2D NMRlatest
2D NMRlatest
2D NMRlatest
4/21/2012
Guided By Mrs.M.C
4/21/2012
NMR SPECTROSCOPY
Based upon measurement of absorption of electromagnetic radiation in the radiofrequency region of roughly 4 to 600 MHz Nuclei of certain atoms are involved in the absorption process In order to cause nuclei to develop the energy states required for absorption to occur, it is necessary to place analyte in an intense external magnetic field.
4/21/2012
Amplitude modulation of a singlet resonance as a function of t1 (signal decays due to spin relaxation)
FT t2
FT t1
4/21/2012
In the previous slide two-dimensional experiment, a sample containing two uncoupled spins A and X, of offsets nA and nX, will produce 2D peaks at their corresponding chemical shift offsets in both dimensions (2D spectra are in fact 3D images).
Contour Plot
4/21/2012
If spins A and X are J coupled, during the evolution time t1 the magnetization will evolve into anti-phase components. A necessary condition for the magnetization magnetization transfer to takes place during the mixing pulse (M).
As a result, each magnetization (A and X) will not only modulate with its own resonance frequency but they will also modulate with the resonance frequency of the coupled spin, giving origin to a cross-correlation peak between them. Diagonal Peak
Cross-Correlation Peak
4/21/2012
Extensions of the standard COSY experiment. Relayed correlation, total correlation spectroscopy (TOCSY), and multiple quantum spectroscopy (MQS) increase the information content, while exclusive correlation (E.COSY), multiple quantum filtering (MQF), and spin topology filtration reduce the complexity. Both avenues can lead to three-dimensional spectroscopy.
6
-Homonuclear ( COSY, TOCSY, Multiple quantum, NOESY) -Heteronuclear (HSQC, Hetero TOCSY , HMQC, NOESY-HSQC, NOESY -HSQC)
Correlations Through Space: -Homonuclear
4/21/2012
4/21/2012
Contd.
COSY- Correlating coupled homonuclear spins. Typically used for correlating protons coupled over two or three bonds but may be used for any high-abundance nuclide. Reduced 2D peak structure over basic COSY. Vicinal and geminal coupling relationships can be differentiated in some cases.
Delayed COSY Correlating coupled homonuclear spins through small couplings. Often used to identify proton correlations over many bonds (>3), hence also known as longrange COSY.
4/21/2012
Contd
TOCSY Correlating coupled homonuclear spins and those that reside within the same spin system but which may not share mutual couplings. Employs the propagation of magnetization along a continuous chain of spins. Powerful technique for analyzing complex proton spectra. INADEQUATE Correlating coupled homonuclear spins of low natural abundance. Typically used for correlating adjacent carbon centers at natural abundance but has extremely low sensitivity.
10
4/21/2012
Contd..
ADEQUATE Correlating coupled homonuclear spins of low natural abundance, primarily 13C
13C,
11
4/21/2012
12
4/21/2012
13
4/21/2012
14
4/21/2012
Applications:
1) To determine structure in organic and biological samples. 2) To determine each & every proton in beta sheet of the pancreatic trypsin.
15
4/21/2012
16
4/21/2012
Chemical shifts H C
1.2
3.9 3.4-3.5
20
67 51
17
4/21/2012
No
1H
13 C
1 2
1.56 21 4.66 79
18
4/21/2012
NO.
1 2
13 C
23 25
H
0.92 1.69
3
4 6
37
63 20.09
1.52
4.1 2.04
19
4/21/2012
20
4/21/2012
21
4/21/2012
22
4/21/2012
23
4/21/2012
- Correlates all protons within the same spin system - Number of transfer steps associated with each crosspeak not known, a priori - A second significant feature of TOCSY that contrasts with COSY is that it utilizes the net transfer of in-phase magnetization; so it does not suffer from cancellation of anti-phase peaks under conditions of low digital resolution or large linewidths. In these instances, this feature makes TOCSY the more sensitive of these two methods.
The TOCSY sequence. The spin-lock mixing time, m, replaces the single mixing pulse of the basic COSY experiment.
24
Sample: Chentobiose Solvent: CDCl3 Spectrometer: AVANCE 400 Probehead: Inverse Broadband with z-Gradients
TOCSY
4/21/2012
B
1
A 1
A Anomeric H
B Anomeric H
B 1H NMR A 1H NMR
25
4/21/2012
26
4/21/2012
Correlating coupled spins across multiple bonds. Employs detection of high-sensitivity nuclide, e.g. 1H, 19F, 31P (an inverse technique). Essentially HMQC tuned for the detection of small couplings. Most valuable in correlating 1H13C over two or three bonds. Powerful tool for linking together structural fragments. HETCOR (Heteronuclear Correlation)
Correlating coupled heteronuclear spins across a single bond. Employs detection of the lower- nuclide, typically 13C, so has significantly lower sensitivity than inverse techniques. Benefits from high resolution in 13C dimension, so may find use when this is critical, otherwise superseded by above methods. HXY Triple-resonance methods for correlating protons and a heteratom (Y) whilst using a second heteroatom (X) to either relay the correlations or edit the correlation spectrum.
27
4/21/2012
NOESY(2D or 1D)
Establishing NOEs and hence spatial proximity between protons. Suitable for small (Mr << 1000) and large molecules (Mr > 2000) for which NOEs are positive and negative respectively, but may fail for mid-sized molecules (zero NOE). Observes transient NOEs generated from the inversion of a target. Estimates of internuclear separations can be obtained in favourable cases.
28
4/21/2012
ROESY(2D or 1D)
Establishing NOEs and hence spatial proximity between protons. Suitable for any molecule but often essential for mid-sized molecules; NOEs are positive for all molecular sizes. Observes transient NOEs in the rotating-frame, but is prone to interference from other mechanisms so requires cautious interpretation. Estimates of internuclear separations can be obtained in favourable cases.
HOESY Establishing heteronuclear NOEs and hence spatial proximity between different nuclides, for example, 1H13C. Can provide useful stereochemical information when homonuclear NOEs are insufficient or inappropriate. Suffers from low sensitivity but 1H detected variants can help.
29
4/21/2012
EXSY (2D) Qualitative mapping of exchange pathways in dynamic systems when exchange rates are slow on the NMR chemical shift timescale, meaning separate resonances are observed for each exchanging species. Quantitative data on exchange kinetics can be obtained in favorable cases.
30
4/21/2012
REFERENCES:
I. Douglas Skoog, James Holler , Stanley Crouch, Instrumental Analysis, India Edidition, 2007, Published By :Cengage lerning Pg No:.551-594 II. P.S.Kalsi , Spectroscopy of Organic Compounds 6th edition Published By: New Age Publication Pg No:.342-350, 406-409 III. Robert M. Silverstein, Francis X. Webster ,Spectrometric Identification of Organic Compounds ,6th Edition , Published By :Willey Publications Pg No:.250-275 IV.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Correlation_spectroscopy V. http://www.intermnet.ua.es/inteRMNet/doc/chem843-5.PDF VI.http://www.chem.queensu.ca/facilities/NMR/nmr/webcourse/cosy.h tm VII.Donald J.Pavia ,Gary Lampmann, George Kriz, Introduction To Spectroscopy 3rd edition, Published by : Books Cole Pg no:. 540-550
31
4/21/2012
Mrs. M.C. Damle Madam (Vice-Principal) Mr. S.J .Kshirsagar Sir (H.O.D. Q.A. Department) Mr. Abhijeet Ladake Student M.pharm Q.A. 3rd Sem. Mr. Somnath G. Kandekar Junior research fellow (Chemistry Department ,NIPER, Mohali) & ALL MY BATCHMATES/COLLIUGES
32
4/21/2012
THANK YOU!!
33
4/21/2012
Any Questions?
34