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FT-NMR
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Fundamentals Nuclear spin Spin quantum number – ½
Nuclei with spin state ½ are like little bar magnets and align with a B field. Can align with (++) or against (+-) B Small energy gap between + and – spin alignment (NMR insensitive/Boltzman dist) Can probe difference with RW
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(NMR insensitive/Boltzman dist)
Small population difference between +1/2 and -1/2 state It is the small excess of nuclei in the -1/2 that produce NMR signal
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Common NMR nuclei Protons, 1H 13C 15N 19F 31P
Sensitivity depends on natural isotopic abundance and g DE = gћB0 , bigger magnet, greater sensitivity
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Precession of nuclear dipoles
z +1/2 M0; net magnetic moment From small excess of Nuclei in +1/2 state y M0 B0 from magnet x -1/2
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FT pulse Radiofrequency generator
A short, intense pulse generates a magnetic field in the x-y plane (excites all nuclei) M0 of the nuclei interacts with the magnetic field produced by the pulse. Tips M0 off axis Θ = gB1tp tp – length of pulse, 90 pulse
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Vector Illustration of the pulse
+1/2 M0 RF pulse B0 from magnet RF coil -1/2
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Relaxation T1 spin-lattice (relaxing back to precessing about the z axis) T2 spin-spin (fanning out)
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Induced current in coil
After pulse, nuclei begin to precess in phase in the x-y plane Packet of nuclei induce current in RF coil Relaxation is measured by monitoring the induced coil → FID (→ FT) NMR spectrum
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FID
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Noise reduction and increasing resolution
Apodization: Multiply the free-induction decay (FID) by a decreasing exponential function which mathematically suppresses the noise at long times. Other forms of apodization functions can be used to improve resolution or lineshape. Zero filling
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Chemical Shift Shielding
Electrons have spin, produce local B environments Protons in different electronic environments experience different B, different precessing frequencies, DE = hu Chemical shift proportional to size of magnet ppm {(s-s0)/s0}*106
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Spin-Spin Coupling Adjacent nuclei have a 50/50 chance of being spin up (+1/2) or spin down (-1/2) Each produce a small magnetic field that is either with or against B0 1 adjacent proton CHOCH3 CH3 is a doublet at frequencies u0-ua, u0+ua (equal intensity), 1:1 CH is a quadruplet 1:3:3:1
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Splitting Patterns J values
Quadruplet Triplet Multiplets 1 2 1 ¼ ½ ¼ ¾ 1 ½ ¾ ¾ 1 ½ ¾ ¼ ½ ¼
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13C NMR 13C frequency Different tuning folk Broadband Decoupling of 1H
No spin-spin coupling NOE effect Assignments based on chemical shift Wider frequency range
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Obtaining a 13C NMR Spectrum
1H Broadband decoupling Gives singlet 13C peaks, provided no F, P, or D present in the molecule) Continuous sequence of pulses at the 1H frequency causes a rapid reversal of spin orientation relative to the B0, causing coupling to 13C to disappear
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Broadband Decoupling 1H channel 13C channel
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H3C4-C3H=C2H-C1OOH solvent C-4 C-2 C-3 C-1 10 180
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13C Chemical Shifts Reference is TMS, sets 0 ppm A range of 200 ppm
Chemical shifts can be predicted Empirical correlations Ex. Alkanes di = na + 9.4nb – 2.5ng + 0.3nd + 0.1ne + Sij 2-methylbutane di = * *2 – 2.5* = 22.0 (22.3)
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Signal averaging 13C experiment generally take longer than 1H experiments because many more FIDs need to be acquired and averaged to obtain adequate sensitivity. NOE effect (enhancement/reduction in signal as a result of decoupling) N4 N4 13C 1H W2 N2 N2 N3 N3 W1 1H 13C N1 N1
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NOE effect W2 (Enhancement) dominates in small molecules
Relevant for all decoupling experiments
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Other more complex 1D Experiments
1H NOE experiment Inversion Recovery Experiment; Determination of T1 J modulated Spin Echo INEPT Experiment DEPT Experiment
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Targeted 1H Spin Decoupling
Continuous irradiation at a frequency (n2) that corresponds to a specific proton in the molecule during the 1H NMR experiment All coupling associated with the protons corresponding to n2 disappears from the spectrum
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1H targeted decoupling (NOE)
n2 channel 1H channel
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1 3 2 TMS n2
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NOE- nuclear Overhauser effect
Saturation of one spin system changes the equilibrium populations of another spin system NOE effect can be positive or negative. In small molecules it is usually positive
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Selective Heteronuclear Decoupling
Saturate at a specific frequency Multiplets collapse reveal connectivity
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More Complex NMR Pulse Sequences
J-Modulated Spin Echo experiment Cq and CH2 down and CH3 and CH up DEPT experiment Q= 45, 90, 135 CH3 [DEPT(90)], CH2 [DEPT(45)-DEPT(135)], CH [DEPT(45)+DEPT(135)-0.707DEPT(90)] 2D-NMR Het. 2D J resolved/Homo 2D J resolved 1H-1H COSY 1H/13C HETCOR
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J-Modulated Spin Echo 13C channel 90x – t – 180x – t(echo)
1H channel _____________BBBBBBB t = 1/J(C-H) CH + CH3 (up) C(q) + CH2 down
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Neuraminic acid
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CH and CH3 Cq and CH2
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DEPT 13C ch 90x–t –180x–t–FID 1H ch 90x–t–180x–t – fy –t-BBBBBB
t = 1/2J(C-H) fy = 90, 45, 135 CH: DEPT(90) CH2: DEPT(45)- DEPT(135) CH3: DEPT(45) + DEPT(135) DEPT(90)
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DEPT DEPT(90) CH3 DEPT(45) – DEPT(135) CH2 DEPT(45)+DEPT(135)-
13C decoupled spectra
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HET 2D J Resolved 13C ch 90x – t – 180y – t - FID
1H ch BBBBBB__________BBBBBBB t = 1/J(C-H) Gives J(H-C) values as a function of 13C chemical shift
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Homo 2D J Resolved 1H ch 90x – t – 180x – t - FID t = 1/J(H-H)
Gives J(H-H) values as a function of 1H chemical shift
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H-H COSY 1H ch 90x – t1 – f- FID (t2) t = 1/J(H-H)
Coupled protons give cross correlation peaks off the diagonal
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HOOC(1)-C(2)H(NH2)-C(3)H2-C(4)H2-C(5)OOH
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HETCOR Plots 13C chemical shifts as a function of 1H chemical shifts of the connected carbon/protons pairs.
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F2 (13C NMR decoupled Spectrum)
H(3) H(4) H(2) C(2) C(4) C(3)
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Practical Aspects to “Running a sample”
Deuterated solvent Air drop, sample height Lock-in the deuterated peak (B drift) Shimming the magnet; parallel magnetic field lines for limiting broadening of line width. Setting the parameter; nuclei, spectral range, FID time, number of scans, and apodization, ect.
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