The derivation of structural information from spectroscopic data is now an integral part of organic chemistry courses at all Universities. A critical part of any such course is a suitable set of problems to develop the student's understanding of how structures are determined from spectra.
Organic Structures from Spectra, FourthEditionis a carefully chosen set of more than 280 structural problems employing the major modern spectroscopic techniques, a selection of 18 problems using 2D-NMR spectroscopy, more than 20 problems specifically dealing with the interpretation of spin-spin coupling in proton NMR spectra and 8 problems based on the quantitative analysis of mixtures using proton and carbon NMR spectroscopy. All of the problems are graded to develop and consolidate the student's understanding of organic spectroscopy. The accompanying text is descriptive and only explains the underlying theory at a level which is sufficient to tackle the problems. The text includes condensed tables of characteristic spectral properties covering the frequently encountered functional groups.
The examples themselves have been selected to include all important structural features and to emphasise connectivity arguments. Many of the compounds were synthesised specifically for this purpose. There are many more easy problems, to build confidence and demonstrate basic principles, than in other collections.
The fourth edition of this popular textbook:
* now incorporates a suite of new problems dealing with the analysis of 2D NMR spectra (COSY, NOESY, TOCSY and C-H Correlation spectroscopy);
* has been expanded and updated to reflect the new developments in the area;
* has an additional 25 carefully selected basic problems;
* provides a set of problems dealing specifically with the quantitative analysis of mixtures using NMR spectroscopy;
* features proton NMR spectra obtained at 200, 400 and 600 MHz and 13C NMR spectra include DEPT experiments as well as proton-coupled experiments;
* conatins 6 problems in the style of the experimental section of a research paper and the appendix contains examples of fully worked solutions.
Organic Structures from Spectra, Fourth Edition will prove invaluable for students of Chemistry, Pharmacy and Biochemistry taking a first course in Organic Chemistry.
Review from earlier edition
".I would definitely state that this book is the most useful aid to basic organic spectroscopy teaching in existence and I would strongly recommend every instructor in this area to use it either as a source of examples or as a class textbook".
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Editions-Typ
Maße
Höhe: 22.9 cm
Breite: 15.2 cm
Dicke: 27 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-470-31927-7 (9780470319277)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Preface.
List of Tables.
List of Figures.
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY
1.2 CHROMOPHORES
1.3 DEGREE OF UNSATURATION
1.4 CONNECTIVITY
1.5 SENSITIVITY
1.6 PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS
2 ULTRAVIOLET (UV) SPECTROSCOPY
2.1 BASIC INSTRUMENTATION
2.2 THE NATURE OF ULTRAVIOLET SPECTROSCOPY
2.3 QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF ULTRAVIOLET SPECTROSCOPY
2.4 CLASSIFICATION OF UV ABSORPTION BANDS
2.5 SPECIAL TERMS IN ULTRAVIOLET SPECTROSCOPY
2.6 IMPORTANT UV CHROMOPHORES
2.7 THE EFFECT OF SOLVENTS
3 INFRARED (IR) SPECTROSCOPY
3.1 ABSORPTION RANGE AND THE NATURE OF IR ABSORPTION
3.2 EXPERIMENTAL ASPECTS OF INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY
3.3 GENERAL FEATURES OF INFRARED SPECTRA
3.4 IMPORTANT IR CHROMOPHORES
4 MASS SPECTROMETRY
4.1 IONIZATION PROCESSES
4.2 INSTRUMENTATION
4.3 MASS SPECTRAL DATA
4.4 REPRESENTATION OF FRAGMENTATION PROCESSES
4.5 FACTORS GOVERNING FRAGMENTATION PROCESSES
4.6 EXAMPLES OF COMMON TYPES OF FRAGMENTATION
5 NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE (NMR) SPECTROSCOPY
5.1 THE PHYSICS OF NUCLEAR SPINS AND NMR INSTRUMENTS
5.2 CONTINUOUS WAVE (CW) NMR SPECTROSCOPY
5.3 FOURIER-TRANSFORM (FT) NMR SPECTROSCOPY
5.4 CHEMICAL SHIFT IN 1H NMR SPECTROSCOPY
5.5 SPIN-SPIN COUPLING IN 1H NMR SPECTROSCOPY
5.6 ANALYSIS OF 1H NMR SPECTRA
5.7 RULES FOR SPECTRAL ANALYSIS
6. 13C NMR SPECTROSCOPY
6.1 COUPLING AND DECOUPLING IN 13C NMR SPECTRA
6.2 DETERMINING 13C SIGNAL MULTIPLICITY USING DEPT
6.3 SHIELDING AND CHARACTERISTIC CHEMICAL SHIFTS IN
13C NMR SPECTRA
7 MISCELLANEOUS TOPICS
7.1 DYNAMIC PROCESSES IN NMR - THE NMR TIME-SCALE
7.2 THE EFFECT OF CHIRALITY
7.3 THE NUCLEAR OVERHAUSER EFFECT (NOE)
7.4 TWO DIMENSIONAL NMR
7.5 THE NMR SPECTRA OF "OTHER NUCLEI"
7.6 SOLVENT - INDUCED SHIFTS
8 DETERMINING THE STRUCTURE OF ORGANIC MOLECULES FROM SPECTRA
9 PROBLEMS
9.1 ORGANIC STRUCTURES FROM SPECTRA
9.2 THE ANALYSIS OF MIXTURES
9.3 PROBLEMS IN 2-DIMENSIONAL NMR
9.4 NMR SPECTRAL ANALYSIS
APPENDIX
INDEX