It’s an open secret that organic chemistry students struggle to learn a skill that is integral to the field: interpreting nuclear magnetic resonance spectra. Organic chemists use this important tool ...
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy represents a technique that is dependent on the magnetic properties of the atomic nucleus. When positioned in a strong magnetic field, certain nuclei ...
NMR makes use of specific stable isotopes, commonly 13 C, but there is only one NMR-active stable isotope for oxygen, 17 O. The effects of using this oxygen isotope over other isotopes include lower ...
Spectroscopy isn’t just for scientists in lab coats—it’s a toolkit anyone can learn to use for uncovering the hidden architecture of molecules. By combining NMR, IR, and other techniques, chemists can ...
Data processing for 1D NMR spectra is a key bottleneck for metabolomic and other complex-mixture studies, particularly where quantitative data on individual metabolites are required. We present a ...
NMR spectroscopy is among the most powerful analytical techniques for the elucidation of chemical structure. It has the capability of providing detailed information about structure and dynamics of ...
Determining alcohols using NMR spectroscopy is carried out in order to introduce students to NMR spectroscopy at an early stage in their undergraduate career. The experiment aims to enable students to ...
Resonance” is right there in the name of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, but the technique doesn’t make most chemists think of music. Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy, a biophysical chemist at the ...
Unfortunately, many 1H-NMR spectra are severely overlapped due to the multiplet structure caused by homo-nuclear scalar couplings. "Pure shift" NMR spectra, also known as broadband homonuclear ...
UNC postdoctoral Ajit Prakash explores how G proteins function as intracellular pH sensors and how this affects cell ...
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) was first experimentally observed in late 1945, nearly simultaneously by the research groups of Felix Bloch, at Stanford University and Edward Purcell at Harvard ...