NMR Flashcards
1
Q
What does NMR stand for?
A
- nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
2
Q
How does NMR work?
A
- magnetic field applied to a sample, which is surrounded by a source of radio waves and a radio receiver
- this generate an energy change in the nuclei of atoms in the sample that can be detected
- electromagnetic energy is emitted, which can then be interpreted by a computer
3
Q
What is special about carbon-13?
A
- 1% of carbon
- has spin
- behaves as a little magnet
4
Q
What is resonance condition>?
A
- when C-13 placed in magnetic field it aligns with the field (lowest energy state / most stable)
- radio waves of certain frequencies supply energy to flip to make the flip
- possible to detect this at the right freq as it flips from one orientation to the other
- this is the peak on the graph
5
Q
How does functional groups cause a difference in the resonance of carbon-13 atom?
A
- different functional gorups cause the atoms to resonate at different magnetic field strengths
- all nuclei are shielded from the external magnetic field by the electrons around them
- nuclei with more electrons around them are better shielded
- greater the electron density, the smaller the magnetic field felt by the nucleu and the lower the frequency it resonates
6
Q
What does the NMR instrument produce?>
A
- graph of energy abosrbed (from the radio signal) vertically against a quantity called chemical shift (which is related to the resonant freq) horizontally
7
Q
What are the units of chemical shift and symbol>?
A
- δ
- ppm
8
Q
How is chemical shift defined as zero?
A
related to a compound called tetramethylsilane, TMS
9
Q
What does chemical shift depend on?
A
- related to the difference in freq between the resonating nucleus and that of TMS