiation
for 7 days, Na-PCDA was analyzed by PXRD (Figure S5), FTIR (Figure S6), and ssNMR
(Figure S7). Characterization of the irradiated
powder provided no evidence of photopolymerization or photodegradation,
which was particularly evident by the lack of alkene peaks in the
region of 130–100 ppm in the ssNMR spectra.
Figure 8
Na-PCDA irradiated for
increasing durations of UV (254 nm) radiation.
The powders were placed on a glass slide and exposed to radiation
without any rotation of the powder so that only the surface of the
powder was exposed.
Na-PCDA irradiated for
increasing durations of UV (254 nm) radiation.
The powders were placed on a glass slide and exposed to radiation
without any rotation of the powder so that only the surface of the
powder was exposed.
Conclusion
The
X-ray structures of short-chain lithium salts and PCDA give
insights into the structures of Li-PCDA and its monohydrated and anhydrous
forms,[33] which are further illustrated
by the similarity of the lamellar spacing in the PXRD patterns.[3] It is hypothesized that form A crystallizes in
a monoclinic space group with a similar lamellar spacing to that of
PCDA itself, while form B crystallizes in a triclinic space group.
Both carboxylate head groups of each form have the same mixed bridged–chelating
bidentate coordination to the lithium ion even though form A has a
water molecule coordinated to the lithium ion. Additionally, form
A can be transformed to form B in the final dosimetry film by heating.
Due to the photoreactive nature of both Li-PCDA forms, they must also
adhere to the topochemical postulate in a similar way to the organic
salts of PCDA.[3] Li-PCDA has been shown
to produce an ordered photopolymer when irradiated (as evident by
the Raman spectroscopy analysis), although PCDA combined with organic
cations gives materials with enhanced photoreactivities.[3] In contrast to Li-PCDA, the X-ray structure of
Na-PCDA demonstrates a different coordination environment that involves
both monodentate and bridging ligands and is not sensitive to radiation.
The lack of photoreactivity in Na-PCDA reinforces the importance of
the topochemical postulate to predict the photoreactivity of a system,
which can only be quantitatively confirmed by the X-ray structure.
Therefore, a sustained investigation into different salts of PCDA
is required to continually improve and advance photoreactive materials
and their dosimetry applications.
Experimental
Section
General
Form A of Li-PCDA was supplied by Ashland LLC,
and all other reagents and solvents were purchased from standard commercial
sources and used without further purification. IR spectra were measured
with a PerkinElmer 100 FT-IR spectrometer with a uATR attachment.
Raman spectra were collected on a PerkinElmer Ramanstation 400F instrument
with 5–10 accumulations of 10–60 s scans using an excitation
laser with a wavelength of 785 nm. Thermogravimetric analysis thermograms
were recorded using a TA Instruments Q 500 TGA analyzer. Between 1
and 5 mg of the sample was weighed into platinum pans, and dry nitrogen
was used as the purge gas (flow rate of 60 mL min–1). Solid-state NMR spectra were recorded at 100.63 MHz using a Bruker
Avance III HD spectrometer and a 4 mm magic-angle spinning probe.
Spectra were obtained using cross-polarization with a 20 s recycle
delay and a 7 ms contact time at an ambient probe temperature (approximately
25 °C) using a sample spin rate of 10 kHz with 400 repetitions.
Spectral referencing was with respect to an external sample of neat
tetramethylsilane. Single-crystal data for Na-PCDA were collected
at 100.0(2) K at the I19 beamline (Dectris Pilatus 2 M pixel-array
photon-counting detector, undulator, graphite monochromator, λ
= 0.6889 Å) at the Diamond Light Source, Oxfordshire. The structure
was solved using direct methods and refined by full-matrix least-squares
on F2 for all data using the SHELXL(46) and OLEX2 software.[47] All non-hydrogen atoms were refined with anisotropic displacement
parameters. CH hydrogen atoms were placed in calculated positions
and refined in the riding mode. H atoms attached to oxygen atoms were
located on the difference map but refined as part of a rotating group
(AFIX 147); disordered H atoms of the OH groups were refined with
a fixed SOF equal to 0.5. X-ray powder diffraction patterns were recorded
on glass slides using a Bruker AXS D8 Advance diffractometer with
a Lynxeye Soller PSD detector, using Cu Kα radiation at a wavelength
of 1.5406 Å. The powdered materials were placed on filter paper
in a dark box and exposed to a 6 W of hand-held UV light at 254 nm.
Synthesis of Li-PCDA and Na-PCDA
Lithium 10,12-Pentacosadiynoate
Monohydrate (Form A)
The Li-PCDA·H2O supplied
by Ashland contained excess
surface water and was placed under vacuum at room temperature for
one day before analysis (which subsequently changed the monohydrated
sample to the anhydrous sample). Analysis calcd. for C25H41O2Li: C, 78.91; H, 10.86%. Found: C, 78.76;
H, 10.76%. FTIR (cm–1): 3570–3040 ν(OH),
2956 ν(CH3)asym, 2934 ν(CH2)asym, 2918 ν(CH3)symm, 2847
ν(CH2)symm, 1688 δ(HOH), 1581 ν(COO)asym, 1564 ν(COO)asym, 1457 δ(CH2), 1432 ν(COO)symm, 1418 ν(COO)symm, 1370 ω(CH2), 1355 ω(CH2), 1338 ω(CH2), 1318 ω(CH2), 1311
ω(CH2), 1306 ω(CH2), 1297 ω(CH2), 1277 ω(CH2), 1254 ω(CH2), 1241 ω(CH2), 1231 ω(CH2), 1219
ω(CH2), 1208 ω(CH2), 1197 ω(CH2), 1182 ω(CH2), 1119 ω(CH2), 1103 ω(CH2), 1090 ν(C–C), 1058 ν(C–C),
1050 ν(C–C), 1030 ν(C–C), 1026 ν(C–C),
1009 ν(C–C), 999 ν(C–C), 990 ν(C–C),
979 ν(C–C), 877 ν(C–C)COO, 780 ρ(CH2), 722 ρ(CH2), 634.
The
sodium 10,12-pentacosadiynoate/10,12-pentacosadiynoic
acid salt cocrystal was prepared by grinding 10,12-pentacosadiynoic
acid (0.60 g, 1.59 mmol) and sodium hydroxide (0.021 g, 0.53 mmol)
in a Retsch MM 200 mixer mill for 45 min at a frequency of 20 s–1 to yield a peach-colored powder (yield of 0.57 g,
1.15 mmol, 91%). Analysis calcd. for C100H167O8Na: C, 78.76; H, 10.84%. Found: C, 78.40; H, 10.81%.
FTIR (cm–1): 2957 ν(CH3)asym, 2916 ν(CH2)asym, 2851 ν(CH2)symm, 1712 ν(C=O), 1472 δ(CH2), 1421, 1408, 1323 ω(CH2), 1287 ω(CH2), 1254 ω(CH2), 1222 ω(CH2), 1192 ω(CH2), 1100 ν(C–C), 936 νC–C(COO),
715 ρ(CH2). The X-ray structure of Na-PCDA came from
a failed crystallization of PCDA and 3-aminopyridine in a 3:1 ratio
from the slow evaporation of acetone at room temperature, which yielded
colorless plate crystals. It is assumed that the presence of sodium
was from a contamination in the glass vial.
Crystal Data
M
= 1520.32 g/mol, 0.203 × 0.029
× 0.008 mm3, triclinic, space group P1 (no. 2), a = 5.3007(6) Å, b = 7.9037(9) Å, c = 54.510(6) Å,
α = 91.674(3)°, β = 92.680(3)°, γ = 92.463(4)°, V = 2278.0(4) Å3, Z = 1, Dc = 1.108 g/cm3, μ = 0.068
mm–1, F(000) = 842.0, synchrotron
radiation, λ = 0.6889 Å, T = 100(2) K,
2θmax = 50.00°, 27970 reflections collected,
8701 unique (Rint = 0.1030). Final GooF
= 1.005, R1 = 0.0998 (5841 reflections
with I > = 2σ(I)), wR2 = 0.2559 (all data), 497 parameters, 0 restraints.
Crystallographic data for the structure were deposited with the Cambridge
Crystallographic Data Centre as supplementary publication CCDC no. 2054687.
Authors: Patrizio Vaiano; Marco Consales; Pierluigi Casolaro; Luigi Campajola; Francesco Fienga; Francesco Di Capua; Giovanni Breglio; Salvatore Buontempo; Antonello Cutolo; Andrea Cusano Journal: Phys Med Date: 2019-05-03 Impact factor: 2.685
Authors: Jin Dong Cho; Jaeman Son; Jiwon Sung; Chang Heon Choi; Jin Sung Kim; Hong-Gyun Wu; Jong Min Park; Jung-In Kim Journal: Med Phys Date: 2020-04-30 Impact factor: 4.071