Войдите в систему

Vicinal or three-bond coupling is commonly observed between protons attached to adjacent carbons. Here, nuclear spin information is primarily transferred via electron spin interactions between adjacent C‑H bond orbitals. This generally favors the antiparallel arrangement of spins, so 3J values are usually positive.

The extent of coupling depends on the C‑C bond length, the two H‑C‑C angles, any electron-withdrawing substituents, and the dihedral angle between the involved orbitals. The stereoelectronic interactions between the involved orbitals are maximized when the orbitals are synperiplanar at a dihedral angle of zero and minimized when the orbitals are orthogonal. Strong coupling is also seen at 180° when the back lobes of the sp3 orbitals overlap.

The Karplus equation predicts the approximate variation of 3JHH as a function of the dihedral angle.

Figure1

This relationship is evident in the vicinal coupling constants of cyclohexane derivatives, where ring flipping is restricted by the presence of bulky substituents. In acyclic systems, however, single bonds rotate rapidly and the observed coupling constant is an average over all the conformations.

Теги

Vicinal CouplingThree bond CouplingNuclear SpinElectron Spin InteractionsC H Bond Orbitals3J ValuesBond LengthDihedral AngleStereoelectronic InteractionsSynperiplanarOrthogonal OrbitalsStrong CouplingKarplus EquationCoupling ConstantsCyclohexane DerivativesRing Flipping

Из главы 8:

article

Now Playing

8.16 : Spin–Spin Coupling: Three-Bond Coupling (Vicinal Coupling)

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

992 Просмотры

article

8.1 : Chemical Shift: Internal References and Solvent Effects

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

531 Просмотры

article

8.2 : NMR Spectroscopy: Chemical Shift Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.3K Просмотры

article

8.3 : Proton (¹H) NMR: Chemical Shift

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.4K Просмотры

article

8.4 : Inductive Effects on Chemical Shift: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.0K Просмотры

article

8.5 : π Electron Effects on Chemical Shift: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

997 Просмотры

article

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

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.1K Просмотры

article

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

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

2.2K Просмотры

article

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

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.3K Просмотры

article

8.9 : ¹H NMR Signal Integration: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.2K Просмотры

article

8.10 : NMR Spectroscopy: Spin–Spin Coupling

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.1K Просмотры

article

8.11 : ¹H NMR Signal Multiplicity: Splitting Patterns

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

4.8K Просмотры

article

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

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

1.1K Просмотры

article

8.13 : Spin–Spin Coupling Constant: Overview

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

834 Просмотры

article

8.14 : Spin–Spin Coupling: One-Bond Coupling

Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra

898 Просмотры

See More

JoVE Logo

Исследования

Образование

О JoVE

Авторские права © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Все права защищены