Abstract

AbstractCocrystals with three π‐components, which were a π‐cation, a π‐anion acting as a hydrogen‐bond acceptor, and a π‐molecule acting as a hydrogen‐bond donor, were prepared by the solution‐growth methods. The first and second components were ion pairs of 1‐methylpyridinium or 1‐methylquinolinium p‐toluenesulfonate derivatives, and the third components were dihydric phenol derivatives, like hydroquinone, 1,4‐naphthalenediol, 4,4’‐biphenol, and 1,1’‐bi‐2‐naphthol, or benzoic acid derivatives with hydroxy or amino group at the para position. Among 23 cocrystals found from 35 possible combinations of five ion‐pairs and seven hydrogen‐bond donors, 20 cocrystals were investigated by the X‐ray crystallographic analyses. Some of them also contained solvent molecules. In these cocrystals, hydrogen‐bond sequences composed of p‐toluenesulfonate and the hydrogen‐bond donors were observed, and ionic bonds between the first and second components and hydrogen bonds between the second and third components were found to be responsible for three‐π‐component cocrystals. When the cations were 4‐cyanopyridinium or quinolinium derivatives, the cocrystals showed charge‐transfer absorption bands due to electronic interaction between the cations and the hydrogen‐bond donors. To the mixture of quinolinium p‐toluenesulfonate and 1,1’‐bi‐2‐naphthol forming the three‐π‐component cocrystals, tetrathiafulvalene were added to form four‐π‐component cocrystals with ethanol or water molecules.

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