PHYSICAL METHODS IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY AND LABORATORY
cod. 1004470

Academic year 2012/13
1° year of course - Second semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Chimica organica (CHIM/06)
Field
Discipline chimiche organiche
Type of training activity
Characterising
62 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in - - -

Learning objectives

The aim of the first part of the course is to provide students with a thorough knowledge of the advanced tools for the structural analysis or organic compounds using monodimensional and bidimensional NMR spectroscopy. The acquisition of the most common 1D and 2D NMR techniques will be attained in the second part of the course through an extensive laboratory practice on the instruments.

Prerequisites

n/a

Course unit content

Magnetic properties of nuclei: angular momentum and spin angular momentum. The Vector model. Fundamental concepts of 2D NMR spectroscopy. Relaxation processes. The Chemical exchange. The modern NMR spectrometer. Interpretation of 1D e 2D NMR spectra and determination of the structure of an organic compound. Practical exercitations on the NMR spectrometer.

Full programme

Magnetic properties of nuclei: angular momentum and spin angular momentum. Microscopic magnetism. Correlation between magnetism and spin angular momentum.
- NMR Frequencies and Chemical shift. Linewidth and lineshape. Scalar coupling. The basic NMR experiment.
- Energy levels and NMR spectra. The spectrum for one spin. The energy levels for two coupled spins.
- The Vector model. The bulk magnetization. Larmor precession. Detection. Pulses. "On resonance" pulses. The rotating frame. The basic impulse-acquisition sequence. Calibration of pulses. The Spin-Echo experiment. Pulses of various phase. "Off-resonance" effetcs and "soft" pulses. Fourier Transformation and data processing. FID representation. Peaks linewidth and lineshape. FID manipulation. Zero filling.
- The "Product Operators" formalism. Product operators for one spin. Hamiltonians for spins and delays. Equation of motion. The spin-echo experiments with the product operators formalism. Product operators for two weakly coupled spins.
- Fundamental concepts of 2D NMR spectroscopy. 2D NMR experiments with coherence transfer mediated by J-coupling. COSY and DQF-COSY: pulses sequence and spectra interpretation. Double Quantum NMR Spectroscopy. Heterocorrelated 2D NMR spectroscopy. HMQC, HSQC and HMBC experiments: pulses sequence and spectra interpretation. 2D TOCSY NMR experiment: pulses sequence and spectra interpretation.
- Relaxation and Nuclear Overhauser Effect (NOE). The origin of the nuclear relaxation phenomenon. Mechanisms of relaxation. Correlation time. Population of the states. Longitudinal relaxation of isolated spins. Dipolar longitudinal relaxation of two spins. Cross-relaxation. Relaxation due to chemical shift anisotropy.
- NOEDif, NOESY and ROESY experiments: pulses sequence and spectra interpretation
- Coherence selection: phase cycling cycle and field gradient pulses. Order of coherence. Coherence transfer pathways. Frequency discrimination and peak shape.
- The modern NMR spectrometer. Magnet and Probe, Lock Channel, Shim and homogeneity of the magnetic field. RF synthesizer, amplifier and duplexer. Receiver and Quadrature detection. Analogue to digital convertor (ADC). Limits of digitization.
- 1D NMR spectra acquisition and processing (1H and 13C).

Bibliography

Recommended Textbook
- J. Keeler "Understanding NMR Spectroscopy", 2nd Edition, Wiley, 2010.

Suggested Readings:
- T. D. W. Claridge "High-Resolution NMR Techniques in Organic Chemistry, 2nd edition, Tetrahedron Organic Chemistry, Vol. 27, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 2009.
- N. E. Jacobsen "NMR Spectroscopy Explained: Simplified Theory, Applications and Examples for Organic Chemistry and Structural Biology, Wiley, 2007.

Teaching methods

The format of the class will be lectures of one or two hours each spread over three mornings per week. A regular class meetings will be composed of lecture and class exercises, while the practical training on the instrument(s) will take two hours per week usually in the afternoon.

Assessment methods and criteria

The final examination will include a written part in which the candidates have to assign the structure of a known organic compounds to the resonances of several 1D and 2D NMR spectra. In the following oral part, the candidates will be enquired on the theoretical topics discussed during the first part of the course.

Other information

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