Title: NMR Spectroscopy
1NMR Spectroscopy
2Nuclei in Magnetic Field
- Nucleus rotate about an axis -- spin
Nucleus bears a charge, its spin gives rise to a
magnetic field . The resulting magnetic moment is
oriented along the axis of spin and is
proportional to angular momentum m g p
- magnetic moment
- p angular momentum
- g magnetogyric ratio
3Nuclei in Magnetic Field
- Spin Quantum Number I
- a characteristic property of a nucleus. May be
an integer or half integer
of protons of neutrons I even even 0 odd
odd integer 1,2,3 even even half
integral odd odd half integral
4Nuclei in Magnetic Field
- Properties of nucleus with spin quantum number I
1. An angular momentum of magnitude
I(I1)1/2h 2. A component of angular momentum
mIh on an arbitrary axis where mII, I-1, -I
(magnetic quantum number) 3. When Igt0, a magnetic
moment with a constant magnitude and an
orientation that is determined by the value of
mI. m g mI h
5Nuclei in Magnetic Field
- In a magnetic field B (in z direction) there are
2I1 orientations of nucleus with different
energies.
B0 magnetic field in z direction nL Larmor
Frequency
6Nuclei in Magnetic Field
- For I1/2 nucleus mI 1/2 and 1/2
7Nuclei in Magnetic Field
8Nuclei in Magnetic Field
9Nuclei in Magnetic Field
10Nuclei in Magnetic Field
11Nuclei in Magnetic Field
Distribution between two states
12Nuclei in Magnetic Field
13Nuclei in Magnetic Field
Magnetizaton
The difference in populations of the two states
can be considered as a surplus in the lower
energy state according to the Boltzmann
distribution A net magnetization of the sample is
stationary and aligned along the z axis (applied
field direction)
14Nuclei in Magnetic Field
15Effect of a radio frequency
16Effect of a radio frequency
17Effect of a radio frequency
18NMR Signals
19Relaxation- Return to Equilibrium
t
t
z axis
x,y plane
0
0
Longitudinal
Transverse
1
1
t
t
2
2
E-t/T2
1-e-t/T1
8
8
Transverse always faster!
20NMR Spectroscopy
21Free Induction Decay (FID)
- FID represents the time-domain response of the
spin system following application of an
radio-frequency pulse. - With one magnetization at w0, receiver coil would
see exponentially decaying signal. This decay is
due to relaxation.
22Fourier Transform
The Fourier transform relates the time-domain
f(t) data with the frequency-domain f(w) data.
23Fourier Transform
24Fourier Transform
25NMR line shape
Lorentzian line A amplitude W half-line width
26Resolution
- Definition
- For signals in frequency domain it is the
deviation of the peak line-shape from standard
Lorentzian peak. For time domain signal, it is
the deviation of FID from exponential decay.
Resolution of NMR peaks is represented by the
half-height width in Hz.
27Resolution
28Resolution-digital resolution
29Resolution
- Measurement
- half-height width
- 1015 solution of 0-dichlorobenzene (ODCB)
in acetone - Line-shape
- Chloroform in acetone
30Resolution
- Factors affect resolution
- Relaxation process of the observed nucleus
- Stability of B0 (shimming and deuterium
locking) - Probe (sample coil should be very close to the
sample) - Sample properties and its conditions
31Sensitivity
- Definition
- signal to noise-ratio
- A height of the chosen peak
- Npp peak to peak noise
32Sensitivity
- Measurement
- 1H 0.1 ethyl benzene in deuterochloroform
- 13C ASTM, mixture of 60 by volume
deuterobenzene and dioxan or 10 ethyl benzene
in chloroform - 31P 1 trimehylphosphite in deuterobenzene
- 15N 90 dimethylformamide in deutero-dimethyl-
sulphoxide - 19F 0.1 trifluoroethanol in deuteroacetone
- 2H, 17O tap water
33Sensitivity
- Factors affect sensitivity
- Probe tuning, matching, size
- Dynamic range and ADC resolution
- Solubility of the sample in the chosen solvent
34Spectral Parameters
- Chemical Shift
- Caused by the magnetic shielding of the nuclei
by their surroundings. d-values give the position
of the signal relative to a reference compound
signal. - Spin-spin Coupling
- The interaction between neighboring nuclear
dipoles leads to a fine structure. The strength
of this interaction is defined as spin-spin
coupling constant J. - Intensity of the signal
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36Chemical Shift
- Origin of chemical shift
- s shielding constant
- Chemically non-equivalent nuclei are shielded to
different extents and give separate resonance
signals in the spectrum
37Chemical Shift
38Chemical Shift
- d scale or abscissa scale
39Chemical Shift
- Shielding s
- CH3Br lt CH2Br2 lt CH3Br lt TMS
90 MHz spectrum
40Abscissa Scale
41Chemical Shift
- d is dimensionless expressed as the relative
shift in parts per million ( ppm ). - d is independent of the magnetic field
- d of proton 0 13 ppm
- d of carbon-13 0 220 ppm
- d of F-19 0 800 ppm
- d of P-31 0 300 ppm
42Chemical Shift
- Charge density
- Neighboring group
- Anisotropy
- Ring current
- Electric field effect
- Intermolecular interaction (H-bonding solvent)
43Chemical Shift anisotropy of neighboring group
c susceptibility r distance to the dipoles
center
Differential shielding of HA and HB in the
dipolar field of a magnetically anisotropic
neighboring group
44Chemical Shift anisotropy of neighboring group
d2.88
d9-10
45- Electronegative groups are "deshielding" and tend
to move NMR signals from neighboring protons
further "downfield" (to higher ppm values). - Protons on oxygen or nitrogen have highly
variable chemical shifts which are sensitive to
concentration, solvent, temperature, etc. - The -system of alkenes, aromatic compounds and
carbonyls strongly deshield attached protons and
move them "downfield" to higher ppm values.
46- Electronegative groups are "deshielding" and tend
to move NMR signals from attached carbons further
"downfield" (to higher ppm values). - The -system of alkenes, aromatic compounds and
carbonyls strongly deshield C nuclei and move
them "downfield" to higher ppm values. - Carbonyl carbons are strongly deshielded and
occur at very high ppm values. Within this group,
carboxylic acids and esters tend to have the
smaller values, while ketones and aldehydes
have values 200.
47Ring Current
- The ring current is induced form the delocalized
p electron in a magnetic field and generates an
additional magnetic field. In the center of the
arene ring this induced field in in the opposite
direction t the external magnetic field.
48Ring Current -- example
49Spin-spin coupling
50Spin-spin coupling
51AX system
52AX2 system
53Spin-spin coupling
54AX3 system
55Multiplicity Rule
Multiplicity M (number of lines in a multiplet) M
2n I 1 n equivalent neighbor nuclei I spin
number
For I ½ M n 1
56Example AX4 system
I1 n3
AX4
57Order of Spectrum
Zero order spectrum only singlet First order
spectrum Dn gtgt J Higher order spectrum Dn J
58AMX system
59Spin-spin coupling
- Hybridization of the atoms
- Bond angles and torsional angles
- Bond lengths
- Neighboring p-bond
- Effects of neighboring electron lone-pairs
- Substituent effect
60JH-H and Chemical Structure
- Geminal couplings 2J (usually lt0)
- H-C-H bond angle
- hybridization of the carbon atom
- substituents
61Geminal couplings 2J bond angle
62Geminal couplings 2J
Effect of Neighboring p-electrons
Substituent Effects
63Vicinal couplings 3JH-H
- Torsional or dihedral angles
- Substituents
- HC-CH distance
- H-C-C bond angle
64Vicinal couplings 3JH-H dihedral angles
65Chemical Shift of amino acid
http//bouman.chem.georgetown.edu/nmr/interaction/
chemshf.htm
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67Chemical Shift Prediction
Automated Protein Chemical Shift
Prediction http//www.bmrb.wisc.edu8999/shifty.ht
ml
BMRB NMR-STAR Atom Table Generator for Amino Acid
Chemical Shift Assignments http//www.bmrb.wisc.ed
u/elec_dep/gen_aa.html
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69http//bouman.chem.georgetown.edu/nmr/interaction/
chemshf.htm
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71Example 1
72NMR Spectroscopy
- Relaxation Time
- Phenomenon Application
73Relaxation- Return to Equilibrium
t
t
z axis
x,y plane
Longitudinal
Transverse
0
0
1
1
t
t
2
2
E-t/T2
1-e-t/T1
8
8
Transverse always faster!
74Relaxation
magnetization vector's trajectory The initial
vector, Mo, evolves under the effects of T1 T2
relaxation and from the influence of an applied
rf-field. Here, the magnetization vector M(t)
precesses about an effective field axis at a
frequency determined by its offset. It's ends up
at a "steady state" position as depicted in the
lower plot of x- and y- magnetizations.
http//gamma.magnet.fsu.edu/info/tour/bloch/index.
html
75Relaxation
The T2 relaxation causes the horizontal (xy)
magnetisation to decay. T1 relaxation
re-establishes the z-magnetisation. Note that T1
relaxation is often slower than T2 relaxation.
76Relaxation time Bloch Equation
77Relaxation time Bloch equation
78Spin-lattice Relaxation time (Longitudinal) T1
Relaxation mechanisms 1. Dipole-Dipole
interaction "through space" 2. Electric
Quadrupolar Relaxation 3. Paramagnetic
Relaxation 4. Scalar Relaxation 5. Chemical
Shift Anisotropy Relaxation 6. Spin Rotation
79Relaxation
- Spin-lattice relaxation converts the excess
energy into translational, rotational, and
vibrational energy of the surrounding atoms and
molecules (the lattice). - Spin-spin relaxation transfers the excess energy
to other magnetic nuclei in the sample.
80Longitudinal Relaxation time T1
- Inversion-Recovery Experiment
180y (or x)
90y
tD
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82T1 relaxation
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84Spin-spin relaxation (Transverse) T2
- T2 represents the lifetime of the signal in the
transverse plane (XY plane) - T2 is the relaxation time that is responsible for
the line width. - line width at half-height1/T2
85Spin-spin relaxation (Transverse) T2
- Two factors contribute to the decay of transverse
magnetization. - molecular interactions
- ( lead to a pure pure T2 molecular effect)
- variations in Bo
- ( lead to an inhomogeneous T2 effect)
86Spin-spin relaxation (Transverse) T2
180y (or x)
90y
tD
tD
- signal width at half-height (line-width ) (pi
T2)-1
87Spin-spin relaxation (Transverse) T2
88Spin-Echo Experiment
89Spin-Echo experiment
90MXY MXYo e-t/T2
91Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill sequence
92T1 and T2
- In non-viscous liquids, usually T2 T1.
- But some process like scalar coupling with
quadrupolar nuclei, chemical exchange,
interaction with a paramagnetic center, can
accelerate the T2 relaxation such that T2 becomes
shorter than T1.
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94Relaxation and correlation time
For peptides in aqueous solutions the
dipole-dipole spin-lattice and spin-spin
relaxation process are mainly mediated by other
nearby protons
95Why The Interest In Dynamics?
- Function requires motion/kinetic energy
- Entropic contributions to binding events
- Protein Folding/Unfolding
- Uncertainty in NMR and crystal structures
- Effect on NMR experiments- spin relaxation is
dependent on rate of motions ? know dynamics to
predict outcomes and design new experiments - Quantum mechanics/prediction (masochism)
96Application
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98Characterizing Protein Dynamics
Parameters/Timescales
Relaxation
99NMR Parameters That Report On Dynamics of
Molecules
- Number of signals per atom multiple signals for
slow exchange between conformational states - Linewidths narrow faster motion, wide
slower dependent on MW and conformational states - Exchange of NH with solvent requires local
and/or global unfolding events ? slow timescales - Heteronuclear relaxation measurements
- R1 (1/T1) spin-lattice- reports on fast motions
- R2 (1/T2) spin-spin- reports on fast slow
- Heteronuclear NOE- reports on fast some slow
100Linewidth is Dependent on MW
- Linewidth determined by size of particle
- Fragments have narrower linewidths
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111Nuclear Overhauser Effect
112Nuclear Overhauser Effect (NOE)
- A change in the integrated NMR absorption
intensity of a nuclear spin when the NMR
absorption of another spin is saturated.
113Nuclear Overhauser Effect
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115Macromolecules or in viscous solution W0
dominant, negative NOE at i due to s Small
molecules in non-viscous solution W2 dominant,
positive NOE at i due to s
116Nuclear Overhauser EffectBrownian motion and NOE
117When 1/tc gtgtw0 (or tc2 w02 ltlt1 ) extreme
narrowing limit
118When 1/tc gtgt w0 (or tc2 w02 ltlt1 ) extreme
narrowing limit
For homo-nuclear hmax 0.5 For
hetro-nuclear hmax 0.5 (gs/gi)
119- When 1/tc w0 (or tc w0 1 ) M.W. 103
- W2 and W0 effect are balanced. ? max 0
- improvement
- Change solvent ofr temperature
- Using rotating frame NOE
120When 1/tc lt w0 (or tc w0 gtgt 1 ) M.W. gt 104 W0
dominant , ? max -1 application Useful
technique for assigning NMR spectra of protein
121Nuclear Overhauser Effect distance
122citraconic acid
mesaconic acid
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