Abstract

The principal components of the 13C chemical shift tensors for the ten crystallographically distinct carbon atoms of the active pharmaceutical ingredient cimetidine Form A have been measured using the FIREMAT technique. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations of 13C and 15N magnetic shielding tensors are used to assign the 13C and 15N peaks. DFT calculations were performed on cimetidine and a training set of organic crystals using both plane-wave and cluster-based approaches. The former set of calculations allowed several structural refinement strategies to be employed, including calculations utilizing a dispersion-corrected force field that was parametrized using 13C and 15N magnetic shielding tensors. The latter set of calculations featured the use of resource-intensive hybrid-DFT methods for the calculation of magnetic shielding tensors. Calculations on structures refined using the new force-field correction result in improved values of 15N magnetic shielding tensors (as gauged by agreement with experimental chemical shift tensors), although little improvement is seen in the prediction of 13C shielding tensors. Calculations of 13C and 15N magnetic shielding tensors using hybrid functionals show better agreement with experimental values in comparison to those using GGA functionals, independent of the method of structural refinement; the shielding of carbon atoms bonded to nitrogen are especially improved using hybrid DFT methods.

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