NMR stuff Flashcards
1
Q
science behind NMR
A
- nuclei of atoms usually spin in a random direction, unless in a strong magnetic field
- radio waves will flip spins, and difference between spin up and spin down gives info on functional groups nearby
2
Q
elements of NMR
A
- powerful superconducting magnet (surrounded by layers of liquid helium and liquid nitrogen)
- powerful radiofrequency transmitter
- detector for emitted radio waves
3
Q
how is emission measured in NMR?
A
- pulses of radio waves flip spins
- nuclei emit radio signals as they flip back
- emissions are measured
4
Q
3 main pieces of info from NMR
A
- integration: area under peaks (how many of each type of proton)
- splitting: how many peaklets are there (how many neighboring protons there are)
- chemical shift: where peaks show up (depends on functional groups)
5
Q
signal integration
A
- area under peak indicates relative number of protons
- in symmetrical molecules, same kinds of protons attached to different carbons can integrate!
6
Q
splitting
A
- multiplicity: peaks are split into peaklets depending on how many nearby H spins there are
- multiplicity = n + 1, where n is the number of equivalent neighboring protons
7
Q
chemical shift
A
- different functional groups show up in different regions
- upfield (lower frequencies on right): more shielding and harder to flip
- downfield (higher frequencies on left): less shielding and easier to flip
8
Q
NMR shifts that are common
A
- electronegative atoms pull electrons away from nearby atoms, causing a downfield shift
- sp2 and sp carbons cause a downfield shift (more significant if proton directly attached to them)
9
Q
OH and NH groups in NMR
A
- OH and NH groups can H-bond, leading to broad peaks or no peaks at all
- OH may not split neighboring protons, and vice versa
- adding D2O will make OH peak disappear completely!
10
Q
nonequivalent protons with aklenes
A
- “equivalent” protons on an alkene are nonequivalent if there’s no symmetry
11
Q
what causes splitting into peaklets?
A
- vicinial protons may be spinning in same or opposite direction, which causes slight shielding or deshielding
- when there’s >1 vicinial proton, there’s more possibilities but some are more likely (larger center peak)
12
Q
spacing of protons that split each other
A
- spacing between peaklets for each peak set should be the same
- peaks may lean towards eachother because the up/down spin is preferred
13
Q
spliting by nonequivalent protons
A
- causes complex patterns
- “doublet of doublets”: proton split 2 separate times by nonequivalent alkene protons
14
Q
13C spectroscopy
A
- way more 12C in nature, so many repeated scans must be done
- splitting is not observed
- integration doesn’t correspond to # identical carbons
- chemical shifts are similar (electronegative substituents
and alkenes/alkynes deshield)
15
Q
chemical shifts in 13C NMR
A
0-50: sp3
50-80: sp3 near fxl group
80-100: sp
100-160: sp2
160-200: C=O