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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243 http://www.cis.rit.edu/htbooks/nmr/
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Page 1: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

Chemistry 243

http://www.cis.rit.edu/htbooks/nmr/

Page 2: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

NMR is based on the behavior of a sample placed in an electromagnet and irradiated with radiofrequency waves: 60 – 900 MHz (l ≈ 0.5 m) The magnet is typically large, strong, $$$ A transceiver, called the NMR probe, is

inserted into the center bore of the magnet, and the sample is placed into the probe Sample can be in a narrow tube, or Sample can flow in via an autosampler

Qualitative or Quantitative; liquid or solid Universal proton detector; non-destructive

Page 3: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR, continued

NMR is a chemical analysis technique MRI = magnetic resonance imaging, and usually

an imaging technique, but is becoming a chemical method, too, called functional MRI (fMRI) MRI is also non-destructive Prof. Paul Lauterbur, UIUC, Nobel Laureate for

Medicine or Physiology, 2003, with Sir Peter Mansfield, U. Nottingham

MRI is really NMRI

Page 4: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

A plaque just outsidethe Chemical Life Sciences

LaboratorycommemoratingPaul Lauterbur,

Professor of Chemistry,U of Illinois

Another plaque, normallyoutside Noyes Lab,

honors Herb GutowskyProfessor of Chemistry,

U of Illinois.He was the first to “apply the nuclear magnetic resonance

method to chemical research. His experimental and theoretical work on the chemical shift effect and its

relation to molecular structure.”

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_S._Gutowsky

Page 5: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR basic layout

Page 6: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Workstationcomputer

(creates andreads pulses)

NMR Console

Photos from www.jeol.com

Magnet(inside a Dewar)

NMR Probe(inside magnet)

NMR basic components

Overheadperspective;

solenoid inside

Page 7: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

U. Bristol, United Kingdom14.1 Tesla magnet

Termed a“600 MHz” magnet

600 MHz is the frequencyat which the proton (1H) nucleus spin

resonates – in a magnet of this strength.

1000 MHz is equivalent to 23.5 Tesla

Bo = Static Magnetic Field

Varian is now Agilent

Page 8: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

U. Bristol, United Kingdom14.1 Tesla magnet

Termed a“600 MHz” magnet

600 MHz is the frequencyat which the proton (1H)

nucleus spin resonates – in a magnet of this strength.

The magnet is superconducting,always charged, but not powered,and surrounded by liquid helium(4.2 K) and the He is surrounded

by liquid nitrogen (77 K).The current is “coasting”, that is,

persistent; uniform & stable.

The big whitetanks outside

Noyes and RALhold liquid N2

for NMR andother cold stuff.

No high pressuresare involved; vented.

Bo = Static Magnetic Field

Page 9: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR magnet cut-away

Helium sleeve

Nitrogen sleeve

Solenoid (cut-away)superconductingcoil

Bore

Bo

Page 10: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR basic components

NMR workstation computer

NMR console

Page 11: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

A typical NMR sample tube:7 inches long; 5 mm

outer diameter.Inserted into the NMR

probe from aboveeither manually orusing automation.

NMR basic components

Automated flow NMR

Spinning tube NMR

Pumps and solvents

Autosampler

Samplesyringe

Samplevial

Page 12: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://u-of-o-nmr-facility.blogspot.com/2008/03/probe-coil-geometry.html

How does NMR work?

Probe Coils for the Transverse (B1) Fieldfrom a current pulse at time t

Bo = Static Magnetic Field

from the big supercon magnet

Mag

net

Ho

usi

ng

Helmholtz Coil

Mag

net H

ou

sing

Solenoid Coil

Bo Bo

Page 13: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://www.bioc.aecom.yu.edu/labs/girvlab/nmr/course/COURSE_2010/Lab_1.pdf

2 Helmholtz Coils:1 inside the other;

for tube NMR

SolenoidalMicrocoil

for flow NMR

Page 14: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR depends on the spin of the nucleus under study – the most common is 1H

Nuclear spin in an applied magnetic field A magnetic dipole, m, is produced The spin precesses The spin is quantized 1H has a spin quantum number of

either +½ (low E) or – ½ (high E) Many nuclei have suitable spin

quantum numbers for NMR: 13C (only 1.1% abundance) 19F 31P 14N

Many nuclei are not NMR active: 12C (sadly), 16O

Fig. 19-2

Page 15: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

momentumangular

moment dipole

ratio icmagnetogyr

p

p

NMR depends on the spin of the nucleus under study: the magnetogyric ratio

Magnetogyric ratio = gyromagnetic ratio:It’s different for each

type of nucleus.

Eqn. 19-1, slightly modified to be a ratio

Page 16: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

oBhm

E

2

In a magnetic field, the spin has two quantized energy states called high and low

m = spin quantum numberm = - ½ for high energy; opposedm = + ½ for low energy; aligned

oBh

E

42/1

oBh

E

42/1

Bo in Tesla (T)and E in Joules (J)

oBh

E

2

High; opposed

Low; alignedDE = high - low

Page 17: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Fig. 19-2

oBh

E

42/1

Low; aligned

m = spin quantum numberm = - ½ for high energy; opposedm = + ½ for low energy; aligned

In a magnetic field, the spin has two quantized energy states called high and low

Page 18: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

In a magnetic field, the spin has two quantized energy states called high and low

High;opposed

Low;aligned

Fig. 19-1

High;opposed

Low;aligned

Page 19: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

oBh

E

42/1

oBh

E

42/1

http://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/Spectrpy/nmr/nmr1.htm

4

hSlope

4

hSlope

DE depends on the applied Bo

Page 20: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

So, where does the NMR signal come from?

Fig. 19-3

High;opposed

Low;aligned

Fast - msec

Slow - sec

Transverse pulsetransmitted

by the probe

Relaxationreceived

by the probe

The NMR signal comes from the spin relaxation after it is pulsed by the NMR probe.

Page 21: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

At equilibrium, the low spin state is slightly favored – otherwise, no NMR signal

Tk

Bh o

eN

N

2

Lo

HiBoltzmann Distribution Equation

for quantum spin statesin a magnetic field

In Example 19-2 (p. 501), for 1,000,000 atoms of hydrogen, 1H,in the high energy state:• Bo = 4.69 Tesla• T = 20°C• g = 2.6752 x 108 T-1 sec-1

• NHi / NLo = 0.999967• For NHi = 1,000,000 then NLo = 1,000,033• DN = 33 or just 33 ppm of all the spins present are available for NMR because all the rest of the spins are in a dynamic equilibrium• This is why NMR is a relatively insensitive technique

Page 22: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

What does NMR data look like?S

pin

Rel

axat

ion

Sig

nal

Time (a few seconds for 1 pulse)

Sig

nal

pro

po

rtio

nal

to a

mo

un

t o

f p

roto

n

FourierTransform

This is the acquired signal from the spin relaxation.

This is what you look at and analyze:An NMR spectrum

zero

A signal is seen foreach type of proton and

each has its own frequencydepending on its

chemical environment

ppm,in shift )10x (1x 6

reference

Page 23: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Understanding NMR Spectra

zeroset byTMS

Deshieldedprotons absorb

more energy

Si is notelectron

withdrawing

Oxygen iselectron

withdrawinghttp://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/Spectrpy/nmr/nmr1.htm

Page 24: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Understanding NMR Spectra

http://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/Spectrpy/nmr/nmr1.htm

Page 25: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Understanding NMR Spectra

Small magnet

Large magnet

ppm

http://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/Spectrpy/nmr/nmr1.htm

Page 26: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Understanding NMR Spectra

These ppm are for the small magnet

ppm

http://www2.chemistry.msu.edu/faculty/reusch/VirtTxtJml/Spectrpy/nmr/nmr1.htm

Page 27: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

But, the spins couple - they interact

For 2 protons:• Each proton has its own spin• The spin can be +½ or –½ • We can draw all the combinations:

Page 515

Relative spin population 1 2 1

High;opposed

Low;aligned

Page 28: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

Relative spinpopulation 1 3 3 1

For 3 protons:• Each proton has its own spin• The spin can be +½ or –½ • We can draw all the combinations:

But, the spins couple - they interact

Page 517

High;opposed

Low;aligned

Page 29: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

The principle of multiplicity: the n + 1 ruleand peak splitting

n is the number of adjacent(neighboring) protons that

are in a differentchemical environment

Multiplicity, m = n + 1

Pattern follows Pascal’s triangle

Page 30: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

The principle of multiplicity: a signal gets split based on what it’s next to

M

1

2

3

4

Proximityis

important

The splitting is called J coupling.

Page 31: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://cobalt.rocky.edu/~barbaroj/equivalent_hydrogens.pdf

Do they split – or not?

This will yield a spectrumwith one NMR singlet.

Protons are not splitby identical neighbors.

Page 32: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://cobalt.rocky.edu/~barbaroj/equivalent_hydrogens.pdf

Do they split – or not?

aa bSee next panelfor spectrumof propane

Page 33: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

1H-NMR Spectrum of Propane

CH3 – CH2 – CH3

a b a

b (septet)

a (triplet)

Page 34: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR Data Interpretation - Example

Relative total areas:C:B:A2:3:3

Splitting relative areas

1:2:1

Splitting relative areas

1:3:3:1

Page 35: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR Chemical Shifts – helps interpret data

Page 36: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://cobalt.rocky.edu/~barbaroj/equivalent_hydrogens.pdf

Do they split – or not?

This will yield a spectrumwith one NMR singlet.

Protons are not splitby identical neighbors.

Page 37: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://cobalt.rocky.edu/~barbaroj/equivalent_hydrogens.pdf

Do they split – or not?

aa bSee next panelfor spectrumof propane

Page 38: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

1H-NMR Spectrum of Propane

CH3 – CH2 – CH3

a b a

b (septet)

a (triplet)

Page 39: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

NMR Data Interpretation - Example

Page 40: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Chemistry 243

http://mestrelab.com/software/mnova-nmrpredict-desktop/

NMR data interpretation – watch the video!