NMR Flashcards

1
Q

Why is NMR so useful

A
  • it is easy to obtain a spectrum
  • only small amounts of sample are necessary
  • it is non-destructive
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2
Q

relationships between electronegativity and chemical shift

A

The closer to an electronegative atom, the higher the chemical shift of that carbon

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3
Q

Tetra methyl silane and why it is used

A

4 carbon atoms which give ruse to a sharp peak at 0ppm
- used as a reference for chemical shifts.
- generated one sharp peak
- it is unreactive so won’t affect the sample being analysed
- highly volatile so can easily be removed from the sample
- peak always found in the far right of the spectrum

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4
Q

What does each thing tell you on a proton NMR

A
  • number of peaks tells you the different number of proton environments
  • location of peaks shows the type of proton environment
  • area under the peak tells you the number of protons in each environment
  • the splitting shows the number of protons in adjacent environments
  • integration ratios tell you how many protons each peak represents
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5
Q

Solvents used in NMR

A
  • needs to be dissolved in a solvents before it is analysed
    Deuterium is used- an isotope of hydrogen with a mass number of 2, doesn’t create a peak in NMR
    Deuterated trichloromethane: CDCl3 for polar samples
    Deuterated benzene: C6D6 for non-polar samples
    Alternatively solvent molecules with no hydrogen atoms to start with could be used like tetrachloromethane
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