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5-Amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride

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aNorth Central College, Department of Chemistry, 131 S. Loomis St, Naperville, IL 60540, USA, and bICDD, 12 Campus Blvd, Newtown Square, PA 19073, USA
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]

Edited by M. Zeller, Purdue University, USA (Received 26 March 2026; accepted 17 April 2026; online 29 April 2026)

The crystal structure of 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride (systematic name: 4-carb­oxy-2-oxobutan-1-aminium chloride), C5H10NO3+·Cl, has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, and optimized using density functional theory (DFT) techniques. The structure is compared to a recent single-crystal determination [Wang et al. (2025View full citation). Z. Kristallogr. New Cryst. Struct. 240, 413–414]. 5-Amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride crystallizes in the space group Pbca (No. 61), with a = 8.20862 (9), b = 11.22253 (10), c = 16.8595 (2) Å, V = 1553.12 (4) Å3, and Z = 8 at 298 K. The crystal structure consists of layers parallel to the ab plane. The center of the layers contains hydro­philic NH3, Cl, and CO2H groups, and the outer surface of the layers is composed of hydro­phobic CH2 groups. Hydrogen bonds are prominent in the crystal structure. The ammonium group acts as a donor to three chloride anions, and one hydrogen bond is bifurcated to the carbonyl group. Each Cl anion is an acceptor in three N—H⋯Cl hydrogen bonds, plus one from the carb­oxy­lic acid group. These hydrogen bonds connect the cations and anions into the layers parallel to the ab plane. The powder pattern has been submitted to the Inter­national Centre for Diffraction Data (ICDD) for inclusion in the Powder Diffraction File (PDF)

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

Structure description

5-Amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride is a porphyrin precursor and a photosensitizing agent. It finds application in the treatment of skin problems, including actinic keratosis and early-stage carcinomas. The systematic name (CAS Registry Number 5451-09-2) is 4-carb­oxy-2-oxobutan-1-aminium chloride. X-ray powder diffraction data for 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride has been reported in Chinese Patent CN113149854A (Gu et al., 2021View full citation). The single-crystal structure of 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride has been determined very recently [Wang et al., 2025View full citation; Cambridge Structural Database (CSD; Groom et al., 2016View full citation) refcode MUPYOP]. This work is part of a project (Kaduk et al., 2014View full citation) to determine commercial pharmaceutical crystal structures and add high-quality powder diffraction data to the Powder Diffraction File (Kabekkodu et al., 2024View full citation).

The r.m.s. Cartesian displacement of the single-crystal (Wang et al., 2025View full citation) and Rietveld-refined structures is 0.159 Å. The r.m.s. agreement of the Rietveld-refined and VASP-optimized structures is 0.172 Å. The agreement of the single-crystal, Rietveld, and VASP structures is very good. The agreements are all well within the normal range for correct structures (van de Streek & Neumann, 2014View full citation). The isotropic displacement coefficients from the Rietveld refinement correlate very well to the isotropic equivalents calculated form the anisotropic displacement coefficients from the single-crystal refinement, providing another measure of the accuracy of the powder structure. The standard uncertainties on the fractional coordinates from the Rietveld refinement average about 3.5 times larger than those from the single-crystal structure. The powder structure is accurate, but less precise, than the single-crystal structure. The asymmetric unit with the atom numbering is presented in Fig. 1[link].

[Figure 1]
Figure 1
The asymmetric unit of 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride, with the atom numbering. The atoms are represented by 50% probability spheroids/ellipsoids. Image generated using Mercury (Macrae et al., 2020View full citation).

All of the bond distances, bond angles, and torsion angles fall within the normal ranges indicated by a Mercury Mogul Geometry check (Macrae et al., 2020View full citation). Quantum chemical geometry optimization of the isolated cation (DFT/B3LYP/6-31G*/water) using Spartan '24 (Wavefunction, 2023View full citation) indicated that it is 3.1 kcal mol−1 higher in energy than the local minimum, which has a similar conformation (r.m.s. displacement = 0.087 Å). The global minimum-energy conformation has the same energy, but a slightly different conformation (r.m.s. difference = 0.917 Å), mainly at the periphery of the cation. The cation is apparently flexible, and inter­molecular inter­actions determine the solid-state conformation.

The crystal structure (Fig. 2[link]) consists of layers parallel to the ab plane. The center of layers contains hydro­philic NH3, Cl, and CO2H groups, and the outer surface of the layers is composed of hydro­phobic CH2 groups.

[Figure 2]
Figure 2
The crystal structure of 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride, viewed down the a axis. Image generated using DIAMOND (Putz & Brandenburg, 2025View full citation).

Analysis of the contributions to the total crystal energy of the structure using the Forcite module of Materials Studio (Dassault Systèmes, 2024View full citation) suggests that the intra­molecular deformation energy is dominated by angle distortion terms, while van der Waals attractions (which in this force field-based analysis include hydrogen bonds) dominate the inter­molecular energy.

Hydrogen bonds are prominent in the crystal structure. The ammonium group acts as a donor to three chloride anions, and one hydrogen bond is bifurcated to the O2 carbonyl group. Each chloride anion is an acceptor in three N—H⋯Cl hydrogen bonds, plus one from the carb­oxy­lic acid group. These hydrogen bonds connect the cations and anions into layers parallel to the ab plane. The energies of the N—H⋯O hydrogen bonds were calculated using the correlation of Wheatley & Kaduk (2019View full citation), and the energy of the O—H⋯Cl hydrogen bond was calculated using the correlation of Kaduk (2002View full citation). Three C—H⋯O/Cl hydrogen bonds also contribute to the lattice energy.

The Bravais–Friedel–Donnay–Harker (Bravais, 1866View full citation; Friedel, 1907View full citation; Donnay & Harker, 1937View full citation) morphology suggests that we might expect isotropic morphology for 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride. A second-order spherical har­monic model was included in the refinement. The texture index was 1.010 (0), indicating that preferred orientation was not significant in this rotated capillary specimen.

Synthesis and crystallization

5-Amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride was a white powder purchased from TargetMol (Batch No. 146376), and was used as-received.

Refinement

The powder sample was analyzed at 298 K at the Wiggler Low Energy Beamline (Leontowich et al., 2021View full citation) of the Brockhouse X-ray Diffraction and Scattering Sector of the Canadian Light Source using a wavelength of 0.819325 (2) Å (15.1 keV). The pattern was indexed using JADE Pro (MDI, 2025View full citation) and the crystal structure was solved independently using direct methods, as implemented in EXPO2014 (Altomare et al., 2013View full citation). The original structure solution yielded the carb­oxy­lic acid group rotated ∼180° from the single-crystal structure. The single-crystal structure was 26.7 kcal/mol/cell lower in energy, and that conformation was adopted for the refinement.

Rietveld refinement (Fig. 3[link]) was carried out using GSAS-II (Toby & Von Dreele, 2013View full citation). All non-H bond distances and angles were restrained according to a Mercury/Mogul Geometry Check (Sykes et al., 2011View full citation; Bruno et al., 2004View full citation). H atoms were included in calculated positions and recalculated during the refinement using the Mercury (Macrae et al., 2020View full citation) `Auto Edit' feature and the `Adjust Hydrogen' feature of Materials Studio (Dassault Systèmes, 2024View full citation). The Cl atom was refined anisotropically. the Uiso values of the C, N, and O atoms were refined individually, while the Uiso values for the H atoms were fixed at 1.2 times the Uiso of the C, N, and O atoms to which they are attached. The final refinement yielded Rwp = 0.10874. The largest features in the normalized error plot are in the positions of many of the strong low-angle peaks, and may indicate that the specimen changed during the measurement. The largest peak (0.55 Å from Cl1) and hole (1.86 Å from Cl1) in the difference Fourier map were 0.87 (18) and −0.81 (18) e Å−3, respectively.

[Figure 3]
Figure 3
The Rietveld plot for 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride. The blue crosses represent the observed data points and the green line is the calculated pattern. The cyan curve is the normalized error plot and the red line is the background curve. The blue tick marks indicate the peak positions. The vertical scale has been multiplied by a factor of ×10 for 2θ > 30.0°.

The crystal structure of 5-amino­levulinic acid hydro­chloride was optimized (fixed unit cell) with density functional theory (DFT) techniques using VASP (Version 6.0; Kresse & Furthmüller, 1996View full citation) through the MedeA graphical inter­face (Materials Design, 2024View full citation). Single-point density functional theory calculations (fixed experimental cell) and population analysis were carried out using CRYSTAL23 (Erba et al., 2023View full citation) using H, C, N, and O basis sets defined by Gatti et al. (1994View full citation) and the Cl basis set of Peintinger et al. (2013View full citation).

Experimental details are given in Table 1[link].

Table 1
Experimental details

Crystal data
Chemical formula C5H10NO3+·Cl
Mr 167.59
Crystal system, space group Orthorhombic, Pbca
Temperature (K) 298
a, b, c (Å) 8.20862 (9), 11.22253 (10), 16.8595 (2)
V3) 1553.12 (4)
Z 8
Radiation type Synchrotron, λ = 0.81933 Å
μ (mm−1) 0.29
Specimen shape, size (mm) Cylinder, 0.45 × 0.15
 
Data collection
Diffractometer Wiggler Low Energy Beamline, Brockhouse X-ray Diffraction and Scattering Sector, Canadian Light Source
Specimen mounting Kapton capillary
Data collection mode Transmission
Scan method Step
2θ values (°) 2θmin = −9.008 2θmax = 75.047 2θstep = 0.003
 
Refinement
R factors and goodness of fit Rp = 0.071, Rwp = 0.109, Rexp = 0.002, R(F2) = 0.09084, χ2 = 2566.942
No. of parameters 64
No. of restraints 34
(Δ/σ)max 7.079
Computer programs: GSAS-II (Toby & Von Dreele, 2013View full citation).

Structural data


Computing details top

4-Carboxy-2-oxobutan-1-aminium chloride top
Crystal data top
C5H10NO3+·ClZ = 8
Mr = 167.59Dx = 1.434 Mg m3
Orthorhombic, PbcaSynchrotron radiation, λ = 0.81933 Å
a = 8.20862 (9) ŵ = 0.29 mm1
b = 11.22253 (10) ÅT = 298 K
c = 16.8595 (2) Åcylinder, 0.45 × 0.15 mm
V = 1553.12 (4) Å3
Data collection top
Wiggler Low Energy Beamline, Brockhouse X-ray Diffraction and Scattering Sector, Canadian Light Source
diffractometer
Scan method: step
Specimen mounting: Kapton capillary2θmin = 9.008°, 2θmax = 75.047°, 2θstep = 0.003°
Data collection mode: transmission
Refinement top
Least-squares matrix: full64 parameters
Rp = 0.07134 restraints
Rwp = 0.1090 constraints
Rexp = 0.002Weighting scheme based on measured s.u.'s
R(F2) = 0.09084(Δ/σ)max = 7.079
33623 data pointsBackground function: Background function: "chebyschev-1" function with 3 terms: 7.73(3)e3, -1.90(5)e3, -8(3), Background peak parameters: pos, int, sig, gam: 9.68(4), 9.22(18)e6, 1.98(5)e5, 0.100,
Profile function: Finger-Cox-Jephcoat function parameters U, V, W, X, Y, SH/L: peak variance(Gauss) = Utan(Th)2+Vtan(Th)+W: peak HW(Lorentz) = X/cos(Th)+Ytan(Th); SH/L = S/L+H/L U, V, W in (centideg)2, X & Y in centideg 6.157, -1.198, 1.258, 0.000, 0.667, 0.002,Preferred orientation correction: Simple spherical harmonic correction Order = 2 Coefficients: 0:0:C(2,0) = -0.185(6); 0:0:C(2,2) = -0.092(8)
Fractional atomic coordinates and isotropic or equivalent isotropic displacement parameters (Å2) top
xyzUiso*/Ueq
Cl10.08722 (19)0.38073 (14)0.41224 (10)0.0481
O20.0446 (6)0.1463 (3)0.4452 (3)0.0436 (19)*
O30.1421 (6)0.1790 (3)0.3666 (3)0.072 (2)*
O40.0889 (6)0.0777 (4)0.3361 (2)0.061 (2)*
N50.1619 (6)0.3359 (4)0.4450 (3)0.045 (2)*
C60.0760 (7)0.3045 (5)0.3692 (4)0.036 (3)*
C70.0829 (8)0.1383 (5)0.3041 (4)0.028 (2)*
C80.0181 (8)0.1909 (6)0.3815 (5)0.029 (2)*
C90.1717 (9)0.0206 (6)0.3188 (4)0.037 (3)*
C100.0637 (10)0.0816 (7)0.3375 (4)0.057 (3)*
H110.169520.291630.319950.0432*
H120.011360.379280.352320.0432*
H130.071940.379180.487700.0535*
H140.213690.251580.473040.0535*
H150.170710.204350.275620.0332*
H160.022970.121170.261850.0332*
H170.260490.033430.370080.0438*
H180.243890.005000.263600.0438*
H190.265270.400770.431800.0535*
H200.070500.241900.380700.0865*
Atomic displacement parameters (Å2) top
U11U22U33U12U13U23
Cl10.0527 (18)0.0384 (15)0.053 (2)0.006 (3)0.026 (3)0.018 (3)
Geometric parameters (Å, º) top
O2—C81.205 (8)C8—C71.528 (8)
O3—C101.360 (7)C9—C71.529 (7)
O3—H200.949 (4)C9—C101.483 (8)
O4—C101.254 (8)C9—H171.140 (6)
N5—C61.502 (8)C9—H181.141 (7)
N5—H131.139 (5)C10—O31.360 (7)
N5—H141.140 (5)C10—O41.254 (8)
N5—H191.140 (5)C10—C91.483 (8)
C6—N51.502 (8)H11—C61.140 (6)
C6—C81.505 (6)H12—C61.140 (6)
C6—H111.140 (6)H13—N51.139 (5)
C6—H121.140 (6)H14—N51.140 (5)
C7—C81.528 (8)H15—C71.140 (6)
C7—C91.529 (7)H16—C71.140 (6)
C7—H151.140 (6)H17—C91.140 (6)
C7—H161.140 (6)H18—C91.141 (7)
C8—O21.205 (8)H19—N51.140 (5)
C8—C61.505 (6)H20—O30.957 (4)
C10—O3—H20113.3 (5)C8—C7—H16109.5 (6)
C6—N5—H13109.5 (5)C9—C7—H16108.6 (5)
C6—N5—H14109.4 (4)H15—C7—H16109.2 (5)
H13—N5—H14109.5 (5)O2—C8—C6124.5 (8)
C6—N5—H19109.4 (5)O2—C8—C7122.6 (7)
H13—N5—H19109.5 (4)C6—C8—C7112.9 (7)
H14—N5—H19109.5 (4)C7—C9—C10114.7 (6)
N5—C6—C8108.8 (6)C7—C9—H17108.6 (5)
N5—C6—H11109.5 (5)C10—C9—H17108.7 (6)
C8—C6—H11109.8 (5)C7—C9—H18109.4 (6)
N5—C6—H12109.5 (6)C10—C9—H18106.8 (5)
C8—C6—H12109.6 (5)H17—C9—H18108.6 (6)
H11—C6—H12109.6 (6)O3—C10—O4120.5 (8)
C8—C7—C9111.1 (6)O3—C10—C9114.5 (7)
C8—C7—H15109.1 (5)O4—C10—C9124.5 (7)
C9—C7—H15109.2 (6)
 

Acknowledgements

Part of the research described in this article was performed at the Canadian Light Source, a national research facility of the University of Saskatchewan, which is supported by the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), the Government of Saskatchewan, and the University of Saskatchewan. This work was partially supported by the Inter­national Centre for Diffraction Data. We thank Adam Leontowich for his assistance in the data collection. We also thank the ICDD team – Megan Rost, Steve Trimble, and Dave Bohnenberger – for their contribution to research, sample preparation, and in-house XRD data collection and verification.

Funding information

Funding for this research was provided by: International Centre for Diffraction Data (grant No. 09-03).

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