Structure-property relationships in dicyanopyrazinoquinoxalines and their hydrogen-bonding-capable dihydropyrazinoquinoxalinedione derivatives

Beilstein J Org Chem. 2024 May 8:20:1037-1052. doi: 10.3762/bjoc.20.92. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Presented here is the design, synthesis, and study of a variety of novel hydrogen-bonding-capable π-conjugated N-heteroacenes, 1,4-dihydropyrazino[2,3-b]quinoxaline-2,3-diones (DPQDs). The DPQDs were accessed from the corresponding weakly hydrogen-bonding dicyanopyrazinoquinoxaline (DCPQ) suspensions with excess potassium hydroxide, resulting in moderate to good yields. Both families of compounds were analyzed by UV-vis and NMR spectroscopy, where the consequences of hydrogen bonding capability could be assessed through the structure-property studies. Conversion of the DCPQs into hydrogen-bonding capable DPQDs results in modulation of frontier MO energies, higher molar extinction coefficients, enhanced crystallinity, and on-average higher thermal stability (where in some cases the 5% weight loss temperature is increased by up to 100 °C). Single crystal X-ray diffraction data could be obtained for three DPQDs. One reveals pairwise hydrogen bonding in the solid state as well as a herringbone packing arrangement rendering it a promising candidate for additional studies in the context of organic optoelectronic devices.

Keywords: N-heteroacenes; conjugated molecules; hydrogen bonding; optoelectronic properties; organic field-effect transistors; organic semiconductors.

Grants and funding

R.K.C. and J.X. are grateful to the National Science Foundation (NSF) for supporting this research (R.K.C.: CHE-1057411; R.K.C./J.X.: CHE-1507561). K.A.A. wishes to acknowledge the NSF and the University of Florida for funding of the purchase of the X-ray equipment. The mass spectrometry data has been generated by the Mass Spectrometry Research and Education Center at the University of Florida which is grateful for funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH S10 OD021758-01A1 and S10 OD030250-01A1). N.G.A. acknowledges funding from the NSF for NMR instrumentation (CHE-1228336).