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Welcome to Chemistry 421

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Title: Welcome to Chemistry 421


1
Welcome to Chemistry 421
  • Use of Physical Methods to determine structures
    in Organic Chemistry
  • Dr. Charles DeBrosse
  • 232 Beury Hall (across from Dept. office)
  • NMR lab 001 Beury Hall
  • 215-204-1082

2
Course Organization
  • Lectures Tuesday evenings 6-9pm. Attendance is
    strongly encouraged. You should read the assigned
    material and do the homework problems prior to
    the lecture.
  • Textbook, Organic Structural Spectroscopy, by
    Lambert, Shurvell, Lightner and Cooks
  • Grade based on 3 In-class quizzes, homework sets
    and Final exam
  • Course notes will be available on Blackboard
    generally the Monday before the lecture.
  • I will reserve Monday 10-11am as office hour, and
    am accessible other times in my lab or office

3
Spectroscopy in Organic Chemistry.
  • The Chemists Eyes, Ears and Nose
  • How do we know what we have?
  • Read labels (sometimes labels lie)
  • Whose word do we have to take on it?
  • Check it out for yourself! (Get a spectrum!)
  • A spectroscopist. (never the hero, just the
    heros best friend)

4
Chemistry 421
  • Goal of the course is to give you the tools to
    answer parts of these questions.
  • Organic Structure determination by spectroscopic
    methods
  • NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy)
  • Mass Spectrometry (MS)
  • Infrared Spectroscopy (IR and other vibrational
    classes like Near IR, Raman)
  • Electronic Spectra (Ultraviolet and chiroptical
    methods)

5
Structural Features we can address
Spectroscopically
  • Molecular weight
  • Chemical Formula
  • Functional groups
  • Skeletal Connectivity, structural isomers
  • Spatial-geometric arrangements, stereoisomerism,
    symmetry
  • Presence and location of chromophores
  • Chirality issues
  • Some of these are more central than others.
    Sometimes we can stop when the answer is fit to
    purpose.

6
Techniques we will study in this Course
  • NMR--looks atb atoms by means of their nuclei.
    Connectivity pathways, spatial arrangements of
    atoms and 11 correspondence between signals and
    atoms
  • Mass Spec--measures molecular weight, most
    fundamentally useful for unknowns. Controlable
    fragmentation can distinguish among rival
    possibilities
  • IR and Raman--Vibrations characteristic of bonds,
    particulary for functional group identification.
    Excellent fingerprint
  • UV--reports on conjugation and multiple bonds.
    Provides entre to chiroptical probes to
    assymetric configurations

7
Chemistry 421
  • Goal is for you to gain a conversational level of
    knowledge
  • Base level of theory, as pictoral as possible
    should help you realize the scope and limitations
    of these methods.
  • Survey of representative data and how to
    interpret it.
  • Applying the right tool to the right question

Integrating data from various tools and sources
(i.e. we should be able to explain all our
observations. Also we should be able to observe
features we predict, knowing our chemistry)
8
Complementary Spectroscopies
  • There are strengths and weaknesses in all the
    various spectroscopy methods
  • Blind Spots (see story of three blind men
    describing an elephant)
  • NMR e.g. has NMR silent nuclei fully
    substituted carbons as blocks blind to
    inorganics, nearly blind to polymeric mtls.
  • IR e.g. robust for functional groups great if
    you have a compound match in a library
    (fingerprint) shaky on quantitative response,
    same spectrum might explain multiple compounds
    subject to selection rules governed by dipole
    moment in vibration (complement somewhat with
    Raman)
  • UV needs chromophores
  • Mass Spec compounds differ in ionizability.

A smart chemist will be attuned to possible blind
spots before making conclusions. Best solution
is to marry up complementary data. All the
data needs to agree or at least, not conflict
withing the various methods.
9
Total Synthesis as a Structural Proof
  • Use of all our knowledge
  • Generally the product of a reaction is rationally
    related to the ingredients we have used.
  • Non-ambiguous route from known compounds
  • Oxidative degradation to known compounds and
    history of chemistry

10
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
  • Light comes in different colors
  • No matter what part of range, there are some
    features in common, that you should know.

Amplitude
Photon?E h? ? is frequency, Hz, 1/sec ? c/?
c3x1010 cm/sec h Plancks constant 6.624
x10-34 Jsec ?/c 1/ ? wavenumber, cm-1
Propagation of e,b fields, time
11
Chemical Properties as related to the different
colors of light
12
What about Mass Spec?
The properties measured do not directly bear on
absorption of light More properly termed mass
spectrometry We do however in quadrupole mass
spectrometry scan an electric field that induced
different curve paths for different
masses Radiofrequency also does show up in FT
mass spec (ion cyclotron resonance)
13
Sensitivity of the methods we will study
  • NMR is worst, typically needing 10s of ?g to 10s
    of mg for 13C.
  • Mass Spec is generally about 103-104 x more
    sensitive than NMR
  • UV is about 100 x more sensitive than NMR

14
Questions, Questions.
  • Whats in this flask?
  • What have you just synthesized?
  • Did my reaction Work?
  • What is present in that sample?
  • How could this reaction have possibly Failed?
  • Isolated materials?
  • Purity? Mixture? What kind of mixture?
  • Is this material suitable for the next step?
  • Best to Ask Yourself these questions! (Better
    than making your Boss ask, or not to be able to
    answer a Customer

15
Answers!
  • Bad Answer because this always works in our
    lab
  • Bad Answer 2 ..because my Professor (or some
    slightly older grad student, postdoc) said so..
  • Slightly less Bad Answer 3 this was done in
    the literature
  • Good Answer because all the spectral and other
    analytical data agree with me
  • Analytical Chemistry. If you do it right, nobody
    has to take your word on the answers!

16
Features in Common for all Spectroscopy
Measuring Scheme
Data
Some Physical Property
Analysis, Interpretation
A key for us here is, we use instruments to
Disperse energy across a scale appropriate to a
chemical property
Knowledge
Wisdom (or Progress)
17
Therefore we have Precise Analytical Instruments
that can Disperse Energy
  • Accurate, precise, reproducible
  • Combine the energy dispersion scheme with a
    detection scheme.
  • Generally the sample sits physically between the
    source and the detector.
  • Detector provides selectivity in response,
    usually generates a voltage. We record voltage
    responses as DATA

18
The dispersion is easy to achieve with ordinary
light
Monochromator rotates Prism or diffraction
grating Spacings on grating appropriate to
wavelength Schemes use slits to admit a select
region of spectrum Pretty ineffective for radio
waves
19
Spectroscopy Spreads out Vision
All the techniques we will discuss have some
features in common Data will have a running
variable (x-axis) that is in some sense, a
energy scale. (not at least directly, a time
axis. Therefore a snapshot in time of a
molecule) The response variable (an absorption or
other intensity) is related to the chemical
preponderance of some feature that cause the
response.
The position informs us about some chemical
property in the sample The peak height informs us
about how much of that property is in the sample
20
Fourier Transform MethodsAn alternative to
Energy Dispersive methods
  • All modern NMR and IR is done this way
  • Measures all frequencies at same time. More
    efficient at signal-gathering in a give time
    (better S/N)
  • The frequencies present are deconvoluted (or
    dispersed) after data is collected.
  • Fourier Analysis is the mathematical method for
    doing this. It is based on the theory that any
    complex periodic (repeats over time) wave can be
    decomposed into a linear combination of sinusoids

21
To get the measurement, we collect a detector
response as a function of time
Lots of different frequencies present from the
sample Their voltages beat against each other
making interference pattern (interferogram) Interf
erence is periodic, because the frequencies are
constant w.r.t each other
22
An Oscillating voltage is interpreted as a
Frequency
The process is similar to the way a sound wave is
digitized to make e.g. a music CD
Key to this is sampling at exactly equal time
intervals
This is a Frequency Axis. Think Hz!
23
Interfering Sinusoids are Represented in a
decaying trace
Space is frequency 1
Space is beating of frequency 2 vs 1 (1 - 2)
A human being could compute this FT, counting
beats per time unit
Key to the process is a very precisely defined
time base (the x axis) that the FT algorithm uses
to count
24
Interference patterns--Almost able to Transform
by Hand
Time(ms)
But its really the Fast Fourier Transforms and
fast computers that make this practical!
25
Since the time-acquisition is fast and efficient
it is easy to Signal-Average
Adding accumulating scans from the detector into
memory of computer Signals are coherent and
adding the scans causes signal to grow linearly
with number of scans. Noise being random and
incoherent grows with vno.of scans From this,
the Signal-to-Noise ratio (S/N) grows
proportionally to the square root of number of
scans E.g., a spectrum acquired with 100 scans
will be 10x better than one with 1 scan only.
26
Some Features common to all Spectra
27
Noise, the curse of Science
  • All measurements, especially those we carry out
    with instruments, generate Noise.
  • Detectors of all sorts generate electrical noise
  • Noise is bad. It is random and incoherent and
    does not possess information. We go to
    tremendous expense and effort to eliminate,
    suppress, and finesse our way past noise.
  • Signals are good. They give us information.
  • Noise limits our ability to even observe very
    weak signals or to quantify somewhat weak
    signals. The Signal-to-Noise Ratio is an
    important parameter is assessing our ability to
    interpret data.
  • Noise is superimposed on top of peaks

28
Signal-to-Noise (S/N) ratios
Measure height
Typical rule of thumb Limit of detection,
S/N3 Limit of Quantitation, S/N10
Noise(rms) is 0.707 x peak to peak
S/N6.3/20.707 4.45 So this peak is
reliably detectable, but not reliably
quantitatable
29
Chemistry 421--Structure Determination
  • Interpretable Connection between Structural
    Features and Spectroscopic signals
  • We will interpret spectra to learn about
    structures.
  • The Interpretation paradigm consists of
    charting

30
A way of Thinking
Known compounds (verify structure) All predicted
signals present? Agreement with
literature? Impurities present? Fingerprint?
31
A Strategy for Handling Unknown Structures
  • Complementary 1H NMR, 13C NMR, Mass Spec, UV--any
    features stand out?
  • Get the Molecuar Weight from MS
  • Heavy Atoms? (ratio of M to M1, M2)
  • If heavy atoms are identified, subtract from MW
  • Consult various molecular formula DBs (Merck, CRC
    etc). Write out Molecular Formula
  • Use the DBE (sites of unsaturation) rule
  • Infrared-- Functional groups present? Identify as
    possibly subtract from formula (retain the need
    to incorporate at end)
  • Inventory 13C NMR and classify the C,H groups
    present. Tabulate fragments of structure.
    Reconcile MS fragments.
  • Assemble possible structures

32
Molecular Weight and Molecular Formulas
  • Absolutely critical to Stucture determination
  • Centrality of Mass Spectrometry to modern
    Chemistry
  • Molecular weight must agree with the structure.
    Note well, that a given nominal MW generally is
    consistent with several possible formulas.
  • The nitrogen rule. A compound with an
    even-numbered molecular weight has 0, 2 or an
    even number of nitrogens.
  • Very Important Learn the rule for sites of
    unsaturation (double-bond equivalents, DBE) as a
    predictive tool for multiple bonds and/or rings.
    These are based on the standard valencies for
    ordinary atoms.

33
DBE Rules
  • Aim to reduce a formula to CNH2N2
  • Take formula and cross off Oxygen atoms
  • Replace all halogen atoms with hydrogen
  • Cross off all Nitrogen atoms, and for each N
    remove one H atom.
  • Sulfur treat like Oxygen (? Use care if there are
    a lot of oxygens, possible OSO type groups,
    similar issues with Phosphorus)
  • Subtract your newly reduced formula (looks like
    CxHx, from CxH2x2 number H (even
    number)
  • Divide this answer by 2. Result is DBE.

34
So some Decision-Tree thinking is possible
The NMR branch. Integrate at higher level with
other techniques
Data
Synthetic Product
1H NMR
Could it be what I want?
Quick Inventory of signals
NO
YES
Do I need more information?
Worth more spectroscopy?
What do I need to find out
Back to the Lab!
granularity of questions
Assess Purity
Carbon Survey
Proton coupling pattern
Need Assignments?
YES
NO
Correlations to protons
Separations methods, Feedback to synthesis.
Noe for stereochemistry
Information Content higher
35
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance(NMR)
36
Tonights Subjects
  • How do the spectrometers work?
  • The NMR measurable quantities

37
What is NMR Spectroscopy?
  • Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
  • Radio Frequency Absorption Spectra of atomic
    nuclei in substances subjected to magnetic
    fields.
  • Spectral Dispersion is Sensitive to the chemical
    environment via coupling to the electrons
    surrounding the nuclei.
  • Interactions can be interpreted in terms of
    structure, bonding, reactivity

38
The Fundamental NMR equations
  • Spinning nuclei produce a magnetic field that is
    proportional to its magnetic moment ?. The
    proportionality constant is ? ? ?hI
  • An active nucleus in a magnetic field B0 has an
    energy w.r.t. zero field of
  • E ( h? h?) -? B0 where ? is the component
    of the magnetic moment colinear with B0
  • This gives for IZ 1/2 E 1/2 (?h B0)
  • ?E ?h B0 and in angular units ? ? B0

39
Origin of the NMR Effect
  • Nuclei with other than A(protonsneutrons) and
    Z(protons) both even numbers, possess net spin
    and associated angular momenta
  • Reveals itself only in magnetic field. As usual,
    such momenta are quantized
  • States have different energies, populated
    according to Boltzmann distribution
  • States are 1/2, 3/2, 5/2for A odd number and
    integer if A even number and Z odd number
  • Transitions of individual nuclei between spin
    states is possible (both directions) leading to
    an equilibrium of populations
  • Number of states is 2I 1

40
Pictoral View of Spin
Precession of nuclear magnet--Units of Torque
41
Resonance--A general phenomenon for energy pumping
Imagine a kid on a swing The period (frequency
of the swing is determined (g, r(length),
?). Lets say the natural period is 3 seconds, or
the frequency is 0.33 If the Daddy gives a push
every 3 seconds, the kid will go higher and
energy will be absorbed. Every 2 seconds and
the motion will get stalled and interfered
with. Every 1.5 seconds and the energy will get
absorbed but not as efficiently. The Daddy will
get tired. This general principal applies in NMR
among other kinds of measurement, and holds
whether we scan through the applied frequency or
multiplex all at once
42
NMR-What is it Good For?(absolutely everything!)
  • Solving structures of compounds like synthetics,
    impurities, natural products
  • Identifying metabolites
  • Stereochemical determination
  • Follow reactions
  • Validating electronic theory trends within
    series of compds.
  • Kinetics
  • Extended structure, e.g. protein nmr
  • Molecular interactions e.g. ligand binding
  • Acid-base questions
  • Purities
  • Mechanisms, e.g. isotope distributions, other
    effects
  • Questions about the solid state
  • Imaging

43
And Besides that
  • You get your sample back!
  • Not so for mass spec
  • Try recovering your compound from a KBr pellet or
    nujol mull

44
But on the other Hand
  • NMR is one of the least sensitive analytical
    methods
  • Characterized by long relaxation time constants,
    limiting experimental efficiency in real time
  • Sometimes too much information. Can be demanding
    on interpretation skill
  • Relatively Expensive compared with other
    analytical methods
  • As with other methods NMR has blind spots and
    cannot serve as an analytical panacea

45
What Do I Hope you will Learn?
  • Enough theory to make you conversant in the
    area.
  • NMR with respect to how the effects arise and can
    be predicted connection with experiments and
    limitations of these survey of how the
    instruments work.
  • Basis of the experiments
  • Data processing considerations, at level to
    appreciate what may have been done to give your
    result.
  • A basic toolbox of experiments, what they do and
    how to use them in your work
  • A working knowledge of organic chemical shifts
    and influence of symmetry on signal counting
  • Spin coupling, coupling networks and
    connectivity, use of J-coupling constants in
    chemistry

46
Why NMR?
  • Unmatched versatility as an Analytical technique
  • High on chemical information content
  • Significant interpretability
  • Interpretable at several levels of sophistication
  • Response related to molar preponderance
  • These attributes are true for solids, liquids,
    mixtures, and to a small extent, gas phase
  • More than half the periodic table has at least
    one NMR active isotope

47
What are the Measurables in NMR?
  • Intensity (analytical parameter, proportional to
    molarity)
  • Chemical Shift (the electronic surroundings)
  • Couplings (scalar J and dipolar D bond paths,
    angles connectivity and distances)
  • Relaxation parameters (motions, distances)

48
How do we Generate, and Record NMR Spectra?
  • Pulser
  • Frequency generation
  • Power Amplifier
  • Oscillator

Host Workstation
transmitter
Acquisition computer
RF pulse
Timing control signals
signal
Probe in Magnet
NMR Acquisition commands
Phase locked loop
Network
  • User interface
  • Expt. Setup, control
  • Data processing, plotting

receiver
PreAmp
signal
  • Superheterodyne (beat-down to AF)
  • Phase sensitive detection
  • A/D convertor

Data file storage
FID with 90deg phase shift
Free Induction Decay
Block Diagram for Spectrometer
49
  • Radio Frequency Transmit-Receive system
  • Finely controlled RF pulses
  • Microsecond control
  • Precise control of timing, e.g pulses and delays
  • Other precisely delivered RF for decoupling,
    selective excitation
  • Gradient amp and generator, shielded in probe to
    avoid eddy currents

50
Modern Superconducting NMR Magnets
Older Magnets (1970s) had opposed pole faces.
High voltages and currents demanded heroic
temperature control. Field ran side to side
through sample
Note Special superconducting alloys
Niobium-Tantalum. Search goes on for higher
temperature superconductors.
Supercon magnets have much larger fields, better
homogeneity. Field runs up the axis of the sample.
New technology! Built in auxilliary magnet with
reversed current acts as active shield, partly
eliminating the projection into the room.
Lines of force project several feet into the
room. They concentrate at the top and bottom.
Magnets can grab iron objects and accelerate them.
51
Whats the role of the magnet?
  • Bigger the field strength, the better. This is
    both from a sensitivity and dispersion of signals
    point of view.
  • Expressed in Hz, permits easiser math and trig as
    needed. Gauss would generate energies in ergs.

Remember the energy difference gives the
population excess. Roughly H7/4 increase
energy
?E h ? H0Iz
Field strength, H0
52
The NMR Probe
Matching to Tx network
Sample goes inside here
Coil
Tuned Circuit
Usually there is a double tuned response for
Deuterium lock A second coil provides a
decoupling, gradient or other RF
53
How Sensitive is NMR?
Nspins
The Rider site, referenced below gives
receptivity vs. 13C with clickable entries. These
reflect natural abundance, ?, etc.
http//arrhenius.rider.edu/nmr/NMR_tutor/periodic_
table/nmr_pt_frameset.html Another good site is
http//nmr.magnet.fsu.edu/resources/nuclei/table.h
tm
54
The answer to that question is
  • Not all that Sensitive!
  • At any given time Mass spec is at least a 104
    times more sensitive
  • Compare with UV, IR at least 102x sensitive
  • This is tied to the fact that NMR detects only
    the tiny Boltzmann excess. Any old molecule can
    fragment in MS or absorb a IR photon. Lots of
    research in NMR aimed at the sensitivity problem

55
Most Important Nuclei in NMR
  • 1H, (also 2H, 3H)
  • 13C
  • 31P
  • 15N especially when labeled into proteins
  • 19F
  • 29Si
  • Some isotopes of Sn, Cd. Pb, Ag, Pt
  • No coincidence that these are the I1/2 nuclei.
    Spin numbers higher possess nuclear quadrupole
    moment as well. This couples to, broadens and
    complicates the nuclear spin angular momentum.
    For the most part these are niche nuclei.
    Exception is 11B

56
Quadrupolar Nuclei
  • Spin 1
  • Electric field at nucleus non-symmetrical
  • Effective relaxation mechanism, promotes loss of
    NMR fine structure
  • decouple from attached spins. Can even wipe out
    attached spin 1/2 signals.
  • Lines are broad, very challenging NMR
  • 35Cl, 11B, 17O, 14N, 7Li, etc.
  • Some redeem themselves, deuterium, 6Li
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