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900 MHz NMR 1 2 Characteristics of Principal Spectrometric Methods 1H-NMR 13C-NMR 0-15 ppm 1-220 ppm Sample 1-2 mg 10-20 mg Molecular formula Partial Partial Functional group ~ yes ~ yes Substructure yes C-Connection Scale MS IR 50-4000 amu 400-4000 cm-1 < 1 mg < 1 mg Yes No Limited Yes yes yes Very limited yes yes No Very limited Stereochem. & yes regiostereochemistry yes No Very limited 3 ALL SPECTROMETERS HAVE SOME COMMON ESSENTIAL FEATURES Electromagnetic Radiation Source SAMPLE HOLDER ANALYZER DETECTOR RECORDER (or Computer) A source of electromagnetic radiations of the appropriate frequency range. A sample holder to permit efficient irradiation of the sample. A frequency analyzer which separates out all of the individual frequencies generated by the source. A detector for measuring the intensity of radiations at each frequency, allowing the measurement of how much energy has been absorbed at each of these frequencies by the sample; and A recorder – either a pen recorder or computerized data station, with a VDU for initial viewing of the spectrum, with the possibility of manipulation. 4 NUCLEAR- study of nuclear spins MAGNETIC- under the influence of applied magnetic field RESONANCE- and to record the resulting resonance in nuclear spin through the absorption of Rf 5 SPECTROSCOPIC TECHNIQUES IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY AND THEIR USES Radiation Absorbed Effect on the Molecule Nuclei placed under the static NMR magnetic field change their spins Radiofrequency after absorption of radiofrequency , 25 cm radiations Information Deduced The electronic environment of nuclei, their numbers and number of neighboring atoms. 6 The first published ‘high-resolution’ proton NMR spectrum (30 MHz) displaying the proton chemical shifts in ethanol 7 Fundamental of NMR Spectroscopy? 8 Angular momentum and magnetic moment µ = γJ Where µ is magnetic moment, J is angular momentum, and γ is the constant of proportionality called magnetogyric ratio Now: Angular momentum is directly proportional to nuclear spin quantum Number; so, J = h/2π * I Therefore, µ = h/2π * γI 9 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Nuclear spin m = g I * h/2π m - magnetic moment g - magnetogyric ratio I - spin quantum number h - Planck’s constant m I is a property of the nucleus Mass # Atomic # I Odd Even or odd 1/2, 3/2, 5/2,… Even Even 0 Even Odd 1, 2, 3 I is quantized; it has only certain values. 10 Spin Quantum Numbers of Some Common Nuclei The most abundant isotopes of C and O do not have spin. Element Nuclear Spin Quantum No 1H 2H 12C 13C 14N 16O 17O 19F 1/2 1 0 1/2 1 0 5/2 1/2 2 3 0 2 3 0 6 2 (I) No. of Spin States Elements with either odd mass or odd atomic number have the property of nuclear “spin”. The number of spin states is 2I + 1, where I is the spin quantum number. 11 Number of spin states or multiplicity: If we place an magnetically active nucleus in an external magnetic field, how many orientations it can adopt. Number of spin states is given by formula: m = 2I + 1 For example, for a nucleus with I = ½, m=2*½+1=2 So it has two spin states (or, orientations, or multiplicities), They are +1/2 and -1/2. We can find out individual spin states by using the sequence: +I, +(I-1), ……-(I-1), -I 12 NMR Spectrometer 13-13 14 NMR Instrumentation • An NMR machine is basically a big and expensive FM radio. Bo N S Magnet B1 Recorder Frequency Generator Detector • Magnet - Superconducting. Some electromagnets and permanent magnets still around. • Frequency generator - Creates the alternating current (at wo) that induces B1. Continuous wave or pulsed. • Detector - Subtracts the base frequency (a constant frequency very close to wo) to the output frequency. It is lower frequency and much easier to deal with. • Recorder - XY plotter, oscilloscope, computer, etc., etc. 15 NMR Spectrometer 17 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance • Figure 13.3 the origin of nuclear magnetic “resonance 13-18 A Conventional 60 MHz NMR Spectrometer RF (60 MHz) Oscillator hn Transmitter absorption signal RF Detector Recorder Receiver MAGNET MAGNET N S ~ 1.41 Tesla (+/-) a few ppm Probe 19 Nuclear Magnets in an External Magnetic Field (B0) Bo Bo > 0 Bo = 0 Oriented in a pattern Randomly oriented N S Each nucleus behaves like a bar magnet. 20 21 Orientations of Nuclei with I = 1/2 Nuclei acquire orientation either Align with the external magnetic field, Or Align against the external magnetic field Bo Align with α state Align against β state Which state should be of lower energy and why? 22 NUCLEAR SPIN STATES OF HYDROGEN NUCLEUS The spin of the positively charged nucleus generates m a magnetic moment vector, m. + + m + 1/2 - 1/2 TWO SPIN STATES The two states are equivalent in energy in the absence of a magnetic or an electric field. 23 THE ENERGY SEPARATION DEPENDS ON Bo - 1/2 DE = kBo = hn degenerate at Bo = 0 + 1/2 Bo increasing magnetic field strength 24 EFFECT OF A STRONG MAGNETIC FIELD WHAT HAPPEN WHEN A SPIN-ACTIVE HYDROGEN ATOM IS PLACED IN A STRONG MAGNETIC FIELD? ….. IT BEGINS TO PRECESS OPERATION OF AN NMR SPECTROMETER DEPENDS ON THIS RESULT 25 26 27 29 Precessional Frequency When placed in an external magnetic field (B0), a magnetically active nucleus starts to undergo a particular motion, called precession. The frequency with which it precesses is called precession frequency. It is angular frequency (ω0). It can be converted to linear frequency (ν0). (ω0= 2π ν0) This is also known as Larmor Frequency 30 Larmor Frequency and B0 What is the relationship between Larmor frequency and applied magnetic field? Should Larmor frequency depend on B0? How? 31 The Larmor Equation!!! (Angular) frequency of the incoming radiation that will cause a transition wo = gBo gyromagnetic ratio g strength of the magnetic field g is a constant which is different for each atomic nucleus (H, C, N, etc) no = gB0/2π Here, no is linear frequency (Hz or MHz) 32 Application of an External Magnetic Field (Putting your sample in the magnet) z w0 w0 = g Bo = 2π ν0 m w0 - resonance frequency in radians per second, also called Larmor frequency n0 - resonance frequency in cycles per second, Hz g - gyromagnetic ratio Bo - external magnetic field (the magnet) Bo m w Spin 1/2 nuclei will have two orientations in a magnetic field +1/2 and -1/2. 33 E and Bo If the difference of energy between β and α orientations is ∆E, then ∆E = hgB0/2π And since, ∆E = hν, So, ν = gB0/2π Using these equations we can calculate the frequency (or, energy) of the RF radiation which can be absorbed by magnetic nuclei placed in an applied magnetic field. 34 WHAT IS “RESONANCE” ? ….Absorption of energy by the spinning nucleus 35 N w Nuclei precess at frequency w when placed in a strong magnetic field. RADIOFREQUENCY 40 - 600 MHz hn If n = w then energy will be absorbed and the spin will invert. NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE NMR S 36 Nuclear Spin Energy Levels N -1/2 unaligned In a strong magnetic field (Bo) the two spin states differ in energy. +1/2 Bo S aligned 37 Absorption of Energy quantized Opposed -1/2 -1/2 DE DE = hn Radiofrequency +1/2 Applied Field Bo +1/2 Aligned 38 Resonance Frequencies of Selected Nuclei Isotope Abundance Bo (Tesla) Frequency (MHz) g (radians/Tesla) 1H 99.98% 1.00 1.41 2.35 7.05 42.6 60.0 100.0 300.0 2H 0.0156% 1.00 7.05 6.5 45.8 41.1 13C 1.108% 1.00 2.35 7.05 10.7 25.0 75.0 67.28 100.0% 1.00 40.0 19F 267.53 251.7 39 POPULATION AND SIGNAL STRENGTH The strength of the NMR signal depends on the Population Difference of the two spin states Radiation induces both upward and downward transitions. resonance induced emission For a net positive signal there must be an excess of spins in the lower state. Saturation = equal populations = no signal excess population 40 Boltzmann Excess Nβ/Nα = e-∆E/kT Or Nβ/Nα = 1+ (-∆E/kT) Or Nα/Nβ = 1 + ∆E/kT) We know that: ∆E = E – E Energy of radiation must match with this energy difference if resonance has to occur. The radiation having energy comparable to this energy demand falls in the region of radiofrequency(RF). This is the radiation of very low energy. Thus: ∆E = hν So, Nβ/Nα = 1+ (-hν/kT) or Nα/Nβ = 1 + ∆E/kT = 1 + hν/kT 41 Calculation of Nα/Nβ What would be the value of DE for protons if Bo = 9.4 T. It is 4 x 10-5 Kcal / mol. What is the frequency, ν, ? (400MHz ?) Use this equation for energy: ∆E = hgB0/2π And this for frequency: ν = gB0/2π Then use this for Boltzmann Excess: Nα/Nβ = 1 + ∆E/kT Or Nα/Nβ = 1 + hν/kT The Nα/Nβ ratio is only 1.000064. In one million nuclear spins we have a difference of just 64: NMR is very insensitive when compared to UV or IR... 42 MODERN INSTRUMENTATION PULSED FOURIER TRANSFORM TECHNOLOGY FT-NMR requires powerful computer 43 Energy States for a Spin 1/2 System DE = g h Bo = h n -1/2 Antiparallel DE E +1/2 Bo = 0 Parallel Bo > 0 Therefore, the nuclei will absorb light with energy DE resulting in a change of the spin states. 44 Effect of Static Magnetic Bo Field on Magnetic Moment 45 Net Magnetic Moment z w m +1/2 Bo m -1/2 w 46 The Net Magnetization Vector w z w one nucleus x Mo - net magnetization many nuclei z w z y y x vector allows us to look at system as a whole x 47 Bloch Vector Model- Boltzmann Distribution Excess 48 49 Effect of RF Pulse (B1) on Nuclear Spin and Resonance 50 Relaxation •Application of RF pulse (lets say 90ox) bring the bulk magnetization vector to the xy plan. •The system re-establish the equilibrium by releasing energy through a process of relaxations. >Spin-Lattice (Longitudinal Relaxation) T1 >Spin-Spin (Transverse Relaxation) T2 •This relaxation or decay with time is detected as FID signals. 51 52 Fourier transformation and the NMR spectrum RF Pulse The NMR spectrum Fourier transform The Fourier transform (FT) is a computational method for analyzing the frequencies present in an oscillating signal A bit of a tickle and the Protons will Sing Because the atom is not static the magnets rotate around the external magnetic field like a gyroscope. Now that their voices are warmed up and ready to go, very little is needed to make the protons sing their song. We don’t use feathers to elicit a response - we use radio waves ! The spinning nuclei interact with the radio wave and are knocked out of their gyroscopic motion. We can detect the radio wave (energy) lost as the nuclei return back to their gyroscopic equilibrium. We do this by carefully placing a receiver coil to listen to the song. This is the NMR signal (in a time format). PROBLEM 1 Explain behavior of spinning nuclei: a. In the absence of magnetic field b. Under the influence of magnetic field c. When rf of appropriate energy is applied to the system 55 Relaxation 56 PROBLEM 2 What will happen if the radiofrequency pulse is applied for an unusually long time? 57 PROBLEM 3 From the discussion so far can you summarize the factors affecting the population difference between the lower energy state (Na) and the upper energy state (Nb) and how is the population difference related to the NMR signal strength? 58 PROBLEM 4 There is only a slight excess of nuclei in the ground state (about 13 in a million protons at 100 MHz). Would you expect in the case of a 13C-NMR experiment for the same population difference to prevail? 59 PROBLEM 5 Explain what is meant by the Larmor frequency. What is its importance in an NMR experiment? 60 PROBLEM 6 What is the magnetogyric ratio, and how does it affect the energy difference between the two states and the nuclear species sensitivity to the NMR experiment? 61 Chemical Shift • A naked nucleus and a nucleus surrounded by electrons. If you place two 1H nuclei (Protons) in a magnetic field (B0), one is naked ( having no electronic cloud around it, while other having electronic cloud around it, should both the nuclei receive the same effect of B0 ? Why? • Nuclei differing in electronic cloud around them. What do you expect for two nuclei having different electronic clound around them? 62 Shielding and deshielding • Diamagnetic shielding or diamagnetic anisotropy: what is it? • Local diamagnetic current: what is it? The electronic cloud around a nucleus is caused to circulate by the applied magnetic filed. This generates a counter magnetic field which opposes the applied field. 63 Beff = B0 – Bi Here, Beff is B which is actually sensed by the nucleus, and Bi is the magnetic field showed by the electronic cloud under the induction of applied magnetic field. And, Bi is directly proportional to B0 So Bi = σB0 Here σ (sigma) is the magnetic shielding of the nucleus. Therefor, we have to modify our equations ∆E = hgB0/2π and ν = gB0/2π as follows: ∆E = hgBeff/2π and ν = gBeff/2π Or ν = g(1-σ)B0/2π 64 Chemical shift scale Where, ν0 and ν’0 are the operating frequencies in hertz (Hz) and Megaherts (MHz), and δi is the chemical shift of a nucleus i and its Units are ppm. Operating frequencies in MHz would be: If Bo = 7.05 T, = 300 MHz for 1H or 75 MHz for C-13. If Bo = 11.75 T, = 500 MHz for 1H or 125 MHz for C-13 The chemical shift of a particular proton (1H nucleus): Reference: TMS or Tetramethylsilane, SiMe4 65 Thus, an NMR signal that absorbs at 300 Hz higher than does TMS at an applied frequency of 300 MHz has a chemical shift of: Although the frequency depends on the applied field, the chemical shift is independent of it. On the other hand the resolution of NMR will increase with applied magnetic field resulting in ever increasing chemical shift changes. 66 Chemical Shift positions Examples 67 Solution 68 69 Solution2 70 Q1. What would be the chemical shift of a peak that occurs 655.2 Hz downfield of TMS on a spectrum recorded using a 90 MHz spectrometer? Q2. At what frequency would the chemical shift of chloroform (CHCl3, δ = 7.28 ppm) occur relative to TMS on a spectrum recorded on a 300 MHz spectrometer? Q3. A 1 GHz (1000 MHz) NMR spectrometer is being developed, at what frequency and chemical shift would chloroform occur? ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 71 Answers • A1. 655.2 Hz / 90 MHz = 7.28 ppm (the chemical shift of chloroform) • A2. 7.28 ppm x 300 MHz = 2184 Hz. • A3. Chemical shift = 7.28 ppm Frequency = 7280 Hz 72 Chemical Shift Scales for Proton and C-13 • For protons, ~ 15 ppm: Acids Aldehydes Alcohols, protons a to ketones Aromatics Amides Olefins Aliphatic ppm 15 10 7 5 2 0 TMS • For carbon, ~ 220 ppm: C=O in ketones Aromatics, conjugated alkenes Aliphatic CH3, CH2, CH Olefins ppm 210 150 C=O of Acids, aldehydes, esters 100 80 50 0 TMS Carbons adjacent to alcohols, ketones NMR Spectrum of Phenylacetone EACH DIFFERENT TYPE OF PROTON COMES AT A DIFFERENT PLACE 74 Spectrum of ethyl acetate: Can you interpret the signals? Look at the chemical shifts, or the positions of signals. Why the signal differ in shape? What the each signal tells us about its neighbors? 75 Anisotropic effect 76 77 Effects 78 Depends on atom attached NMR Chemical Shifts and Splitting Patterns Compound CH3X Element X CH3F CH3OH CH3Cl CH3Br CH3I CH3C-3 CH4 (CH3)4Si F O Cl Br I C H Si Electronegativity of X 4.0 3.5 3.1 2.8 2.7 2.5 2.1 1.8 Chemical shift, ppm 4.26 3.40 3.05 2.68 2.16 0.9 0.23 0.0 ppm • Depends in hybridization: C-C: means must be C or H, not O, N, or X C/H C/H H C 0.2 to 2 ppm C/H C=C: C/H C C H 4.5 to 7 ppm C H 1.6 to 3 ppm H 6.8 to 8 ppm = C=C: C Aromatic: • Depends on carbon group attached: on a carbonyl (aldehyde): O C H 9 - 10 ppm a to carbonyl (aldehydes & ketones): O C/H C C H 1.6 - 3 ppm C/H a to C=C (allylic): C/H C C C H 1.6 - 3 ppm C/H a to aromatic ring (benzylic): C/H C H C/H 1.6 - 3 ppm Example Figure Example Figure Compound containing single bromine Figure Empirical Formula C4H7BrO2 Figure Empirical Formula C4H8O Figure Empirical Formula C4H8O2 Figure Empirical Formula C8H10 Figure Empirical Formula C8H10 Figure Spin Relaxation There are two primary causes of spin relaxation: Spin - lattice relaxation, T1, longitudinal relaxation. lattice Spin - spin relaxation, T2, transverse relaxation. 94 Relaxations of Magnetization Vectors 95 Free Induction Decay The signals decay away due to interactions with the surroundings. A free induction decay, FID, is the result. Fourier transformation, FT, of this time domain signal produces a frequency domain signal. FT Frequency Time 96 Converting FIDs into Frequency Domain Signals FIDs are time-domain signals. Time-domain signals are converted to conventional frequency-domain signals by a mathematical process called Fourier Transformation. 97 FOURIER TRANSFORM A mathematical technique that resolves a complex FID signal into the individual frequencies that add together to make it. ( Details not given here. ) TIME DOMAIN converted to FID COMPLEX SIGNAL FREQUENCY DOMAIN NMR SPECTRUM FT-NMR computer Fourier Transform a mixture of frequencies decaying (with time) DOMAINS ARE MATHEMATICAL TERMS n1 + n2 + n3 + ...... individual frequencies converted to a spectrum 98 Pulse NMR Spectroscopy “Pulse” means turning on the Radiofrequency for a time period and then switching it off. Pulse of Rf excite all nuclear spins at the same time. Pulse techniques allow the recording large number of NMR spectra in short (accumulation of FID transients) provide a higher signal-to-noise ratio Ratio). of a time and (S/N 99 Pulse NMR Spectroscopy The idea of applying a sequence of pulses of different phase angles is of central importance to all NMR experiments. 100 Pulse Fourier Transform NMR t 90ºx RF pulse = w = g B0 Bo Bo A t f w NMR frequency Fourier Transform Variation of signal at X axis vs. time 101 PULSED EXCITATION N n1 BROADBAND RF PULSE contains a range of frequencies (n1 ..... nn) n2 O CH2 C CH3 n3 S All types of hydrogen are excited simultaneously with the single RF pulse. 102 COMPOSITE FID (Free Induction Decay)- Time Domain Signals “time domain“ NMR spectrum n1 + n2 + n3 + ...... time 103 COMPARISON OF CW AND FT TECHNIQUES 104 CONTINUOUS WAVE (CW) METHOD CLASSICAL METHOD The magnetic field is “scanned” from a low field strength to a higher field strength while a constant beam of radiofrequency (continuous wave) is supplied at a fixed frequency (say 100 MHz). Using this method, it requires several minutes to plot an NMR spectrum. SLOW, HIGH NOISE LEVEL 105 PULSED FOURIER TRANSFORM (FT) METHOD FAST THE NEWER COMPUTER-BASED METHOD LOW NOISE Most protons relax (decay) from their excited states very quickly (within a second). The excitation pulse, the data collection (FID), and the computer-driven Fourier Transform (FT) take only a few seconds. The pulse and data collection cycles may be repeated every few seconds. Many repetitions can be performed in a very short time, leading to improved signal ….. 106 IMPROVED SIGNAL-TO-NOISE RATIO By adding the signals from many pulses together, the signal strength may be increased above the noise level. noise signal enhanced signal 1st pulse 2nd pulse nth pulse add many pulses etc. noise is random and cancels out 107 1D Pulse Sequences • The simplest one, the sequence to record a normal 1D spectrum, will serve to define notation: Vectors: Mo y 90y Short hand: z z x x 90y pulse Mxy y acquisition 90y n • According to the direction of the pulse, i.e. 90x or 90y (or 90f if we use other phases) to indicate the relative direction of the B1 field WRT Mo in the rotating frame. • The acquisition period will always be represented by an FID for the nucleus under 108 observation (the triangle). Inversion Recovery • Measurement of T1 is important, as the relaxation rate of different nuclei in a molecule can tell us about their local mobility. • Following pulse sequence is used: 180y (or x) 90y tD •Analyze after the p pulse: z x y z 180y (or x) x tD y •Since we are letting the signal decay by different amounts exclusively under the effect of longitudinal relaxation (T1), we’ll see how different tD’s affect the intensity of the FID and the signal after FT. 109 Inversion Recovery (continued) tD = 0 z z x 90y y tD > 0 z x FT x FT z 90y y y z z x y FT y x tD >> 0 x 90y y • Depending on the tD delay we use we get signals with varying intensity, which 110 depends on the T1 relaxation time of the nucleus (peak) we are looking at. Spin-Echo Experiment • Following pulse sequence is used: 180y (or x) 90y tD tD • Analysis after the 90y pulse: z y x y tD x x y y dephasing y tD x x refocusing 180y (or x) 111 Spin-Echoes (continued) • Back to the <xyz> coordinates: y x z y • If we acquire the FID right after the spin-echo sequence, the intensity of the signal after FT will only be affected by T2 relaxation • Upon repetition for different tD values, the intensity versus 2 * tD is plotted and a graph is obtained, but in this case the decay rate will be equal to T2. 112 Chemical Shift in Rotating Frame 113 Coupling Constants • The energy levels of a nucleus are affected by the spin state of neighboring nuclei. The two nuclei are thus said to be coupled to each other. This manifests in particular in cases where we have through bond connectivity: 1 13 H 1 1 H H three-bond C one-bond • Energy diagrams. Each spin now has two energy ‘sub-levels’ depending on the state of the spin it is coupled to: ab I bb S J (Hz) ba S I I S aa is called coupling constant (J) and has units • The magnitude of the separation of Hz. • Coupling patterns are crucial to identify spin systems in a molecule and to the determination of its chemical structure. 114 One-Dimensional Single Pulse Sequence 115 Spectral Editing by APT (Attached proton test) 116 117 Polarization Transfer • What if we could use the bigger population difference from sensitive nuclei (1H) and pass it on to the less sensitive nuclei (13C, 15N), all in a predictable manner? • The method is called polarization transfer, and basically it involves passing the large excess population (polarization) of the 1H to the insensitive nuclei before we perturb it. • To understand how it works we use the weakly coupled two spin system energy diagram. 118 Uncoupled 1H / 13C System b b a B a o 1 H 13 C 120 Coupled 1H / 13C System bb 13 C1 1 H2 ba 1 H1 ab Bo 13 C1 aa 121 Coupled 1H - 13C System with Gyromagnetic Ratios -1/2 gH - 1/2 gC 13 C2 1 H2 -1/2 gH +1/2 gC 1 H1 +1/2 gH - 1/2 gC 13 C1 +1/2 gH + 1/2 gC 122 Coupled 1H - 13C System (Add + 1/2 gH + 1/2 gC) 0 13 C 1 +gC 1 H H gH 13 C + gC + gH Assume Population in Number: gH= 4 gC= 1 (Based on Gyromagnetic ratios) 123 Coupled 1H - 13C System with Population 0 Selective Population Inversion (SPI) 13 C2 1 H2 0+1 = 1 1 H1 4 + 0= 4 13 C1 4+1=5 1 H-Signal Population difference 5-1=4 4-0=4 13 C-Signal Population difference 5-4=1 1-0=1 124 Coupled 1H - 13C System with Selective Population Inversion 4 13 C 1 1 1 H H 0 13 5 1 H - Signal Population difference 5-1=4 0 - 4 = -4 C 13 C - Signal Population difference 5 - 0 = +5 1 - 4 = -3 125 PULSE SEQUENCE FOR INEPT 126 Heteronuclear Polarization Transfer • Also called selective population inversion, or SPI. Again, the intensities of the lines reflect what we’ve done to the populations of the spin system. • Lets think of the two experiments in a heteronuclear system (IS, where I is Carbon and S is Hydrogen): ab •• 13C 4 2 1,2 bb 3,4 1H •••• •••• 1H aa ••••• ••••• 1 13C 3 ba 1,3 2,4 I S • Here the population differences between the energy levels reflect that we have a 1 to 4 ratio between 13C and 1H due to the differences in the gyromagnetic rations. Here is were we start seeing why it may be useful… 127 Heteronuclear Polarization Transfer • Now we do the same analysis for SPI. If we invert selectively the populations of 1,2, we get the following: 2,4 13C bb ••••• 3,4 4 • • • • • ab 1H 2 •••• •••• 1H aa •• 1 13C 3 ba I 1,2 S • we had started with a 13C signal that looked like 1,3 this: 1,3 2,4 I • By manipulating the polarization of the protons, we obtain an enhancement of 4 in the 13C signal (considering positive and negative signals). 128 O DEPT Experiment HO O Me HO Me H OH 129 One-Dimensional Single Pulse Sequence 130 One-Dimensional NMR Experiment 131 One-Dimensional NMR Spectrum of a Protein 132 TWO-DIMENSIONAL NMR SPECTROSCOPY 133 TIME DOMAINS IN 2D NMR 134 2D NMR Basics • The first perturbation of the system (pulse) will not be called the preparation of the spin system. • The variable tD is renamed the evolution time, t1. • We have a mixing event, in which information from one part of the spin system is relayed to other parts. • Finally, we have an acquisition period (t2) as with all 1D experiments. Preparation Evolution Mixing Acquisition t1 t2 •t1 is the variable delay time, and t2 is the normal acquisition time. We can envision having f1 and f2, for both frequencies… • We’ll see that this format is basically the same for all 2D pulse sequences and 135 experiments. 136 Acronyms For Basic Experiments Differ Only By The Nature Of Mixing Scalar Coupling Dipolar Coupling Homonuclear Heteronuclear COSY HSQC TOCSY Hetero-TOCSY Multiple Quantum HMQC NOESY NOESY-HSQC NOESY-HMQC 138 O 4 N3 6 O O O O O 3 5 2 1 O O O A H N H N OCH(CH 3)2 O O O B 139 Three NMR Spectra of Ethylbenzene 1H-NMR CH2CH3 {C8H10} 2D NMR 13C-NMR Source: Professor J. P. Hornak, Rochester Institute of Technology 140 COSY SPECTRA 141 10 Heteronuclear J- Resolved Spectrum 5 2 3 OH 7 8 9 142 INADEQUATE • 13C-13C Homonuclear shift correlation spectroscopy (Jcc) • Incredible Natural Abundance Double Quantum Transfer Experiment • Chances of finding two 13C nuclei connected to one another is 0.01X0.01 (one in ten thousand) • To detect such weak interactions, it is necessary to suppress the 100 times stronger signals from molecules which contain only an isolated 13C nucleus rather than two adjacent 13C nuclei 143 INADEQUATE (…) • The 2D plot would look like this:1 4 2 3 5 6 7 6-7 OH 2 1 3 4 5 6 7 5-6 HO 4-5 2-3 3-4 1-2 • The pseudo-diagonal is calculated from the cross peaks. If we follow all the correlations, we can basically establish the complete net of 13C connectivities. • In other words, we can figure out the carbon skeleton of the complete molecule. Despite it looks really cool, you need more than 100 mg in 0.5 ml of solvent... 144 CH3 OH 145 TOCSY • TOCSY is TOtal Correlation SpectroscopY. Also called HOHAHA (HOmonuclear HArtmann HAhn). • During this pulse sequence, after the evolution period t1, the magnetization is spin-locked (for example by a series of 180` pulses). • During this mixing time the magnetization exchange through scalar coupling. During this spin-lock period, the magnetization behaves as a strongly coupled spin system and evolve under the influence of a "collective spin-mode". • In that collective mode, coherence transfer is possible between all coupled nuclei in a spin system, (even if the are not directly coupled). 146 TOCSY • For small mixing period, (e.g. 20-30 msec), COSY type of data can be observed. • As the mixing period gets longer, correlation with more distant protons can be observed (e.g. mix=80-100 msec can correlate H1 to H6 in carbohydrate). • The extent of correlation depends mainly on the length of the mixing period. 147 Pulse Sequence of TOCSY 148 2D-TOCSY SPECTRUM 149 Two-Dimensional TOCSY of Cellobioside 150 2D-Heteronuclear : H-detected • A large number of pulse sequences have been proposed for "Reverse-Correlation" experiments which are based on the detection of proton spectra during t2 - the detection time - while the heteronuclear chemical shift is detected during t1 - the evolution time. • This type of experiments have been proposed due to the increase of sensitivity that one can expect by detecting the most sensitive nuclei instead of the low-gamma nuclei like in HETCOR experiments (as a reminder, the sensitivity of a nuclei is proportional to the cube of its frequency!). 152 2D-Heteronuclear : H-detected • When limited amount of material is available, the direct detection of Carbon-13 can be almost impossible but the detection of carbon chemical shift through those 2D "reverse" techniques is most of the time very easy. • Good HMQC could be obtained in 2 hr. but direct carbon gave very noisy spectra after 15 hr. • There are basically two types of experiments in this category: • Those that utilize multiple quantum transitions during the evolution time (like HMQC, HMBC) and those using INEPT single quantum transitions during the evolution time (like HSQC) 153 HMQC (Heteronuclear Multiple Quantum Correlation) • The HMQC experiment provides correlation between protons and their attached heteronuclei through the heteronuclear scalar couplings. • This sequence is very sensitive (compare to the older HETCOR) as it is based on proton detection (instead of the detection of the least sensitive low gamma heteronuclei). • The basic idea behind this experiment is in fact related to the echo difference techniques, which is used to eliminate proton signals not coupled to the heteronuclei. (As a reminder, this cancellation is made possible by varying the phase of the pulses applied to the X nuclei (on alternate scans) and by subtracting the two signals as can be seen in the figure below. 154 2D-Heteronuclear : H-detected 155 HMQC Spectrum of Menthol 10 5 4 6 3 1 2 OH 7 9 8 MENTHOL 156 HMQC Spectrum of Neuraminic Acid 157 HMBC (Heteronuclear Multiple Bond Correlation) 158 HMBC (Heteronuclear Multiple Bond Correlation) • The HMBC experiment detects long range coupling between proton and carbon (two or three bonds away) with great sensitivity. • The length of the delay can be adjusted to detect relatively large coupling constants (4-10 Hz) tau = 0.06 s or smaller couplings (2-7 Hz) tau = 0.1 s. 159 HMBC (Heteronuclear Multiple Bond Correlation) • The carbon decoupler is never used in this sequence: therefore the protons displays homonuclear as well as heteronuclear couplings. • This technique is very valuable to detect indirectly quaternary carbons coupled to protons • Detect indirectly quaternary carbons coupled to protons - specially useful if direct C-13 is impossible to obtain due to low amount of material available. • Very useful sequence provide information about the skeleton of a molecule. It could be an alternative to the 2D-INADEQUATE experiment (which is so insensitive). 160 HMBC (Heteronuclear Multiple Bond Correlation) • Very useful in carbohydrate area as a sequence analysis tool that provides unique information concerning connectivities across glycosidic linkages. • Another area of interest for using HMBC is in the peptide-protein area - specially when applied to a 15N labeled protein - It is possible with this technique to get connectivities between the Nitrogen and the CH proton of the amino acid of the next residue. 161 HMBC Spectrum 162 Correlation Through Space Nuclear Overhauser Effect • An important tool in structural analysis • Based on direct, through space interactions (dipolar couplings), between nuclear spins • Related to nuclear spin relaxation • Typically employed during the last stages of structural investigation • Provide information about the dimensional molecular geometry three163 Correlation Through Space Nuclear Overhauser Effect • Depends upon inter-nuclear separations (spins close in space) • The interpretation of NOE measurements requires care • Two types of NOE: Steady state (NOE difference) and Transient (NOESY) 164 Connections Through Space • Scalar couplings. COSY, HMQC, HOMO2DJ, COSY, and INADEQUATE tell us about the chemical structure, but nothing about the conformation or stereochemistry. • When we saturate a proton in the sample, it will relax by either zero- or double- quantum processes, giving energy (enhancing) the signals of protons dipolarly coupled to it (protons close by…). This is the concept of the nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE): (***) ab bb (*) W1I W2IS W0IS W1S W1S ba (*) W1I aa (***) • Relaxation by either W2IS or W0IS will occur depending on the size of the molecule, actually its rate of tumbling, or correlation time, tc. 165 NOE for Structure Determination 166 Dipolar Coupling and Transition 167 Nuclear Overhauser Effect 168 Nuclear Overhauser Effect The intensity of the interaction is a function of the distance between the nuclei according to the following equation. I = A (1/r6) r1,2 1H 1H 1 2 r1,3 r2,3 1H 3 I - intensity A - scaling constant r - internuclear distance Arrows denote cross relaxation pathways r1,2 - distance between protons 1 and 2 r2,3 - distance between protons 2 and 3 The NOE provides a link between an experimentally measurable quantity, I, and internuclear distance. NOE is only observed up to ~5Å. 169 NOE Measurements for E/Z Isomers 170 NOE for Positional Isomers 171 NOE for Endo/Exo Compounds 172 NOE Difference Spectroscopy •If our molecule has three protons, two of them at a fixed distance (a CH2), we have: Hb C Ha Hb Hc Ha Hc _ = hab hac •This establish that Ha and Hc are closer in space 173 Transient NOE • One of the problems of steady-state NOE is that we are continuously giving power to the system (saturation). This works well for small molecules, because W2 processes (double-quantum) are dominant and we have few protons. • However, as the size and tc increase, other processes become more important (normal single-quantum spin-spin relaxation and zero-quantum transitions). • Additionally, there are more protons in the surroundings of a larger molecule, and we have to start considering a process called spin diffusion: I S Basically, the energy transferred from I to S then diffuses to other nuclei in the molecule. We can see an enhancement of a certain proton even if it is really far away from the center we are irradiating, which would give us ambiguous results. • Therefore, we need to control the amount of time we saturate the system. The 174longer •we irradiate, the more spin diffusion… Summary The NOE enhancement is, among other things, proportional to r-6, so it allows to determine the internuclear distances: stereochemistry and conformation. Depending on the size/rigidity (tc) of the molecule, steady state or transient NOE experiments will give more accurate results: Small organic compounds: Steady-state NOE. Proteins, nucleic acids, NOE, build-up curves. polysaccharides: Transient 175 We can do everything at once using NOESY (transient Magnetic Resonance Imaging 176