"The work is not yet finished. We are working without respite," a source close to Iranian negotiators said. Asked if the talks would continue for an 18th day tomorrow, he said: "This depends on our work tonight."
Another Iranian source said the chances of a deal today were "low".
Over the weekend hopes had been raised that the end might be finally in sight and that ministers from Iran and the six powers might be able to nail down the agreement on Monday.
No deal could be "perfect" but "conditions are already in place for a good agreement", Wang said through an interpreter, before going into talks with US Secretary of State John Kerry and other ministers.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said he believed there should be no further extension to the talks -- but added that he would negotiate as long as needed.
"I always believe there shouldn't be any extension but we could work as long as necessary to finish this," Zarif said as he met Wang.
The P5+1 group -- the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany -- want Iran to scale down its atomic activities in order to make any drive to make the atomic bomb all but impossible.
The current diplomatic effort began when Iranian President Hassan Rouhani came to power in 2013. In November that year an interim deal was agreed but two deadlines in 2014 for a lasting accord were missed.
Then in April, the parties scored a major breakthrough by agreeing the main outlines of an accord, aiming to finalise it by June 30, a deadline since pushed back twice.
Much of the technical work in what will be a highly complex accord is done, but the talks have stumbled on the exact timing of sanctions relief and Iran's desire to have a UN conventional arms embargo lifted.
Earlier today Iranian diplomat Alireza Miryousefi said on Twitter that "political will" was still needed. An Iranian source said "some important issues" remained to be resolved.
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