When proton-coupled carbon-13 spectra are simplified by a broadband proton decoupling technique, structural information about the coupled protons is lost. Distortionless enhancement by polarization transfer (DEPT) is a technique that provides information on the number of hydrogens attached to each carbon in a molecule. While the DEPT experiment utilizes complex pulse sequences, the pulse delay and flip angle are specifically manipulated. The resulting signals have different phases depending on the number of protons attached to the carbon. As a result, methyl, methylene, and methine carbons produce separate signals, whereas quaternary carbons produce no signal.
The DEPT experiment provides a series of spectra. First, the broadband decoupled carbon-13 spectrum is obtained, which shows the chemical shifts of all nonequivalent carbons. Next in the series is the DEPT-45 spectrum, which shows signals from all the protonated carbons. The DEPT-90 spectrum shows peaks only from –CH groups. Finally, in the DEPT-135 spectrum, methyl and methine carbons appear as positive peaks, while methylene carbons appear as negative peaks. Taken together, the DEPT spectra are very useful for structure elucidation.
From Chapter 8:
Now Playing
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
820 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
394 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
844 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
1.1K Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
766 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
884 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
1.0K Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
2.0K Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
1.2K Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
1.0K Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
972 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
2.8K Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
954 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
742 Views
Interpreting Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra
825 Views
See More
ABOUT JoVE
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved