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Proton NMR

 
Proton NMR

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Proton NMR



 
 
Proton NMR (also Hydrogen-1 NMR, or 1H NMR) is the application of nuclear magnetic resonance
Nuclear magnetic resonance

Nuclear magnetic resonance is the name given to a physical resonance phenomenon involving the observation of specific quantum mechanics magnetism properties of an atomic atomic nucleus in the presence of an applied, external magnetic field....
 in NMR spectroscopy
NMR spectroscopy

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, most commonly known as NMR spectroscopy, is the name given to a technique which exploits the magnetic properties of certain nuclei....
 with respect to hydrogen-1 nuclei
Atomic nucleus

The nucleus of an atom is the very dense region, consisting of nucleons , at the center of an atom. Although the size of the nucleus varies considerably according to the mass of the atom, the size of the entire atom is comparatively constant....
 within the molecules of a substance, in order to determine the structure of its molecules. In sample analyte
Analyte

An analyte is a substance or chemical constituent that is determined in an analytical procedure, such as a titration. For instance, in an immunoassay, the analyte may be the ligand or the binder, while in blood glucose testing, the analyte is glucose....
s where natural hydrogen
Hydrogen

Hydrogen is the chemical element with atomic number 1. It is represented by the chemical symbol H. At standard temperature and pressure, hydrogen is a colorless, odorless, nonmetallic, tasteless, highly combustion and explosive Diatomic molecule gas with the molecular formula H2....
 (H) is used, practically all of the hydrogen from the analyte consists of the isotope
Isotope

Isotopes are any of the different types of atoms of the same chemical element, each having a different atomic mass . Isotopes of an element have atomic nucleus with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutron....
 1H (hydrogen-1; i.e. having a proton
Proton

The proton is a subatomic particle with an electric charge of +1 elementary charge. It is found in the nucleus of each atom but is also stable by itself and has a second identity as the hydrogen ion, H+....
 for a nucleus).

Simple NMR spectra are recorded in solution
Solution

In chemistry, a solution is a homogeneous mixture composed of two or more substances. In such a mixture, a solute is dissolved in another substance, known as a solvent....
, and solvent
Solvent

A solvent is a liquid or gas that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution.The most common solvent in everyday life is water....
 protons must not be allowed to interfere.






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Encyclopedia


Proton NMR (also Hydrogen-1 NMR, or 1H NMR) is the application of nuclear magnetic resonance
Nuclear magnetic resonance

Nuclear magnetic resonance is the name given to a physical resonance phenomenon involving the observation of specific quantum mechanics magnetism properties of an atomic atomic nucleus in the presence of an applied, external magnetic field....
 in NMR spectroscopy
NMR spectroscopy

Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, most commonly known as NMR spectroscopy, is the name given to a technique which exploits the magnetic properties of certain nuclei....
 with respect to hydrogen-1 nuclei
Atomic nucleus

The nucleus of an atom is the very dense region, consisting of nucleons , at the center of an atom. Although the size of the nucleus varies considerably according to the mass of the atom, the size of the entire atom is comparatively constant....
 within the molecules of a substance, in order to determine the structure of its molecules. In sample analyte
Analyte

An analyte is a substance or chemical constituent that is determined in an analytical procedure, such as a titration. For instance, in an immunoassay, the analyte may be the ligand or the binder, while in blood glucose testing, the analyte is glucose....
s where natural hydrogen
Hydrogen

Hydrogen is the chemical element with atomic number 1. It is represented by the chemical symbol H. At standard temperature and pressure, hydrogen is a colorless, odorless, nonmetallic, tasteless, highly combustion and explosive Diatomic molecule gas with the molecular formula H2....
 (H) is used, practically all of the hydrogen from the analyte consists of the isotope
Isotope

Isotopes are any of the different types of atoms of the same chemical element, each having a different atomic mass . Isotopes of an element have atomic nucleus with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutron....
 1H (hydrogen-1; i.e. having a proton
Proton

The proton is a subatomic particle with an electric charge of +1 elementary charge. It is found in the nucleus of each atom but is also stable by itself and has a second identity as the hydrogen ion, H+....
 for a nucleus).

Simple NMR spectra are recorded in solution
Solution

In chemistry, a solution is a homogeneous mixture composed of two or more substances. In such a mixture, a solute is dissolved in another substance, known as a solvent....
, and solvent
Solvent

A solvent is a liquid or gas that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution.The most common solvent in everyday life is water....
 protons must not be allowed to interfere. A solvent without hydrogen, such as carbon tetrachloride
Carbon tetrachloride

Carbon tetrachloride, also known by many other names is the organic compound with the chemical formula CCl4. It is a reagent in organic synthesis chemistry and was formerly widely used in fire extinguishers, as a precursor to refrigerations, and a cleaning agent....
 or trifluoroacetic acid
Trifluoroacetic acid

Trifluoroacetic acid is the most simple perfluorinated carboxylic acid chemical compound with the formula CF3CO2H. It is a strong carboxylic acid due to the influence of the three very electronegativity fluorine atoms....
 may be used. More commonly, deuterated
Deuterium

Deuterium, also called heavy hydrogen, is a stable isotope of hydrogen with a natural abundance in the oceans of Earth of approximately one atom in 6500 of hydrogen ....
 (deuterium = 2H, often symbolized as D) solvents especially for use in NMR are preferred, e.g. deuterated chloroform
Deuterated chloroform

Deuterated chloroform , is an isotopologue of chloroform in which the hydrogen atom is replaced with a deuterium isotope . Deuterated chloroform is the most common solvent used in NMR spectroscopy....
, CDCl3, and deuterated dimethyl sulfoxide, (CD3)2SO.

Historically, deuterated solvents were supplied with a small amount (typically 0.1 %) of tetramethylsilane
Tetramethylsilane

Tetramethylsilane is the chemical compound with the chemical formula Si4 or SiMe4 . It is the simplest tetraorganosilane....
 (TMS) as an internal standard
Internal standard

An internal standard in analytical chemistry is a chemical substance that is added in a constant amount to samples, the blank and calibration standards in a chemical analysis....
 for calibrating the chemical shift
Chemical shift

In nuclear magnetic resonance , the chemical shift describes the dependence of nuclear magnetic energy levels on the electronic environment in a molecule....
s of each analyte proton. TMS is a tetrahedral molecule, with all protons being chemically equivalent, giving one single signal, used to define 0 ppm. It is volatile, making sample recovery easy as well. Modern spectrometers are able to reference spectra based on the residual protio solvent (e.g. the CHCl3, 0.01 % in 99.99 % CDCl3). Deuterated solvents are now commonly supplied without TMS.

While deuterated solvents are cheaper, they are able to dissolve a wider range of analytes. Deuterated solvents permit the use of deuterium lock to offset the effect of the natural drift of . Additionally, the deuterium signal may be used to accurately define 0 ppm as well.

Proton NMR spectra of most organic compounds are characterized by chemical shift
Chemical shift

In nuclear magnetic resonance , the chemical shift describes the dependence of nuclear magnetic energy levels on the electronic environment in a molecule....
s in the range +12 to -4 ppm and by spin-spin coupling between protons. The integration curve
Integral

Integration is an important concept in mathematics, specifically in the field of calculus and, more broadly, mathematical analysis. Given a function ƒ of a Real number variable x and an interval [ab] of the real line, the integral...
 for each proton reflects the abundance of the individual protons.

Simple molecules have simple spectra. The spectrum of ethyl chloride consists of a triplet at 1.5 ppm and a quartet at 3.5 ppm in a 3:2 ratio. The spectrum of benzene
Benzene

Benzene, or benzol, is an organic compound chemical compound and a known carcinogen with the molecular formula Carbon6Hydrogen6....
 consists of a single peak at 7.2 ppm due to the diamagnetic ring current.

Together with Carbon-13 NMR
Carbon-13 NMR

Carbon-13 NMR is the application of NMR spectroscopy with respect to carbon. It is analogous to proton NMR and allows the identification of carbon atoms in an organic molecule just as proton NMR identifies hydrogen atoms....
, proton NMR is a powerful tool for molecular structure determination.

Chemical shifts

Chemical shift
Chemical shift

In nuclear magnetic resonance , the chemical shift describes the dependence of nuclear magnetic energy levels on the electronic environment in a molecule....
 values are not precise, but typical - they are to be therefore regarded mainly as orientational. Deviations are in ±0.2 ppm
PPM

PPM may refer to:* In music:** Please Please Me, the first album by The Beatles.**Peter, Paul, and Mary , a 1960's folk music trio.* In computing:...
 range, sometimes more. The exact value of chemical shift depends on molecular structure and the solvent
Solvent

A solvent is a liquid or gas that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution.The most common solvent in everyday life is water....
 in which the spectrum is being recorded. Hydrogen nuclei are sensitive to the hybridisation of the atom to which the proton is attached and to electronic effect
Electronic effect

An electronic effect influences the chemical structure, reactivity, or chemical properties of molecule but is neither a traditional Chemical bond nor a steric effect....
s. Nuclei tend to be deshielded by groups which withdraw electron density. Deshielded nuclei resonate at higher d values, whereas shielded nuclei resonate at lower d values.

Examples of electron withdrawing substituents are -OH, -OCOR, -OR, -NO2 and halogens. These cause a downfield shift of approximately 2-4ppm at Ca and of less than 1-2 ppm at Cß. Carbonyl groups, olefinic fragments and aromatic rings contribute sp2 hybridised carbon atoms to an aliphatic chain. This causes a downfield shift of 1-2 ppm at Ca.

Note that labile protons (-OH, -NH2, SH) have no characteristic chemical shift. However such resonances can be identified by the disappearance of a peak when reacted with D2O
Heavy water

Heavy water is water that contains a higher proportion than normal of the isotope deuterium, as deuterium oxide, D2O or ?H2O, or as deuterium protium oxide, HDO or ?H?HO....
, as deuterium
Deuterium

Deuterium, also called heavy hydrogen, is a stable isotope of hydrogen with a natural abundance in the oceans of Earth of approximately one atom in 6500 of hydrogen ....
 will replace a proton
Proton

The proton is a subatomic particle with an electric charge of +1 elementary charge. It is found in the nucleus of each atom but is also stable by itself and has a second identity as the hydrogen ion, H+....
. This method is called a D2O shake. Acidic protons may also be suppressed when a solvent containing acidic deuterium ions (e.g. methanol-d4) is used.




Spin-spin couplings


The chemical shift
Chemical shift

In nuclear magnetic resonance , the chemical shift describes the dependence of nuclear magnetic energy levels on the electronic environment in a molecule....
 is not the only indicator used to assign a molecule. Because nuclei themselves are little magnets they influence each other, changing the energy and hence frequency of nearby nuclei as they resonate—this is known as spin-spin coupling. The most important type in basic NMR is scalar coupling. This interaction between two nuclei occurs through chemical bond
Chemical bond

A chemical bond is the physical process responsible for the attractive interactions between atoms and molecules, and that which confers stability to diatomic and polyatomic chemical compounds....
s, and can typically be seen up to three bonds away.

The effect of scalar coupling can be understood by examination of a proton which has a signal at 1ppm. This proton is in a hypothetical molecule where three bonds away exists another proton (in a CH-CH group for instance), the neighbouring group (a magnetic field
Magnetic field

A magnetism field is a vector field which can exert a magnetic force on moving electric charges and on magnetic dipoles . When placed in a magnetic field, magnetic dipoles tend to align their axes parallel to the magnetic field....
) causes the signal at 1 ppm to split into two, with one peak being a few hertz
Hertz

The hertz is a measure of frequency per unit of time, or the number of list of cycles per second. It is the SI base unit of frequency in the International System of Units , and is used worldwide in both general-purpose and scientific contexts....
 higher than 1 ppm and the other peak being the same number of hertz lower than 1 ppm. These peaks each have half the area of the former singlet peak. The magnitude of this splitting (difference in frequency between peaks) is known as the coupling constant
J-coupling

J-coupling is the coupling between two nuclear Spin s due to the influence of bonding electrons on the magnetic field running between the two nuclei....
. A typical coupling constant value would be 7 Hz.

The coupling constant is independent of magnetic field strength because it is caused by the magnetic field of another nucleus, not the spectrometer magnet. Therefore it is quoted in hertz
Hertz

The hertz is a measure of frequency per unit of time, or the number of list of cycles per second. It is the SI base unit of frequency in the International System of Units , and is used worldwide in both general-purpose and scientific contexts....
 (frequency) and not ppm (chemical shift
Chemical shift

In nuclear magnetic resonance , the chemical shift describes the dependence of nuclear magnetic energy levels on the electronic environment in a molecule....
).

In another molecule a proton resonates at 2.5 ppm and that proton would also be split into two by the proton at 1 ppm. Because the magnitude of interaction is the same the splitting would have the same coupling constant 7 Hz apart. The spectrum would have two signals, each being a doublet. Each doublet will have the same area because both doublets are produced by one proton each.

The two doublets at 1 ppm and 2.5 ppm from the fictional molecule CH-CH are now changed into CH2-CH:
  • The total area of the 1 ppm CH2 peak will be twice that of the 2.5 ppm CH peak.
  • The CH2 peak will be split into a doublet by the CH peak—with one peak at 1 ppm + 3.5 Hz and one at 1 ppm - 3.5 Hz (total splitting or coupling constant is 7 Hz).


In consequence the CH peak at 2.5 ppm will be split twice by each proton from the CH2. The first proton will split the peak into two equal intensities and will go from one peak at 2.5 ppm to two peaks, one at 2.5 ppm + 3.5 Hz and the other at 2.5 ppm - 3.5 Hz—each having equal intensities. However these will be split again by the second proton. The frequencies will change accordingly:
  • The 2.5 ppm + 3.5 Hz signal will be split into 2.5 ppm + 7 Hz and 2.5 ppm
  • The 2.5 ppm - 3.5 Hz signal will be split into 2.5 ppm and 2.5 ppm - 7 Hz


The net result is not a signal consisting of 4 peaks but three: one signal at 7 Hz above 2.5 ppm, two signals occur at 2.5 ppm, and a final one at 7 Hz below 2.5 ppm. The ratio of height between them is 1:2:1. This is known as a triplet and is an indicator that the proton is three-bonds from a CH2 group.

This can be extended to any CHn group. When the CH2-CH group is changed to CH3-CH2, keeping the chemical shift and coupling constants identical, the following changes are observed:
  • The relative areas between the CH3 and CH2 subunits will be 3:2.
  • The CH3 is coupled to two protons into a 1:2:1 triplet around 1 ppm.
  • The CH2 is coupled to three protons.
Something split by three identical protons takes a shape known as a quartet, each peak having relative intensities of 1:3:3:1.

A peak is split by n identical protons into components whose sizes are in the ratio of the nth row of Pascal's triangle
Pascal's triangle

In mathematics, Pascal's triangle is a geometric arrangement of the binomial coefficients in a triangle. Pascal's Triangle is named after Blaise Pascal in much of the western world, although other mathematicians studied it centuries before him in History of India, History of Iran, China, and Italy....
: n 0 singlet 1 1 doublet1 1 2 triplet 1 2 1 3 quartet 1 3 3 1 4 pentet 1 4 6 4 1 5 sextet 1 5 10 10 5 1 6 septet 1 6 15 20 15 6 1 7 octet 1 7 21 35 35 21 7 1 8 nonet 1 8 28 56 70 56 28 8 1

Because the nth row has n+1 components, this type of splitting is said to follow the "n+1 rule": a proton with n neighbors appears as a cluster of n+1 peaks.

With 2-methylpropane, (CH3)3CH, as another example: the CH proton is attached to three identical methyl groups. The C-H signal in the spectrum would be split into ten peaks according to the (n + 1) rule of multiplicity. Below are NMR signals corresponding to several simple multiplets of this type. Note that the outer lines of the nonet (which are only 1/8 as high as those of the second peak) can barely be seen, giving a superficial resemblance to a septet.

When a proton is coupled to two different protons, then the coupling constants are likely to be different, and instead of a triplet, a doublet of doublets will be seen. Similarly, if a proton is coupled to two other protons of one type, and a third of another type with a different coupling constant, then a triplet of doublets is seen. In the example below, the triplet coupling constant is larger than the doublet one. The analysis of such multiplets (which can get very much more complicated than the ones shown here) provides important clues to the structure of the molecule being studied.

It should be emphasized that the simple rules for the spin-spin splitting of NMR signals described above only apply if the chemical shifts of the coupling partners are substantially larger that the coupling constant between them, otherwise there may be more peaks, and the intensities of the individual peaks will be distorted (second-order effects).

Further reading


External links