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RESEARCH PRODUCT
4-Nitrophenyl phosphoric acid and its four different potassium salts: a solid state structure and kinetic study
Tadeusz LisMarian KuczekIwona Bryndalsubject
Hydrogen bondPotassiumInorganic chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementGeneral ChemistryCondensed Matter PhysicsPhosphateMedicinal chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundHydrolysischemistryNitroMoleculeGeneral Materials ScienceChelationPhosphoric aciddescription
The structures of 4-nitrophenyl phosphoric acid, H2NPP (1), and its four different potassium salts, K(H2NPP)(HNPP) (2), K(HNPP)·CH3OH (3), K(HNPP)·2H2O (4), and K2(NPP)·4H2O (5), were determined by X-ray diffraction methods. These investigations, together with the study of the role of potassium ions in the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl phosphate, provided information about interactions between the acid, monoanionic and dianionic forms of 4-nitrophenyl phosphate and the potassium cations. In the crystalline state, the H2NPP molecules form one-dimensional chains of bifurcated O–H⋯O hydrogen bonds between phosphate groups. A different network, derived from ladder-like chains of the O–H⋯O hydrogen bonds linking the phosphate group of the H2NPP molecules and (HNPP)− monoanions, is formed in 2. By contrast, in 4, the phosphate groups of the (HNPP)− monoanions are donors and acceptors of the O–H⋯O hydrogen bonds for the water molecules only. The 4-nitrophenyl phosphate ligands differ in their coordination modes. The potassium cations are chelated by the nitro group in 2 and 4, whereas in 3 and 5 the potassium cations are chelated by the phosphate group, with the ester oxygen atom engaging in the chelating mode.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2006-01-01 | CrystEngComm |