Title: Spectroscopy
1Spectroscopy
- Organic Chemistry
- Fall 2008
2Anasazi Multinuclear NMR
3Paragon 1000 FT-IR
4Infrared Spectroscopy
5History
- IR radiation discovered by Sir William Herschel
in 1800 - Coblentz recorded extensive data on the
interaction of infrared radiation with organic
and inorganic compounds showing that each
compound had a unique spectrum - First double beam instruments (Perkin Elmer and
Beckman) came in the 1940s - First FT-IR instruments came out in 1980s from
perkin Elmer
6Basic Theory
- Molecules with covalent bonds may absorb IR
radiation - The absorption is quantized so only certain
frequencies of IR radiation - IR radiation will cause molecules to move to
higher rotational levels and higher vibrational
levels - Because each vibrational excited state has
rotational sublevels the peaks are broad bands - The molecule must have a change in dipole moment
during the vibration to be IR active
7Types of Vibrational Transitions
- There are two modes of vibrations
- Stretching
- Involve changes in bond length resulting in
changes of interatomic distance - Two modes symmetrical and asymmetrical
- Bending
- Involves changes in bond angle or change in the
position of a group of atoms - Scissoring, rocking, wagging, and twisting
8Requirements for Absorption
- The natural frequency of vibration of the
molecule must equal the frequency of the incident
radiation - The frequency must be equal to the ?E between the
vibrational state - The vibration must cause a change in µ
- The amount of radiation absorbed is proportional
to the square of the rate of change in the µ - The ?E is modified by coupling to rotational
energy levels
9FT-IR Instruments
centerburst
FFT
10Stretching Vibrations
11Stretching and Bending Modes
12Basic Equation
- The stretching vibrational modes can be modeled
by using Hookes Law for springs - Frequency 1 / 2p v / µ
- force constant of the bond
- µ reduced mass
- µ M1M2 / M1 M2
13Typical Spectrum - Polystyrene
Functional Group Region - Stretching
Fingerprint Region
T
Aromatic
Aromatic
Cm-1
14Sampling Techniques
- Broad categories
- Transmittance and Reflectance
- Solids
- Nujol, KBr mull
- Evaporative films
- Diamond anvil cell
- Liquids
- Sealed cell Demountable cell (Beta Cell)
- IR Cards (PE and Teflon films)
- Gas
- Gas cell (path length up to one meter)
15Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
16History of the Method
- First Commercial Instrument Varian HR-30 in 1952
- Permanent magnet
- Only for hydrogen spectra
- First Fourier Instrument Varian FT-80 in 1978
- Electromagnet (water cooled)
- Used 1,000,000 mainframe computer
- Latest design Varian 900 mHz Superconducting
FT-NMR (2.5 Million) - Related technique Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(the dont spin the sample !!)
17Basic Principles
- Paramagnetic nuclei (odd number of protons or
neutrons) will behave as magnets when placed in
magnetic field - EM radiation in the radiofrequency range will
cause the nuclear magnets to absorb energy and be
promoted to higher energy arrangement with their
magnetic fields aligned against the applied field - When the excited nuclei fall back to lower energy
they release a resonant frequency to that
absorbed
18Nobel Laureates in NMR
- E. Bloch and F. Purcell (1952) for demonstrating
the NMR effect in 1946 - R. Ernst and W. Anderson (1991) for discovering
and developing pulsed FT-NMR methods and 2-D
methods - Fenn, Tanaka, and Wuthrich (2002) for discovering
methods for analysis of 3D structure of proteins
by NMR and MS
19Basic Design of the Instrument
20Paramagnetic Nuclei in Magnetic Field
21Energy Difference is Field Dependent
v ? Bo / 2p ? magnetogyric ratio Bo
magnetic field
Larmor Frequency (v)
22The NMR Spectrum
FFT
23Chemical Shifts
- From the basic equation it would appear that all
nuclei of hydrogen or carbon would resonate at
the same combination of Bo and frequency (same
Larmor frequency) - But each set of nuclei see a different effective
field (Beff Bo sBo) - s is the screening constant or the diamagnetic
shielding constant - For most compounds the value of sBo is different
for each unique nucleus present in the molecule - Beff and the separation seen are both dependent
upon the applied magnetic field, thus higher
fields yield better resolution of closely
appearing peaks
24Measurement of Chemical Shifts
- The absolute value of the frequency cannot be
accurately measured (varies by ppm of Hz),
therefore an internal standard is used (TMS) and
the relative chemical shift from TMS is measured
and divided by the field strength of the
instrument so that it is independent of field
strength - Chemical shift ?S ?R / ?NMR
25The Spectrum
Deshielded region
TMS
Shielded region
Higher ?
Lower ?
Chemical Shift (ppm)
26Sample Preparation Techniques
- For carbon samples with the EFT-60 instrument you
need a neat sample or at least a 40 mg/mL
deuterated solvent sample (0.75 to 1.0 mL) - For proton samples with the EFT-60 you can obtain
a good spectrum with a single scan with a 5
solution of the solid or liquid sample in a
deuterated solvent - Common deuterated solvents chloroform, benzene,
acetone, acetonitrile) - Sample MUST be filtered through a glass fiber
filter to remove any metallic particles and dust
27Pentane, proton spectrum
28Pentane, carbon spectrum
29Pentane, IR spectrum
30Steps to Work Spectral Problems
- Calculate the index of hydrogen deficiency
- Look at the FT-IR and determine the functional
groups present (CO, O-H) - Look at the H-NMR to determine the presence of
aromatic/aliphatic hydrogens - Count number of carbons from the C-NMR
- Using the chemical formula (if given) draw
possible structures - See which structure fits the H-NMR splitting
pattern
31Different Spectral Data
- UV-Vis a peak indicates multiple double bonds or
aromatic ring(s) - FT-IR indicates functional groups
- H-NMR indicates number of unique hydrogens,
splitting indicates neighboring hydrogens,
position indicates type of H - C-NMR indicates number of unique carbons,
position indicates type of carbon
32Proton NMR Spectra
- Number of signals number of unique kinds of
hydrogen - Intensity of signals (area) number of hydrogens
giving each signal - Position of signals type of hydrogens
- Splitting of signals number of adjacent
hydrogens (n1 rule) - Spacing of splitting coupling constant
33Common IR Peaks
- C-H stretch 2960-2850 cm-1
- C-H unsaturated stretch 3100-3120
- CC 1680-1620
- CC 2260-2100
- CC-H 3350-3300
- Ar-H 3030-3000
- Benzene, CC 1600, 1500
- O-H stretch 3650-3400
- C-O stretch 1150-1050
- CO stretch 1780-1640
- N-H stretch 3500-3300
- C-N stretch 1230, 1030
- CN stretch 2260-2210
- RNO2 1540
34Common H-NMR Peaks
- CH3 0.7 - 1.3 ppm
- CH2 1.2 - 1.4 ppm
- CH 1.4 - 1.7 ppm
- C-H 4.5 - 6.5 ppm
- OC-CH3 2.1 - 2.6 ppm
- Ar-CH3 2.2 - 2.7 ppm
- C-H 2.5 - 3.1 ppm
- C-H 9.5 10 ppm
- C-O-H 1.0 6.0 ppm
- X-C-H 2.0 4.0 ppm
35Triplet
CDCl3
Quartet
Multiplet
1750 cm-1
C6H12O2
1150 cm-1
36Spectroscopy Problems
37IR Overtones 1600-2000 cm-1
381-Hexene, proton spectrum
391-Hexene, carbon spectrum
401-Hexene, FT-IR spectrum
41Limonene, proton spectrum
42Limonene, carbon spectrum
43Limonene, FT-IR spectrum
441-Bromopentane, proton spectrum
451-Bromopentane, carbon spectrum
461-Bromopentane, FT IR spectrum
471-Pentanol, proton spectrum
481-Pentanol, carbon spectrum
491-Pentanol, FT-IR spectrum
50Sec-Butyl methyl ether, proton
51Sec-Butyl methyl ether, carbon
52Unknown, proton spectrum
53Unknown, carbon spectrum
54Unknown, FT-IR spectrum
55sec-Butylamine, proton
56Sec-Butylamine, carbon
57Sec-Butylamine, FT-IR
582-Butanone, proton
592-Butanone, carbon
602-Butanone, FT-IR
61Unknown 2, proton
62Unknown 2, carbon
63Unknown 2, FT-IR
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