determining the structure of an organic compound · determining the structure of an organic...

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7/27/16 1 Chapter 12- Structure Determination: Mass Spectrometry and Infrared Spectroscopy Ashley Piekarski, Ph.D. Determining the Structure of an Organic Compound The analysis of the outcome of a reac=on requires that we know the full structure of the products as well as the reactants In the 19 th and early 20 th centuries, structures were determined by synthesis and chemical degrada=on that related compounds to each other Physical methods now permit structures to be determined directly. We will examine: mass spectrometry (MS) infrared (IR) spectroscopy nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy (VIS)

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Page 1: Determining the Structure of an Organic Compound · Determining the Structure of an Organic Compound ... • Result from fractional mass differences of atoms 16O = ... - Matrix-assisted

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Chapter 12- Structure Determination: Mass Spectrometry and Infrared Spectroscopy

AshleyPiekarski,Ph.D.

Determining the Structure of an Organic Compound

•  Theanalysisoftheoutcomeofareac=onrequiresthatweknowthefullstructureoftheproductsaswellasthereactants

•  Inthe19thandearly20thcenturies,structuresweredeterminedbysynthesisandchemicaldegrada=onthatrelatedcompoundstoeachother

•  Physicalmethodsnowpermitstructurestobedetermineddirectly.Wewillexamine:•  mass spectrometry (MS) •  infrared (IR) spectroscopy •  nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) •  ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy (VIS)

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Why this Chapter?

•  Findingstructuresofnewmoleculessynthesizediscri=cal

•  Togetagoodideaoftherangeofstructuraltechniquesavailableandhowtheyshouldbeused

12.1 Mass Spectrometry of Small Molecules:Magnetic-Sector Instruments •  Measuresmolecularweight•  Samplevaporizedandsubjectedtobombardmentby

electronsthatremoveanelectron•  Creates a cation radical

•  Bondsinca=onradicalsbegintobreak(fragment)•  Chargetomassra=oismeasured

hTp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-wao0O0_qM

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The Mass Spectrum

•  Plotmassofions(m/z)(x-axis)versustheintensityofthesignal(roughlycorrespondingtothenumberofions)(y-axis)

•  Tallestpeakisbasepeak(100%)•  Other peaks listed as the % of that peak

•  Peakthatcorrespondstotheunfragmentedradicalca=onisparentpeakormolecularion(M+)

12.2 Interpreting Mass Spectra

•  Molecularweightfromthemassofthemolecularion•  Double-focusinginstrumentsprovidehigh-resolu=on

“exactmass”•  0.0001 atomic mass units – distinguishing specific

atoms •  ExampleMW“72”isambiguous:C5H12andC4H8Obut:

•  C5H12 72.0939 amu exact mass C4H8O 72.0575 amu exact mass

•  Result from fractional mass differences of atoms 16O = 15.99491, 12C = 12.0000, 1H = 1.00783

•  Instrumentsincludecomputa=onofformulasforeachpeak

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Other Mass Spectral Features

•  Ifparentionnotpresentduetoelectronbombardmentcausingbreakdown,“soder”methodssuchaschemicalioniza=onareused

•  Peaksabovethemolecularweightappearasaresultofnaturallyoccurringheavierisotopesinthesample•  (M+1) from 13C that is randomly present

Interpreting Mass-Spectral Fragmentation Patterns

•  Thewaymolecularionsbreakdowncanproducecharacteris=cfragmentsthathelpiniden=fica=on•  Serves as a “fingerprint” for comparison with

known materials in analysis (used in forensics) •  Positive charge goes to fragments that best can

stabilize it

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Mass Spectral Fragmentation of Hexane

•  Hexane(m/z=86forparent)haspeaksatm/z=71,57,43,29

12.3 Mass Spectrometry of Some Common Functional Groups

Alcohols:•  Alcoholsundergoα-cleavage(atthebondnexttothe

C-OH)aswellaslossofH-OHtogiveC=C

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Mass Spectral Cleavage of Amines

•  Aminesundergoα-cleavage,genera=ngradicals

Fragmentation of Carbonyl Compounds

•  AC-HthatisthreeatomsawayleadstoaninternaltransferofaprotontotheC=O,calledtheMcLaffertyrearrangement

•  Carbonylcompoundscanalsoundergoαcleavage

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12.4 Mass Spectrometry in Biological Chemistry: Time-of-Flight (TOF) Instruments

•  MostbiochemicalanalysesbyMSuse:-  electrosprayioniza=on(ESI)-  Matrix-assistedlaserdesorp=onioniza=on(MALDI)

12.5 Spectroscopy and the Electromagnetic Spectrum

•  Radiantenergyispropor=onaltoitsfrequency(cycles/s=Hz)asawave(Amplitudeisitsheight)

•  Differenttypesareclassifiedbyfrequencyorwavelengthranges

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Absorption Spectra

•  Organiccompoundexposedtoelectromagne=cradia=on,canabsorbenergyofonlycertainwavelengths(unitofenergy)•  Transmits energy of other wavelengths.

•  ChangingwavelengthstodeterminewhichareabsorbedandwhicharetransmiTedproducesanabsorp6onspectrum

•  Energyabsorbedisdistributedinternallyinadis=nctandreproducibleway(SeeFigure12-12)

12.6 Infrared Spectroscopy

•  IRregionlowerenergythanvisiblelight(belowred–produceshea=ngaswithaheatlamp)

•  2.5x10-6mto2.5x10-5mregionusedbyorganicchemistsforstructuralanalysis

•  IRenergyinaspectrumisusuallymeasuredaswavenumber(cm-1),theinverseofwavelengthandpropor=onaltofrequency

•  SpecificIRabsorbedbyorganicmoleculerelatedtoitsstructure

hTp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDTIJgIh86E

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Infrared Energy Modes

•  IRenergyabsorp=oncorrespondstospecificmodes,correspondingtocombina=onsofatomicmovements,suchasbendingandstretchingofbondsbetweengroupsofatomscalled“normalmodes”

•  Energyischaracteris=coftheatomsinthegroupandtheirbonding

•  Correspondstovibra=onsandrota=ons

12.7 Interpreting Infrared Spectra

•  Mostfunc=onalgroupsabsorbataboutthesameenergyandintensityindependentofthemoleculetheyarein

•  Characteris=chigherenergyIRabsorp=onsinTable12.1canbeusedtoconfirmtheexistenceofthepresenceofafunc=onalgroupinamolecule

•  IRspectrumhaslowerenergyregioncharacteris=cofmoleculeasawhole(“fingerprint”region)

•  SeesamplesinFigure12-14

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Regions of the Infrared Spectrum

•  4000-2500cm-1N-H,C-H,O-H(stretching)•  3300-3600 N-H, O-H •  3000 C-H

•  2500-2000cm-1C-CandC-Ntriplebonds(stretching)

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•  2000-1500cm-1doublebonds(stretching)–  C=O1680-1750–  C=C1640-1680cm-1

•  Below1500cm-1“fingerprint”region

Differences in Infrared Absorptions

•  Moleculesvibrateandrotateinnormalmodes,whicharecombina=onsofmo=ons(relatestoforceconstants)

•  Bondstretchingdominateshigherenergymodes•  Lightobjectsconnectedtoheavyobjectsvibratefastest:C-H,

N-H,O-H•  Fortwoheavyatoms,strongerbondrequiresmoreenergy:

CCtriplebond,CNtriplebond>C=C,C=O,C=N>C-C,C-O,C-N,C-halogen

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12.8 Infrared Spectra of Some Common Functional Groups

IR: Aromatic Compounds

•  WeakC–Hstretchat3030cm-1

•  Weakabsorp=ons1660-2000cm-1range•  Medium-intensityabsorp=ons1450to1600cm-1

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IR: Alcohols and Amines

•  O–H3400to3650cm-1•  Usually broad and intense

•  N–H3300to3500cm-1•  Sharper and less intense than an O–H

IR: Carbonyl Compounds

•  Strong,sharpC=Opeak1670to1780cm-1

•  Exactabsorp=oncharacteris=coftypeofcarbonylcompound•  1730 cm-1 in saturated aldehydes •  1705 cm-1 in aldehydes next to double bond or

aromatic ring

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C=O in Ketones