Entrar

Replacing each alpha-hydrogen in chloroethane by bromine (or a different functional group) yields a pair of enantiomers. Such protons are called prochiral or enantiotopic and are related by a mirror plane. Enantiotopic protons are chemically equivalent in an achiral environment. Because most proton NMR spectra are recorded using achiral solvents, enantiotopic hydrogens yield a single signal.

In chiral compounds such as 2-butanol, replacing the methylene hydrogens at C3 produces a pair of diastereomers. Such protons are called diastereotopic, and they perceive different environments in all conformations. They cannot be interchanged by rotation or reflection and have slightly different chemical shifts.

Tags

1H NMRChemical ShiftEquivalenceEnantiotopic ProtonsDiastereotopic ProtonsProchiralEnantiomersAchiral EnvironmentChiral Compounds2 butanolDiastereomersMethylene HydrogensChemical Shifts

Do Capítulo 8:

article

Now Playing

8.8 : ¹H NMR Chemical Shift Equivalence: Enantiotopic and Diastereotopic Protons

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.3K Visualizações

article

8.1 : Chemical Shift: Internal References and Solvent Effects

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

532 Visualizações

article

8.2 : NMR Spectroscopy: Chemical Shift Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.3K Visualizações

article

8.3 : Proton (¹H) NMR: Chemical Shift

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.4K Visualizações

article

8.4 : Inductive Effects on Chemical Shift: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.0K Visualizações

article

8.5 : π Electron Effects on Chemical Shift: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

998 Visualizações

article

8.6 : π Electron Effects on Chemical Shift: Aromatic and Antiaromatic Compounds

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.1K Visualizações

article

8.7 : ¹H NMR Chemical Shift Equivalence: Homotopic and Heterotopic Protons

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

2.2K Visualizações

article

8.9 : ¹H NMR Signal Integration: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.2K Visualizações

article

8.10 : NMR Spectroscopy: Spin–Spin Coupling

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.1K Visualizações

article

8.11 : ¹H NMR Signal Multiplicity: Splitting Patterns

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

4.8K Visualizações

article

8.12 : Interpreting ¹H NMR Signal Splitting: The (n + 1) Rule

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.1K Visualizações

article

8.13 : Spin–Spin Coupling Constant: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

837 Visualizações

article

8.14 : Spin–Spin Coupling: One-Bond Coupling

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

900 Visualizações

article

8.15 : Spin–Spin Coupling: Two-Bond Coupling (Geminal Coupling)

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

893 Visualizações

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidade

Termos de uso

Políticas

Pesquisa

Educação

SOBRE A JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos os direitos reservados