Cocrystals and Solvates are Not the Same: A Network Perspective.
Tom Edward de Vries, Hugo Meekes, Elias Vlieg, René de Gelder
Abstract
Open AccessCocrystals and solvates are two kinds of multicomponent crystals. Cocrystals consist of solid compounds, while solvates consist of a mixture of solid and liquid compounds. This work addresses the question of whether cocrystals and solvates can be treated the same or need to be treated separately. To do this, networks out of known cocrystals and solvates are created, where each node represents an individual compound, and two nodes are linked if the compounds they represent form a cocrystal or solvate. These networks are also used to predict new cocrystals and solvates using a technique called link prediction. By analyzing the structure of the cocrystal and solvate networks, differences in behaviors between cocrystals and solvates are found, due in part to a clash between chemical and steric complementarity found in the solvate network. Based on the analysis of the networks, it is found that cocrystals and solvates cannot be treated equally and that information from one network is not relevant for predictions in the other. It is also found that link prediction performs poorly when used on the solvate network, unless 14 problematic solvents are removed.