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What can you remember from last lesson? 1.Suggest how pentan-1-ol and pentan-3- ol could be distinguished from their carbon-13 nmr spectra. 2.Suggest how.

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Presentation on theme: "What can you remember from last lesson? 1.Suggest how pentan-1-ol and pentan-3- ol could be distinguished from their carbon-13 nmr spectra. 2.Suggest how."— Presentation transcript:

1 What can you remember from last lesson? 1.Suggest how pentan-1-ol and pentan-3- ol could be distinguished from their carbon-13 nmr spectra. 2.Suggest how pentan-3-ol and pentan-3- one could be distinguished from their carbon-13 nmr spectra. 3.Suggest how chloromethane and methanal could be distinguished from their carbon-13 nmr spectra.

2 Proton nmr Aims What is a 1 H nmr spectrum? What information does a 1 H nmr spectrum give? What does the integration trace show?

3 Proton nmr In proton nmr spectroscopy it is the 1 H nucleus that is being examined. As nearly all hydrogen atoms are 1 H, it is easier to get a proton nmr spectrum than a 13 C spectrum. As with Carbon-13 atoms, the Hydrogen-1 atoms are surrounded by electrons which partly shield them from the applied magnetic field. The amount of shielding, and hence the energy gap ∆E, depends on the electron density surrounding the nucleus and varies for different hydrogen nuclei within a molecule. The greater the electron density, the smaller the chemical shift. In 1 H nmr, values of δ range from 0-10ppm. In 1 H nmr, hydrogen atoms in different environments give different chemical shift values.

4 All the hydrogen atoms in methane are in the same chemical environment There is only one chemical shift value How many peaks will appear in the proton nmr of methane?

5 How many different chemical environments are there in methanol? How many peaks will appear on the nmr spectrum? Which peak will be the highest?

6

7 Ethanol CH 3 CH 2 OH How many different chemical environments are there in ethanol? How many peaks will appear in the nmr spectrum? Which peak will be the highest?

8 Ethanol CH 3 CH 2 OH

9 δ/ppmType of hydrogen Number of H 1.0-CH 3 3 3.5-CH 2 -O2 4.5-O-H1 Note 1: In 1 H nmr, the height, or more specifically, the area under each peak is significant. The areas under the peaks are proportional to the number of hydrogen atoms causing the peaks. Note 2: As it can be difficult to evaluate the area under each peak by eye, the nmr instrument produces a line called the integration trace. The relative heights of the steps of this trace give the relative number of each type of hydrogen.

10 Tetramethylsilane (TMS) By definition, the δ value of TMS is zero. This is the chosen standard because – It gives a single intense peak as there are 12 chemically equivalent protons (hydrogens) It gives a signal that resonates upfield (to the right) from almost all other organic hydrogen resonances as the 12 hydrogens are highly shielded Non-toxic and inert Low boiling point (26.5˚C) so can be easily removed from the sample The δ values of chemical shifts are measured by reference to a standard- the chemical shift of the hydrogen atoms in the compound TMS. The chemical shift of these hydrogen atoms is zero. A little TMS, which is liquid is added to samples before their nmr spectrum are run, and gives a peak at δ value of exactly zero ppm to calibrate the spectrum.

11 Proton n.m.r spectra are recorded in solution. The sample to be examined (a few mg) is dissolved in a proton free solvent to avoid unwanted absorptions. Typical solvents include – CCl 4 (tetrachloromethane) CDCl 3 C 6 D 6 D 2 O Deuterated solvents where 1 H atoms are replaced by 2 H atoms (D atoms). This is expensive.

12 Tasks 1.Worksheet 2.Summary questions page 147 3.Explain why CHCl 3 is not used as a solvent in proton nmr spectroscopy 4.For the compounds below give the number of chemical environments, the integration ratio and the chemical shift each peak will appear at: a.Pentan-2-ol b.Pentan-3-ol c.Butanone d.Butane

13 Spectra 1 Methyl propanoate Spectra 2 Propanoic acid


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