PPT
PPT
PPT
(1H-NMR) Spectroscopy
1
1H-NMR Spectroscopy
Background and Theory
Fundamental principle
The energy required to cause nuclear spin flip is a function of the magnetic
environment of the nucleus.
Bo
add magnetic field
I = -1/2
Absorb energy
DE ~ 0.02 cal mol-1
Release energy = radio wave photons
(relaxation)
I = +1/2
3
Background and Theory
Magnetic Field Controls DE
• DE influenced by magnetic field strength at nucleus
I = -1/2
Spin state energy
I = +1/2
NMR signal
Intensity of signal
(photon quantity)
NMR C O
X C O
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Background and Theory
Spectrum Structure
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Number of Signals
Proton Equivalency
•NMR signal due to photon absorption
•Photon energy controlled by magnetic environment of nucleus
•Nuclei in same magnetic environment = equivalent
•Multiple magnetic environments multiple signals
•Number of signals = number of equivalent proton sets
O H H
H H
Cl CN
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Number of Signals
Proton Equivalency
How to test for equivalency?
•Equivalent = proton magnetic environments identical in every way
•Nonequivalent = proton magnetic environments not identical in one or more ways
•Easier to test for nonequivalency than for equivalency
•Models:
Build two copies; label protons in question
Superpose protons in question
If rest of molecule superposable then protons in question are equivalent
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Number of Signals
Proton Equivalency
H H H
rapid equilibrium
H C Cl H C C Cl
H H H
H H F Cl H F
H C C OH H C C H H C C Cl
H H F Cl F Cl
H H H H
C C H
C C
H C C C H mirror plane H C C H
C C H C C
H H H H
CH3
CH3 C CH2OH HO OH
CH3
H H
Three proton sets three signals Two proton sets two signals
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Ringkasan sebelumnya :
I = -1/2
Spin state energy
I = +1/2
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Position of Signals
The Chemical Shift
Intensity of signal
(photon quantity)
Reference point?
0.00 ppm (CH3)4Si
Tetramethylsilane (TMS)
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Position of Signals
The Chemical Shift
•How does molecular structure influence chemical shift?
5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 ppm
2.0 1.8
2.1
2.5 2.5
3.0
2.8
3.0
H X H X H X H X
Increasing EN of X
Decreasing electron density around H
Less shielding
Higher chemical shift
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Position of Signals
Characteristic Proton NMR Chemical Shifts (pp m)
RCH3 0.9 RCCH 2.5 ArH 6.5 - 8
O
2.0 – 2.6 OCH2 3.3 – 4.1 ROH 1–5
R CH3
O
2.2 – 3.0 R2C=CH2 5.0 ArOH 4–7
CH2R
benzene
ring ArCH3 2.3 RCH=CR2 5.3 RCO2H 10 – 13
ArCH2R 2.6
•Characteristic shifts are typical proton averages. Actual shifts may lie outside given range.
O O O
0.23 ppm 3.39 ppm 1.18 ppm 0.93 ppm 3.49 ppm
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Position of Signals
Avoid This Common Misconception
•Unlike IR peaks, we cannot assign NMR peaks based only on chemical shift
•Example:
2.2 ppm not always ArCH3
Common exception
6.5-8.0 ppm usually
benzene ring protons
C=O stretch
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Relative Intensity of Peaks
Integration
•Beer’s Law: amount of energy absorbed or transmitted proportional to moles of stuff present
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Sample Spectra
•Verify what we have learned about equivalent protons, chemical shifts, and integration
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens:
H 4.19 ppm: integral = 1.0 (1 H)
H C OH 3.41 ppm: integral = 3.0 (3 H)
H CH3OH has 4 H
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Sample Spectra
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens:
OCH3
3.19 ppm: integral = 1.0 (6 H)
H3C C OCH3 1.33 ppm: integral = 1.0 (6 H)
CH3 C5H12O2 has 12 H
Two equal integrals
Two groups of equivalent H
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Sample Spectra
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens:
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Sample Spectra
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens:
CH3CH2Br
Three peaks!
Four peaks!
Homework
•Why the extra peaks? Hint: think about spin and magnetic fields 26
Proton Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
(1H-NMR) Spectroscopy Part 3
Lecture Supplement:
Take one handout from the stage
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1H-NMR Spectroscopy Part 2 Summary
Information from NMR Spectrum
•Number of signals how many sets of equivalent protons
•Position of signals (chemical shift) magnetic environment of nucleus
Deshielding by electronegative atoms higher chemical shift
•Relative intensity of signals (integration) how many hydrogens per signal
Integrals give proton ratio; not always equal to absolute proton count (i.e., 1.5:1)
•Splitting of signals (spin-spin coupling)
Example:
3.55 ppm: integral = 1.0 4 H
CH3OCH2CH2OCH3
3.39 ppm: integral = 1.5 6 H
Two groups of equivalent H
Two unequal integrals
C4H10O2 has 10 H
10 H / (1.0 + 1.5) = 4 H per unit
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Signal Splitting three lines
triplet
1H-NMR spectrum of CH3CH2Br has more details...
Signals
3.43 ppm: are split
integral = 1.0 2 H
CH3CH2Br 1.68 ppm: integral = 1.5 3 H
Two unequal integrals
5 H / (1.0 + 1.5) = 2 H per unit
four lines
quartet
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Signal Splitting
What is the origin of signal splitting?
Each line in signal...
...has slightly different chemical shift
...represents slightly different spin flip energy
...represents nucleus with slightly different magnetic environment
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Signal Splitting
How can one nucleus have different magnetic environments?
•Spin direction of adjacent nuclei
Ha C C Hb
Ha feels Bo + Hb
Bo
Ha feels Bo - Hb
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Signal Splitting
Some Useful Terms
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Signal Splitting
More Than One Neighbor
What is splitting when there is more than one neighbor?
Ha C C Hc
Hb
Ha feels Bo + Hb + Hc
Ha feels Bo - Hb + Hc
Bo
H feels B + H - H
} equal energy
a o b c
NMR signal for Ha
Ha feels Bo - Hb - Hc
1:2:1 because of energy state
•Ha has three different (but very similar) chemical shifts population probabilities
•Ha signal is split into a triplet
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Signal Splitting
Rules and Restrictions
General rule: the signal for a proton with n neighbors is split into n+1 lines
X
•Hb couples with Hc
X Hb Hc Hd H
•Hb and Ha do not couple because they are equivalent
Ha C C C C H
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Signal Splitting
Rules and Restrictions
2. Protons separated by more than three single bonds usually do not couple
Hb Hd •Ha couples with Hb
X •Ha couples with Hc
Ha C C C
•Ha does not couple with Hd
Hc
Pi bonds do not count toward this bond limit, but J may be too small to observe
free spacer
Hb Hc •Ha couples with Hb
C C •Ha couples with Hc
Ha C •Ha couples with Hd but J may be very small
Hd
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Signal Splitting
Rules and Restrictions
2. Protons separated by more than three single bonds usually do not couple
Hd
•Benzene ring = one big free spacer
Hc F
•All benzene ring protons may couple with each other but J may be small
•Ha, Hb, Hc, and Hd all couple with each other
Hb Cl
•Jad may be too small to observe
Ha
Benzene ring is a “gated community:” it blocks some coupling that we expect to observe
H X
CH3
X
CH2CH3
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Signal Splitting
Rules and Restrictions
H H
triplet triplet
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Sample Spectra
•Verify what we have learned about equivalency, chemical shifts, integration, and
splitting patterns
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens in structure
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Sample Spectra
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens in structure
Br
H3C C CH3
3.79 ppm (septet; integral = 1.0) 1H
H 1.31 ppm (doublet; integral = 6.0) 6 H
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Sample Spectra
•Assign peaks to corresponding hydrogens in structure
5.66 ppm (multiplet; integral = 1.0) 2 H
H H
1.98 ppm (multiplet; integral = 2.0) 4 H
C H
H2C C 1.16 ppm (multiplet; integral = 2.0) 4 H
H2C C
C H 10 H / (1.0 + 2.0 + 2.0) = 2 H per unit
H H
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Non-First Order Splitting
Why Is Cyclohexene Splitting Not Simple?
Example:
Hb
For Chem 14C we predict J values equal and “normal” coupling results. Exceptions are plentiful.
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Proton Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
(1H-NMR) Spectroscopy Part 4
Lecture Supplement:
Take one handout from the stage
42
1H-NMR Spectroscopy Part 3 Summary
Information from NMR Spectrum
•Number of signals how many sets of equivalent protons
•Position of signals (chemical shift) magnetic environment of nucleus
Deshielding by electronegative atoms higher chemical shift
•Relative intensity of signals (integration) how many hydrogens per signal
Integrals give proton ratio; not always equal to absolute proton count (i.e., 1.5:1)
•Splitting of signals (spin-spin coupling)
•The signal of a proton with n neighbors is split into n+1 lines (first order coupling)
Example: CH3CH2Br CH3 is a triplet, CH2 is a quartet
More complex patterns (non first-order coupling) are common
Splitting rules
•Only nonequivalent hydrogens couple with each other
•Hydrogens can be at most three single bonds distant
•Pi bonds and benzene rings are “free spacers”
•Benzene ring “gated community”
•OH, NH usually not split
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Sample Spectra
Effects of Pi Electron Clouds: Vinyl Protons (C=C-H)
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Sample Spectra
Benzene Ring Protons
H H
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