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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Renee Y. Becker Valencia Community College CHM 2011C 1 The Use of NMR Spectroscopy • Used to determine relative location of atoms within a molecule • Most helpful spectroscopic technique in organic chemistry • Related to MRI in medicine (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) • Maps carbon-hydrogen framework of molecules • Depends on very strong magnetic fields 2 3 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy • 1H or 13C nucleus spins and the internal magnetic field aligns parallel to or against an aligned external magnetic field (See Figure 13.1) • Applying an external magnetic field, Bo, the proton or nucleus will orient parallel or anti-parallel to the orientation of the external field. – The parallel orientation of the proton or nucleus is lower in energy than the anti-parallel orientation. • Radio energy of exactly correct frequency (resonance) causes nuclei to flip into anti-parallel state • Energy needed is related to molecular environment (proportional to field strength, Bo ) – see Figure 13.2 4 5 6 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (1H) • The energy of the radiation required is within the radio frequency range. • The energy required is dependent upon the nucleus and the strength of the magnetic field. • A proton in a magnetic field of 1.41 telsa requires a E.M. radiation of 60 MHz to resonate. – E = 2.4 x 10-5 kJ/mol – I.R. energies 48 kJ/mol 7 The Nature of NMR Absorptions • Electrons in bonds shield nuclei from magnetic field • Different signals appear for nuclei in different environments 8 1H 13C 9 The NMR Measurement • The sample is dissolved in a solvent that does not have a signal itself and placed in a long thin tube • The tube is placed within the gap of a magnet and spun • Radiofrequency energy is transmitted and absorption is detected • Species that interconvert give an averaged signal that can be analyzed to find the rate of conversion 10 11 Chemical Shifts • The relative energy of resonance of a particular nucleus resulting from its local environment is called chemical shift • NMR spectra show applied field strength increasing from left to right • Left part is downfield right part is upfield • Nuclei that absorb on upfield side are strongly shielded. • Chart calibrated versus a reference point, set as 0, tetramethylsilane [TMS] 12 Chemical Shifts • Let’s consider the just the proton (1H) NMR. • 60 MHz NMR experiments are carried out with a constant RF of 60 MHz and the magnetic field is varied. When a spin-flip occurs (resonance), it is detected by an R.F. receiver. Bare proton Proton in organic molecule Ho Ho’ > Ho Increasing magnetic field strength Increased shielding of nucleus Downfield Upfield 13 Measuring Chemical Shift • Numeric value of chemical shift: difference between strength of magnetic field at which the observed nucleus resonates and field strength for resonance of a reference – Difference is very small but can be accurately measured – Taken as a ratio to the total field and multiplied by 106 so the shift is in parts per million (ppm) • Absorptions normally occur downfield of TMS, to the left on the chart 14 15 Measuring Chemical Shift observed shift ( Hz ) chemical shift( ) spectrometer frequency( MHz ) Remember: the chemical shift is in ppm. 16 1H NMR Spectroscopy and Proton Equivalence • Proton NMR is much more sensitive than 13C and the active nucleus (1H) is nearly 100 % of the natural abundance • Shows how many kinds of nonequivalent hydrogens are in a compound • Equivalent H’s have the same signal while nonequivalent are different – There are degrees of nonequivalence 17 18 19 Chemical Shifts in 1H NMR Spectroscopy • Lower field signals are H’s attached to sp2 C • Higher field signals are H’s attached to sp3 C • Electronegative atoms attached to adjacent C cause downfield shift • See Tables 13-2 and 13-3 for a complete list 20 21 22 Integration of 1H NMR Absorptions: Proton Counting • The relative intensity of a signal (integrated area) is proportional to the number of protons causing the signal • This information is used to deduce the structure • For example in ethanol (CH3CH2OH), the signals have the integrated ratio 3:2:1 • For narrow peaks, the heights are the same as the areas and can be measured with a ruler 23 Integration of 1H NMR Absorptions: Proton Counting • This is proportional to the relative number of protons causing each signal. – An integration ratio of 1.5:1 is consistent with a 6:4 ratio of protons as with a 3:2 ratio of protons. – How many signals would you expect from the 1H NMR spectrum of chloromethyl methyl ether, ClCH2OCH3, and what would you expect the signal area ratios to be? 24 Spin-Spin Splitting in 1H NMR Spectra • Peaks are often split into multiple peaks due to interactions between nonequivalent protons on adjacent carbons, called spin-spin splitting • The splitting is into one more peak than the number of H’s on the adjacent carbon (“n+1 rule”) • The set of peaks is a multiplet (2 = doublet, 3 = triplet, 4 = quartet) 25 26 Rules for Spin-Spin Splitting • Equivalent protons do not split each other • The signal of a proton with n equivalent neighboring H’s is split into n + 1 peaks • Protons that are farther than two carbon atoms apart do not split each other 27 28 29 30 31 32 13.12 More Complex Spin-Spin Splitting Patterns • Spectra can be more complex due to overlapping signals, multiple nonequivalence • Example: trans-cinnamaldehyde H O H H 33 34 p-bromotoluene 35 Analysis of NMR Spectra • The NMR spectra provides the following information that can assist in the determination of chemical structure – The number of signals – The chemical shift – The intensity of the signal (area under each peak) – The splitting of each signal 36