6: Structure Determination - Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
- Page ID
- 452029
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- solve road-map problems which may require the interpretation of 1H NMR spectra in addition to other spectral data.
- define, and use in context, the key terms introduced.
In Chapter 5, you learned how an organic chemist could use infrared spectroscopy to assist in determining the structure of an unknown compound. This chapter introduces nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The two most common forms of NMR spectroscopy, 1H NMR and 13C NMR, will be discussed, the former in much more detail than the latter. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a very powerful tool, particularly when used in combination with other spectroscopic techniques.
Chapter Videos
This video provides an example of how to predict NMR spectra.
This video provides an example of how to solve a structure determination problem.
This video provides another example of how to solve a structure determination problem.
- 6.3: The Chemical Shift
- We shall try to focus on the interpretation of NMR spectra, not the mathematical aspects of the technique. In this Section, we discuss 1H NMR chemical shifts in more detail. Although you will eventually be expected to associate the approximate region of a 1H NMR spectrum with a particular type of proton, you are expected to use a general table of 1H NMR chemical shifts.