Inversion dimers dominate the crystal packing in the structure of trimethyl citrate (trimethyl 2-hy-droxy-propane-1,2,3-tri-carboxyl-ate)

Acta Crystallogr E Crystallogr Commun. 2018 Aug 24;74(Pt 9):1362-1365. doi: 10.1107/S2056989018011222. eCollection 2018 Sep 1.

Abstract

Trimethyl citrate, C9H14O7 (systematic name: trimethyl 2-hy-droxy-propane-1,2,3-tri-carboxyl-ate), 2, was prepared by the esterification of citric acid and methanol in the presence of thionyl chloride at 273 K. The bond lengths and angles in 2 compare closely with those observed in citric acid. The C-C bonds adjacent to the terminal carboxyl groups are significantly shorter than those around the central C atom. The central carboxyl-ate group and the hy-droxy group occur in the normal planar arrangement with an r.m.s. deviation of 0.0171 Å from the mean plane involving all six atoms in the central unit. The crystal structure is almost completely dominated by the formation of inversion dimers through an O-H⋯O hydrogen bond, together with an extensive array of weaker C-H⋯O contacts. These generate a three-dimensional network structure with mol-ecules stacked along the c-axis direction.

Keywords: crystal structure; hydrogen bonds; inversion dimers; ring motifs; trimethyl citrate.

Grants and funding

This work was funded by Analytical Chemistry Trust Fund of the Royal Society of Chemistry grant 6000504/3 to Rami Y. Morjan. Bank of Palestine and Welfare Association grant Zamala program to R. Y. Morjan.