Operating frequency
The operating frequency of a magnet is calculated from the Larmor equationChemical shift referencing
Chemical shift δ is usually expressed in parts per million (ppm) by frequency, because it is calculated from:The induced magnetic field
The electrons around a nucleus will circulate in a magnetic field and create a secondary induced magnetic field. This field opposes the applied field as stipulated by Lenz's law and the nucleus is therefore said to be shielded. Trends in chemical shift are explained based on the degree of shielding or deshielding.Nuclei are found to resonate in a wide range to the left (or more rare to the right) of the internal standard. When a signal is found with a higher chemical shift:
- the applied effective magnetic field is lower, if the resonance frequency is fixed, (as in old traditional CW spectrometers)
- the frequency is higher, when the applied magnetic field is static, (normal case in FT spectrometers)
- the nucleus is more deshielded
- the signal or shift is downfield or at low field or paramagnetic
Conversely a lower chemical shift is called a diamagnetic shift, and is upfield and more shielded.
Diamagnetic Shielding
In real molecules protons are surrounded by a cloud of charge due to adjacent bonds and atoms. In an applied magnetic field (B0) electrons circulate and produce an induced field (Bi) which opposes the applied field. The effective field at the nucleus will be B = B0 - Bi. The nucleus is said to be experiencing a diamagnetic shielding.
Factors causing chemical shifts
Important factors influencing chemical shift are electron density, electronegativity of neighboring groups and anisotropic induced magnetic field effects.Electron density shields a nucleus from the external field. For example in proton NMR the electron-poor tropylium ion has its protons downfield at 9.17 ppm, those of the electron-rich cyclooctatetraenyl anion move upfield to 6.75 ppm and its dianion even more upfield to 5.56 ppm.
A nucleus in the vicinity of an electronegative atom experiences reduced electron density and the nucleus is therefore deshielded. In proton NMR of methyl halides (CH3X) the chemical shift of the methyl protons increase in the order I > Br > Cl > F from 2.16 ppm to 4.26 ppm reflecting this trend. In carbon NMR the chemical shift of the carbon nuclei increase in the same order from around -10 ppm to 70 ppm. Also when the electronegative atom is removed further away the effect diminishes until it can be observed no longer. Anisotropic induced magnetic field effects are the result of a local induced magnetic field experienced by a nucleus resulting from circulating electrons that can either be paramagnetic when it is parallel to the applied field or diamagnetic when it is opposed to it. It is observed in alkenes where the double bond is oriented perpendicular to the external field with pi electrons likewise circulating at right angles. The induced magnetic field lines are parallel to the external field at the location of the alkene protons which therefore shift downfield to a 4.5 ppm - 7.5 ppm range. The three-dimensional space where a nucleus experiences diamagnetic shift is called the shielding zone with a cone-like shape aligned with the external field.
The protons in aromatic compounds are shifted downfield even further with a signal for benzene at 7.73 ppm as a consequence of a diamagnetic ring current.
Alkyne protons by contrast resonate at high field in a 2-3 ppm range. For alkynes the most effective orientation in the external field in parallel with electrons circulation around the triple bond. In this way the acetylenic protons are located in the cone-shaped shielding zone hence the upfield shift.
Magnetic properties of most common nuclei
1H and 13C aren't the only nuclei susceptible to NMR experiments. A number of different nuclei can also be detected, although the use of such techniques is generally rare due to small relative sensitivities in NMR experiments (compared to 1H) of the nuclei in question, the other factor for rare use being their slender representation in nature/organic compounds.| Isotope | Occurrence in nature (%) | spin number l | Magnetic moment μ | Electric quadrupole moment (e×10-24 cm2) | Frequency at 7 T (MHz) | Relative sensitivity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1H | 99.984 | 1/2 | 2.79628 | 300.13 | 1 | ||
| 2H | 0.016 | 1 | 0.85739 | 2.8 x 10-3 | 46.07 | 0.0964 | |
| 10B | 18.8 | 3 | 1.8005 | 7.4 x 10-2 | 32.25 | 0.0199 | |
| 11B | 81.2 | 3/2 | 2.6880 | 2.6 x 10-2 | 96.29 | 0.165 | |
| 12C | 98.9 | 0 | |||||
| 13C | 1.1 | 1/2 | 0.70220 | 75.47 | 0.0159 | ||
| 14N | 99.64 | 1 | 0.40358 | 7.1 x 10-2 | 21.68 | 0.00101 | |
| 15N | 0.37 | 1/2 | −0.28304 | 30.41 | 0.00104 | ||
| 16O | 99.76 | 0 | |||||
| 17O | 0.0317 | 5/2 | −1.8930 | −4.0 x 10-3 | 40.69 | 0.0291 | |
| 19F | 100 | 1/2 | 2.6273 | 282.40 | 0.834 | ||
| 28Si | 92.28 | 0 | |||||
| 29Si | 4.70 | 1/2 | −0.55548 | 59.63 | 0.0785 | ||
| 31P | 100 | 1/2 | 1.1205 | 121.49 | 0.0664 | ||
| 35Cl | 75.4 | 3/2 | 0.92091 | −7.9 x 10-2 | 29.41 | 0.0047 | |
| 37Cl | 24.6 | 3/2 | 0.68330 | −6.2 x 10-2 | 24.48 | 0.0027 | |
| Magnetic properties of common nuclei | |||||||
- 1H because of high sensitivity and vast occurrence in organic compounds
- 13C because of being the key component of all organic compounds despite occurring at a low abundance (1.1%) compared to the major isotope of carbon 12C, which has a spin of 0 and therefore is NMR inactive.
- 15N because of being a key component of important biomolecules such as proteins and DNA
- 19F because of high relative sensitivity
- 31P because of frequent occurrence in organic compounds and moderate relative sensitivity
Other chemical shifts
The related Knight shift (first reported in 1949) is observed with pure metals. The NMR chemical shift in its present day meaning first appeared in journals in 1950. Chemical shifts with a different meaning appear in X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy as the shift in atomic core-level energy due to a specific chemical environment. The term is also used in Mössbauer spectroscopySee also
- Carbon-13 NMR
- MRI
- NMR spectroscopy
- Nuclear magnetic resonance
- Protein NMR
- Proton NMR
- Solid-state NMR
- Zeeman effect
External links
- www.chem.wisc.edu
- BioMagResBank
- wwwchem.csustan.edu
- Proton chemical shifts
- Carbon chemical shifts
- Online tutorials (these generally involve combined use of IR, 1H NMR, 13C NMR and mass spectrometry)
- Problem set 1, advanced (see also this link for more background information on spin-spin coupling)
- Problem set 2, moderate
- Problem set 3, for beginners
- Problem set 4, moderate, German language (don't let that scare you away!)
- Problem set 5, the best!
- Combined solutions to problem set 5 (Problems 1–32) and (Problems 33–64)
References
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Last updated on Saturday July 19, 2008 at 06:03:02 PDT (GMT -0700)
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