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(E)-1-(3,3′-Dimeth­­oxy-4′-{[(E)-4-nitro­benzyl­­idene]amino}-[1,1′-biphen­yl]-4-yl)-N-(4-nitro­phen­yl)methanimine

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aNational Biotechnology Research Center (CRBT), Industrial Biotechnology Division, Ali Mendjli New City, UV 03 BP E73, Constantine 25000, Algeria, bUnité de Recherche de Chimie de l'Environnement et Moléculaire Structurale, Université de Constantine-1 25000, Constantine, Algeria, cLaboratoire de Technologie des Matériaux Avancés, École Nationale Polytechnique de Constantine, Algeria, dUniversité Constantine 1, Algeria, eThe Environmental Engineering and Technologies Laboratory, Abdelhafid Boussouf Mila University, Algeria, and fCentre de Diffractométrie Henri Longchambon, Université Claude Bernard Lyon1, 5 rue de la Doua, 69100 Villeurbanne, France
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]

Edited by M. Zeller, Purdue University, USA (Received 19 January 2026; accepted 27 February 2026; online 5 March 2026)

The title compound, C28H22N4O6, crystallizes with one half-mol­ecule in the asymmetric unit centered on a twofold rotation axis located at the midpoint of the central C—C bond. The structure is non-planar overall, with nearly planar anisole-imine and nitro­phenyl-methanimine fragments. In the crystal, a cooperative network of inter­molecular C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds organizes the mol­ecules into layers parallel to the (101) plane, which are further consolidated by offset ππ stacking between centrosymmetrically related phenyl rings and C—H⋯π inter­actions. Collectively, these non-covalent inter­actions contribute to the cohesion of the three-dimensional supra­molecular framework.

3D view (loading...)
[Scheme 3D1]
Chemical scheme
[Scheme 1]

Structure description

The title Schiff base was synthesized as part of a broader search for multifunctional imine-based mol­ecules, whose tunable π-conjugation underpins applications in catalysis, sensing, materials science and medicinal chemistry. The title compound crystallizes in the monoclinic space group I2/a, with one half-mol­ecule in the asymmetric unit. The mol­ecule is centered on a crystallographic twofold rotation axis located at the midpoint of the C11—C11i bond of the amine mol­ecule [symmetry code: (i) Mathematical equation − x, 1 − y, 1 − z] (Fig. 1[link]). The mol­ecule is not planar. Within the asymmetric unit, the two Schiff base moieties are also non-planar, whereas the anisole-imine and nitro­phenyl-methanimine are each individually nearly planar (C1—C6 and N, O1, O2, C7 are planar with a maximum deviation of 0.045 (2) Å for the azomethine carbon atom C7; and C8–C13, N2, O3 and C14 are planar with a maximum deviation of 0.148 (1) Å for the azomethine nitro­gen atom N2). In the two six-membered rings, the largest distance between atom and the mean plane is 0.005 (2) Å, and 0.018 (2) Å in the nearly planar parts, respectively. Bond length analysis indicates an extended network of π bonds across the mol­ecule, consistent with pronounced electronic delocalization. The N2—C7 bond length of 1.266 (2) Å is characteristic of a C=N double bond, confirming significant π character within the imine fragment. The C7—N2—C8 bond angle of 122.82 (14)° shows that atom N2 adopts an essentially trigonal–planar geometry, in agreement with sp2 hybridization and conjugation with the adjacent aromatic ring system. The imine unit adopts an almost perfectly trans arrangement, with the atoms around the C=N bond being essentially coplanar as indicated by the C8—N2—C7—C4 torsion angle of −179.82(14°). The bond distances and angles are normal and are in good agreement with those in analogous structures (Hernández Téllez et al., 2025View full citation; Adam et al., 2015View full citation; Madhuprasad et al., 2014View full citation). The dihedral angle between the aromatic rings in the asymmetric unit is 35.68 (7)° and is largely controlled by the cooperative effect of the intra­molecular C7—H7⋯O3 and the inter­molecular C2—H2⋯O3 hydrogen bonds (Table 1[link]). The latter inter­action links neighboring mol­ecules, forming layers parallel to the (101) plane (Fig. 2[link]). In the crystal, slightly offset ππ stacking inter­actions are present between centrosymmetrically related phenyl rings with a Cg1⋯Cg1(Mathematical equation − x, Mathematical equation − y, Mathematical equation − z) separation of 3.5385 (10) Å, slippage = 1.235 Å, where Cg1 is the centroid of the C1–C6 ring. The overall crystal cohesion is reinforced by C—H⋯π inter­actions involving C5—H5⋯Cg2(−Mathematical equation + x, 1 − y, z) and C14—H14ACg2(1 − x, 1 − y, 1 − z) inter­actions, with H⋯Cg separations of 3.4898 (18) and 3.6757 (17) Å, respectively, and C—H⋯Cg angles of 140 and 129°, respectively, where Cg2 is the centroid of the C8–C13 ring (Fig. 3[link]). Collectively, these non-covalent inter­actions contribute to the cohesion of the three-dimensional supra­molecular framework.

Table 1
Hydrogen-bond geometry (Å, °)

D—H⋯A D—H H⋯A DA D—H⋯A
C2—H2⋯O3i 0.95 2.59 3.3833 (19) 141
C7—H7⋯O3 0.95 2.25 2.7783 (19) 114
Symmetry code: (i) Mathematical equation.
[Figure 1]
Figure 1
View of the title compound with the atom-numbering scheme. Displacement ellipsoids for non-H atoms are drawn at the 50% probability level. Symmetry code (i): Mathematical equation − x, 1 − y, 1 − z.
[Figure 2]
Figure 2
Extended packing arrangement viewed in the [010] direction of the unit cell showing C—H⋯O inter­molecular inter­actions (red line).
[Figure 3]
Figure 3
Graphical view of C—H⋯π and π-π stacking inter­actions.

Synthesis and crystallization

An ethano­lic solution of 4-nitro­salicyl­aldehyde (0.02 mmol, 3.34 mg) was added dropwise to a methano­lic solution of O-dianisidine (0.01 mmol, 2.44 mg) under constant magnetic stirring at room temperature. The reaction mixture was stirred for 1 h, during which the solution gradually turned orange. The product was obtained as brown crystals suitable for X-ray diffraction analysis after slow evaporation of the solvent, washed with cold ethanol, and dried in a desiccator. Yield: 76.24%. m.p 529.15 K.

FTIR (ATR, cm−1): 3100–3000 (w) (aromatic/sp2 C—H stretching), 2924 (w) (asymmetric aliphatic C—H stretching), 2857 (w) (symmetric aliphatic C—H stretching), 1687 (w)–1630 (vs) (azomethine stretching vibration C=N), 1599 (s) (N—O asymmetric stretching), 1371 (w) (N—O symmetric stretching).

Refinement

Crystal data, data collection and structure refinement details are summarized in Table 2[link].

Table 2
Experimental details

Crystal data
Chemical formula C28H22N4O6
Mr 510.49
Crystal system, space group Monoclinic, I2/a
Temperature (K) 150
a, b, c (Å) 14.2099 (14), 8.0341 (8), 20.899 (2)
β (°) 92.171 (9)
V3) 2384.2 (4)
Z 4
Radiation type Cu Kα
μ (mm−1) 0.85
Crystal size (mm) 0.28 × 0.15 × 0.07
 
Data collection
Diffractometer Xcalibur, Atlas, Gemini ultra
Absorption correction Multi-scan (CrysAlis PRO; Rigaku OD, 2022View full citation)
Tmin, Tmax 0.729, 1.000
No. of measured, independent and observed [I > 2σ(I)] reflections 9789, 2120, 1821
Rint 0.038
(sin θ/λ)max−1) 0.597
 
Refinement
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)], wR(F2), S 0.042, 0.121, 1.06
No. of reflections 2120
No. of parameters 173
H-atom treatment H-atom parameters constrained
Δρmax, Δρmin (e Å−3) 0.19, −0.23
Computer programs: CrysAlis PRO (Rigaku OD, 2022View full citation), OLEX2.solve (Dolomanov et al., 2009View full citation), SHELXL2019/3 (Sheldrick, 2015View full citation) and OLEX2 (Dolomanov et al., 2009View full citation).

Structural data


Computing details top

(E)-1-(3,3'-Dimethoxy-4'-{[(E)-4-nitrobenzylidene]amino}-[1,1'-biphenyl]-4-yl)-N-(4-nitrophenyl)methanimine top
Crystal data top
C28H22N4O6F(000) = 1064
Mr = 510.49Dx = 1.422 Mg m3
Monoclinic, I2/aCu Kα radiation, λ = 1.54184 Å
Hall symbol: -I 2yaCell parameters from 5072 reflections
a = 14.2099 (14) Åθ = 4.1–66.9°
b = 8.0341 (8) ŵ = 0.85 mm1
c = 20.899 (2) ÅT = 150 K
β = 92.171 (9)°Plate, brown
V = 2384.2 (4) Å30.28 × 0.15 × 0.07 mm
Z = 4
Data collection top
Xcalibur, Atlas, Gemini ultra
diffractometer
2120 independent reflections
Mirror monochromator1821 reflections with I > 2σ(I)
Detector resolution: 10.4685 pixels mm-1Rint = 0.038
ω scansθmax = 67.0°, θmin = 4.2°
Absorption correction: multi-scan
(CrysAlisPro; Rigaku OD, 2022)
h = 1616
Tmin = 0.729, Tmax = 1.000k = 99
9789 measured reflectionsl = 2420
Refinement top
Refinement on F2Primary atom site location: dual
Least-squares matrix: fullHydrogen site location: inferred from neighbouring sites
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.042H-atom parameters constrained
wR(F2) = 0.121 W = 1/[Σ2(FO2) + (0.068P)2 + 1.2673P] WHERE P = (FO2 + 2FC2)/3
S = 1.06(Δ/σ)max = 0.001
2120 reflectionsΔρmax = 0.19 e Å3
173 parametersΔρmin = 0.23 e Å3
0 restraintsAbsolute structure: All H atoms were placed in geometrically idealized positions and constrained to ride on their parent atoms, with C—H distances of 0.95–0.98 Å with Uiso(H) values of 1.2 or 1.5 Ueq of the parent atoms.
Special details top

Geometry. Bond distances, angles etc. have been calculated using the rounded fractional coordinates. All su's are estimated from the variances of the (full) variance-covariance matrix. The cell esds are taken into account in the estimation of distances, angles and torsion angles

Fractional atomic coordinates and isotropic or equivalent isotropic displacement parameters (Å2) top
xyzUiso*/Ueq
O10.08857 (11)0.4892 (2)0.84954 (7)0.0664 (6)
O20.18453 (10)0.64173 (19)0.90565 (6)0.0538 (5)
O30.53245 (7)0.32934 (13)0.58125 (5)0.0311 (3)
N10.16324 (11)0.56187 (19)0.85733 (7)0.0409 (5)
N20.50068 (9)0.61140 (16)0.66003 (6)0.0305 (4)
C10.23150 (11)0.55294 (19)0.80633 (7)0.0313 (5)
C20.31525 (12)0.6393 (2)0.81402 (7)0.0330 (5)
C30.37976 (11)0.6307 (2)0.76630 (7)0.0318 (5)
C40.35916 (11)0.53793 (19)0.71097 (7)0.0297 (5)
C50.27422 (11)0.4534 (2)0.70499 (8)0.0339 (5)
C60.20921 (11)0.4594 (2)0.75260 (8)0.0345 (5)
C70.42422 (11)0.5304 (2)0.65778 (8)0.0327 (5)
C80.56487 (10)0.60829 (19)0.61024 (7)0.0280 (4)
C90.61697 (11)0.75257 (19)0.60148 (7)0.0298 (5)
C100.68751 (11)0.76153 (19)0.55758 (7)0.0298 (5)
C110.71028 (10)0.62133 (19)0.52197 (7)0.0271 (4)
C120.65722 (11)0.47610 (18)0.52939 (7)0.0272 (4)
C130.58502 (10)0.46875 (18)0.57190 (7)0.0261 (4)
C140.54558 (11)0.19137 (19)0.53924 (7)0.0331 (5)
H20.328250.703560.851480.0400*
H30.438140.687820.771120.0380*
H50.260350.390030.667420.0410*
H60.151180.400940.748390.0410*
H70.408570.463900.621320.0390*
H90.603770.848070.626400.0360*
H100.720330.863100.551750.0360*
H120.671130.380550.504690.0330*
H14A0.533600.226930.494820.0500*
H14B0.501740.102020.549580.0500*
H14C0.610420.150640.544540.0500*
Atomic displacement parameters (Å2) top
U11U22U33U12U13U23
O10.0501 (9)0.0891 (12)0.0617 (9)0.0142 (8)0.0233 (7)0.0021 (8)
O20.0611 (9)0.0675 (9)0.0334 (7)0.0152 (7)0.0106 (6)0.0032 (6)
O30.0330 (6)0.0246 (5)0.0364 (6)0.0020 (4)0.0089 (4)0.0027 (4)
N10.0429 (9)0.0456 (8)0.0348 (8)0.0107 (7)0.0093 (6)0.0070 (7)
N20.0283 (7)0.0316 (7)0.0317 (7)0.0034 (5)0.0039 (5)0.0007 (5)
C10.0335 (8)0.0320 (8)0.0287 (8)0.0090 (6)0.0054 (6)0.0059 (6)
C20.0383 (9)0.0329 (8)0.0274 (7)0.0048 (6)0.0034 (6)0.0012 (6)
C30.0297 (8)0.0330 (8)0.0323 (8)0.0014 (6)0.0024 (6)0.0011 (6)
C40.0286 (8)0.0294 (8)0.0312 (8)0.0041 (6)0.0012 (6)0.0006 (6)
C50.0317 (8)0.0341 (9)0.0360 (8)0.0011 (6)0.0022 (6)0.0083 (7)
C60.0301 (8)0.0320 (8)0.0414 (9)0.0006 (6)0.0020 (7)0.0003 (7)
C70.0305 (8)0.0359 (8)0.0315 (8)0.0043 (7)0.0004 (6)0.0052 (7)
C80.0261 (7)0.0313 (8)0.0265 (7)0.0047 (6)0.0001 (6)0.0004 (6)
C90.0311 (8)0.0263 (8)0.0319 (8)0.0025 (6)0.0004 (6)0.0039 (6)
C100.0300 (8)0.0252 (8)0.0342 (8)0.0006 (6)0.0005 (6)0.0012 (6)
C110.0267 (7)0.0284 (8)0.0261 (7)0.0011 (6)0.0012 (6)0.0012 (6)
C120.0292 (7)0.0254 (7)0.0271 (7)0.0022 (6)0.0008 (6)0.0010 (6)
C130.0248 (7)0.0254 (7)0.0278 (7)0.0011 (6)0.0009 (6)0.0021 (6)
C140.0383 (9)0.0282 (8)0.0330 (8)0.0032 (6)0.0037 (6)0.0025 (6)
Geometric parameters (Å, º) top
O1—N11.217 (2)C9—C101.386 (2)
O2—N11.225 (2)C10—C111.395 (2)
O3—C131.3645 (18)C11—C121.401 (2)
O3—C141.4306 (18)C11—C11i1.482 (2)
N1—C11.470 (2)C12—C131.384 (2)
N2—C71.266 (2)C2—H20.9500
N2—C81.4097 (19)C3—H30.9500
C1—C21.382 (2)C5—H50.9500
C1—C61.378 (2)C6—H60.9500
C2—C31.382 (2)C7—H70.9500
C3—C41.397 (2)C9—H90.9500
C4—C51.386 (2)C10—H100.9500
C4—C71.474 (2)C12—H120.9500
C5—C61.384 (2)C14—H14A0.9800
C8—C91.391 (2)C14—H14B0.9800
C8—C131.414 (2)C14—H14C0.9800
C13—O3—C14117.60 (11)O3—C13—C8116.49 (13)
O1—N1—O2123.28 (16)O3—C13—C12123.39 (13)
O1—N1—C1118.41 (14)C8—C13—C12120.08 (13)
O2—N1—C1118.32 (15)C1—C2—H2121.00
C7—N2—C8122.82 (14)C3—C2—H2121.00
N1—C1—C2118.71 (13)C2—C3—H3120.00
N1—C1—C6118.68 (14)C4—C3—H3120.00
C2—C1—C6122.62 (14)C4—C5—H5119.00
C1—C2—C3118.88 (14)C6—C5—H5119.00
C2—C3—C4120.01 (15)C1—C6—H6121.00
C3—C4—C5119.36 (14)C5—C6—H6121.00
C3—C4—C7121.89 (14)N2—C7—H7120.00
C5—C4—C7118.73 (14)C4—C7—H7120.00
C4—C5—C6121.38 (15)C8—C9—H9119.00
C1—C6—C5117.76 (15)C10—C9—H9119.00
N2—C7—C4120.86 (15)C9—C10—H10120.00
N2—C8—C9116.41 (13)C11—C10—H10120.00
N2—C8—C13125.67 (13)C11—C12—H12119.00
C9—C8—C13117.77 (13)C13—C12—H12119.00
C8—C9—C10122.15 (14)O3—C14—H14A109.00
C9—C10—C11119.96 (14)O3—C14—H14B109.00
C10—C11—C12118.48 (13)O3—C14—H14C109.00
C10—C11—C11i121.88 (14)H14A—C14—H14B109.00
C11i—C11—C12119.63 (13)H14A—C14—H14C109.00
C11—C12—C13121.46 (13)H14B—C14—H14C109.00
C14—O3—C13—C8174.58 (12)C5—C4—C7—N2176.96 (15)
C14—O3—C13—C127.9 (2)C4—C5—C6—C10.2 (2)
O1—N1—C1—C2178.07 (16)N2—C8—C9—C10174.91 (14)
O1—N1—C1—C61.6 (2)C13—C8—C9—C100.9 (2)
O2—N1—C1—C22.2 (2)N2—C8—C13—O35.0 (2)
O2—N1—C1—C6178.16 (15)N2—C8—C13—C12172.64 (14)
C8—N2—C7—C4179.82 (14)C9—C8—C13—O3179.61 (13)
C7—N2—C8—C9148.63 (15)C9—C8—C13—C122.7 (2)
C7—N2—C8—C1336.0 (2)C8—C9—C10—C112.1 (2)
N1—C1—C2—C3179.75 (14)C9—C10—C11—C123.2 (2)
C6—C1—C2—C30.6 (2)C9—C10—C11—C11i175.41 (14)
N1—C1—C6—C5179.64 (14)C10—C11—C12—C131.4 (2)
C2—C1—C6—C50.0 (2)C11i—C11—C12—C13177.27 (14)
C1—C2—C3—C41.0 (2)C10—C11—C11i—C10i36.0 (2)
C2—C3—C4—C50.8 (2)C10—C11—C11i—C12i145.35 (15)
C2—C3—C4—C7177.62 (15)C12—C11—C11i—C10i145.35 (15)
C3—C4—C5—C60.2 (2)C12—C11—C11i—C12i33.3 (2)
C7—C4—C5—C6178.29 (15)C11—C12—C13—O3179.10 (13)
C3—C4—C7—N21.5 (2)C11—C12—C13—C81.6 (2)
Symmetry code: (i) x+3/2, y, z+1.
Hydrogen-bond geometry (Å, º) top
D—H···AD—HH···AD···AD—H···A
C2—H2···O3ii0.952.593.3833 (19)141
C7—H7···O30.952.252.7783 (19)114
Symmetry code: (ii) x+1, y+1/2, z+3/2.
 

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center (CCDC) for access to the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) through the FAIRE program.

References

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Return to citationSheldrick, G. M. (2015). Acta Cryst. C71, 3–8.  Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar

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