2 resultados para X-ray Structures

em Aston University Research Archive


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X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) can play an important role in guiding the design of new materials, tailored to meet increasingly stringent constraints on performance devices, by providing insight into their surface compositions and the fundamental interactions between the surfaces and the environment. This chapter outlines the principles and application of XPS as a versatile, chemically specific analytical tool in determining the electronic structures and (usually surface) compositions of constituent elements within diverse functional materials. Advances in detector electronics have opened the way for development of photoelectron microscopes and instruments with XPS imaging capabilities. Advances in surface science instrumentation to enable time-resolved spectroscopic measurements offer exciting opportunities to quantitatively investigate the composition, structure and dynamics of working catalyst surfaces. Attempts to study the effects of material processing in realistic environments currently involves the use of high- or ambient-pressure XPS in which samples can be exposed to reactive environments.

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Objective: The aims of this study were to establish the structure of the potent anticonvulsant enaminone methyl 4-(4′-bromophenyl)amino-6-methyl-2- oxocyclohex-3-en-1-oate (E139), and to determine the energetically preferred conformation of the molecule, which is responsible for the biological activity. Materials and Methods: The structure of the molecule was determined by X-ray crystallography. Theoretical ab initio calculations with different basis sets were used to compare the energies of the different enantiomers and to other structurally related compounds. Results: The X-ray crystal structure revealed two independent molecules of E139, both with absolute configuration C11(S), C12(R), and their inverse. Ab initio calculations with the 6-31G, 3-21G and STO-3G basis sets confirmed that the C11(S), C12(R) enantiomer with both substituents equatorial had the lowest energy. Compared to relevant crystal structures, the geometry of the theoretical structures shows a longer C-N and shorter C=O distance with more cyclohexene ring puckering in the isolated molecule. Conclusion: Based on a pharmacophoric model it is suggested that the enaminone system HN-C=C-C=O and the 4-bromophenyl group in E139 are necessary to confer anticonvulsant property that could lead to the design of new and improved anticonvulsant agents. Copyright © 2003 S. Karger AG, Basel.