113 NMR
113 NMR
113 NMR
methylpropane. In the spectrum there are two peaks, at 1.6 and 3.7
ppm. There are four pieces of information we can gather from these
peaks.
No magnetic field applied
Fig 4 The proton NMR spectrum of 1,2-dichloro-2-methylpropane
If exactly the right amount of energy is absorbed by the nuclei, they
will flip and point in the other direction (Fig 2). This is called nuclear
magnetic resonance. H
H C C C H
Cl Cl H
magnetic field
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δ (ppm)
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113 High Resolution NMR Spectroscopy Chem Factsheet
1. The number of different chemical environments in the compound 4. How many neighbours each hydrogen atom has
Firstly, the NMR shows us that there are two different chemical Finally, the spectrum gives us information about the
environments for hydrogen atoms in this compound (Figure 5). neighbouring hydrogen atoms of the nuclei. This comes from
The six hydrogens in the methyl (CH3) groups are in the same the splitting pattern, where the peaks in the spectrum are split
environment since they are the same distance from the chlorine into groups of sub-peaks (Table 2). The splitting pattern depends
atoms and from the central carbon atom. The two hydrogens in on how many non-equivalent hydrogen nuclei are on the
Environment 2 are closer to one of the chlorine atoms and adjacent carbon atoms. Splitting occurs because the magnetic
therefore chemically different from Environment 1. fields of different hydrogen nuclei interact with each other, and
the number of sub-peaks is always one more (n+1) than the
Fig 5 The two hydrogen environments in 1,2-dichloro-2- number of hydrogens (n) on the adjacent carbon atom. You
methylpropane won’t need to explain how this happens, but you do need to
H understand its effects.
H C H environment 1
Table 2 Splitting patterns
H H
environment 2
H C C C H Number of Splitting How it looks Typical
Cl Cl H hydrogen atoms pattern structure
on the adjacent (n+1)
2. The relative number of hydrogens in each environment carbon atom (n)
The second piece of information comes from the integration
curve, the line above each peak. The height of this line
corresponds to the area under the curve and therefore tells us
the relative numbers of hydrogen atoms in the different 0 Singlet R3CCH
environments. If you measure the height of the two integration
curves in Fig 4 you will find that they are in a ratio of 1:3. This
matches the structure of the compound, with two hydrogen
nuclei in Environment 2 and six in Environment 1.
3. The electron density around the hydrogen atoms 1 Doublet R2CH-CH
The third piece of information is about the nature of each
environment. This information is given by the chemical shifts
(Table 1). In the exam, you will be given the chemical shifts that
you need, so don’t try to memorise them.
Looking at Fig 4 again, the peaks at 1.6 and 3.7 ppm correspond
respectively to the methyl hydrogens (Environment 1) and the
CH2Cl hydrogens (Environment 2), which are deshielded by the
closer electron-withdrawing chlorine atom. 2 Triplet RCH2-CH
Fig 7 shows the proton NMR spectrum of ethyl ethanoate. The Answer
three peaks show that there are three different environments for the The displayed formula and NMR spectrum of chloroethane are
hydrogen atoms. The integration curves give us a ratio of 2:1:3, shown in Fig 9. There are two hydrogen environments: the methyl
and analysis of the splitting patterns (Table 3) leads to a full hydrogens (a) and the CH2Cl hydrogens (b). Using Table 1 the
assignment of peaks (Fig 8). approximate chemical shifts are 1.1-1.5 and 2.5-4.3 ppm respectively.
The peak at about 1.4 ppm (corresponding to the CH3) is split into a
Fig 7 The proton NMR spectrum of ethyl ethanoate triplet by the neighbouring CH2Cl hydrogens, while the peak at 3.5
ppm (corresponding to the CH2Cl) is split into a quartet by the
H methyl group.
O
H H
H C C
Fig 9 Chloroethane and its NMR spectrum
O C C H
H
H H -CH3(a)
b
a H H
H C C Cl -CH2Cl(b)
H H
11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
δ (ppm)
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113 High Resolution NMR Spectroscopy Chem Factsheet
(b)
Answers
Question 1 O
(a) Environment 2 C
Cl H3C CH3
Environment 1 = 2.5-4.3 ppm
H 3C C CH3 Environment 2 = 0.8-1.2 ppm
H
Environment 1
H H
(b) Environment 1 = 0.8-1.2 ppm
H 3C C C Cl
Environment 2 = 1.1-1.5 ppm
1 H H Environment 3 = 2.5-4.3 ppm
2 3
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
H H
(c) Environment 1 = 0.8-1.2 ppm δ (ppm)
H C C O Environment 2 = 3.3-4.0 ppm
H H H Environment 3 = 1.0-6.0 ppm (c)
1 2 3
O
O C
(d) H H 3C H
H C C O Environment 1 = 2.0-3.0 ppm
H H Environment 2 = 10.0-12.0 ppm
1 2
O
C
H 3C OH
11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
δ (ppm)
Acknowledgements: This Factsheet was researched and written by Emily Perry.
Curriculum Press, Bank House, 105 King Street, Wellington, Shropshire, TF1
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