Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chromatography (Separations) Mass Spectrometry Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy X-ray Crystallography (visual solid.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chromatography (Separations) Mass Spectrometry Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy X-ray Crystallography (visual solid."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chromatography (Separations) Mass Spectrometry Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy X-ray Crystallography (visual solid state molecular structure) Analytical Chemistry

2 The Electromagnetic Spectrum

3 Identify the environment of hydrogen and carbon atoms Identify atom connectivity Identify stereochemical relationships Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy

4 The spin state of a nucleus is affected by an applied magnetic field Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy

5

6 Effect of Field Strength

7 An NMR Spectrometer

8 1 H NMR of Acetone

9 1 H NMR of Methyl Acetate

10 Electron Density Maps

11 Electron Shielding

12

13 Common NMR Shifts

14

15 1 H NMR of Methyl Acetate

16 1 H NMR of Neopentyl Bromide

17

18 3 2 3 1 H NMR of Ethyl Acetate What are these strange signals? Integral ratios

19 Hydrogen nuclei will couple to each other if: They are not chemically equivalent They are 2 or 3 bonds apart Double bonds can cause coupling through 4 bonds Proton Coupling

20

21

22 3 2 3 1 H NMR of Ethyl Acetate

23 Multiplicity

24 Determining Hydrogen Atom Relationships If the structures are identical – Homotopic (no coupling) If the structures are enantiomers – Enantiotopic (no coupling) If the structures are diastereomers – Diastereotopic (coupling is possible) The Substitution Test: For any pair of H’s, substitute each separately with an X and compare the two structures.

25 Determining Hydrogen Atom Relationships

26

27 The coupling constant (J) is the distance between two adjacent peaks of a split NMR signal in hertz (Hz) Coupled protons have the same coupling constant Coupling Constants

28 Useful Coupling Constants

29 Olefin Geometry Through Coupling Constants

30 A Splitting Diagram for a Doublet of Doublets

31 A Quartet Vs. A Doublet Of Doublets

32 Dry, ultra-pure ethanol Ethanol with trace acid Coupling With “Exchangeable” Protons

33 Molecular Ion = 74 [C 4 H 10 O] Four Different (But Similar) Compounds

34 1 9 Unknown #1

35 1 2 1 6 Unknown #2

36 2 1 3 4 Unknown #3

37 1 1 8 Unknown #4

38 Putting It All Together - Identifying Unknown Compounds

39

40


Download ppt "Chromatography (Separations) Mass Spectrometry Infrared (IR) Spectroscopy Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy X-ray Crystallography (visual solid."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google