Module 6 - chapter 29 P2 Flashcards

1
Q

How does mass spectrometry separate atoms?

A

Atoms are separated according to mass. Fragments of the molecular ion are formed in the mass spectrometer .

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2
Q

What is the molecular ion in mass spectrometry?

A

the positive ion when the molecule has lost one electron (M+), this gives the molecular mass of the compound

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3
Q

How is the molecular ion shown on the mass spectrum?

A

the clearest peak with the highest m/z value (mass-to-charge ratio) to the right on the spectrum

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4
Q

What causes a small peak to the right of the molecular ion on a mass spectrum?

A

the presence of carbon-13 in a small percentage of the compound, causing the molecular mass to be greater, this peak is the M+1 peak

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5
Q

what is fragmentation in mass spectrometry?

A

when a molecular ion breaks down into fragment ions and radicals, only the positive ions are detected by the mass spectrometer (as the radicals are uncharged so not deflected by the magnetic field) and so fragments can be pieced together to determine the structure of the molecular ion (parent molecule)

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6
Q

what is the calculation for the number of carbon atoms in the molecule using M+1?

A

height of M+1 peak / height of M peak x100

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7
Q

how does infrared spectroscopy work>

A

radiation within the 200-4000cm-1 range is passed through a sample and the energy is absorbed by the bonds at a specific frequency of radiation - this is the bond’s natural frequency. the absorption of IR causes the bonds to vibrate

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8
Q

how are bond types identified from IR spectra?

A

the frequency of radiation absorbed by the bond is the frequency of the bond so the radiation absorbed on the spectra can be compared to the radiation frequencies absorbed by different types of bonds to identify them

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9
Q

what is the IR frequency for C=O bond?

A

sharp peak in given range, close to 1700cm-1

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10
Q

what indicates an O-H bond on IR spectra?

A

a broad peak in the fingerprint region, !!be aware that all molecules have a peak in the 2850-3100cm-1 region due to C-H so don’t confuse this

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11
Q

what are uses for IR spectroscopy?

A

breathalysers, monitoring gases causing air pollution

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12
Q

how can you identify a carboxylic acid group in IR spectroscopy?

A

peaks in C=O, O-H, and C-O regions

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13
Q

what is elemental analysis?

A

the use of percentage composition data to determine the empirical formula of compounds

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14
Q

how do you calculate Rf value?

A

Rf = distance moved by component/ distance moved by solvent front, ALL Rf VALUES SHOULD BE LESS THAN ONE

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15
Q

how do you interpret gas chromatograms?

A
  • compare retention times for known components to identify components present in the sample
  • area under the peak (peak integrations) to determine the concentrations of components in the sample
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16
Q

what is retention time in gas chromatography?

A

the time taken for each component to travel through the capillary column, shorter retention time = less soluble in stationary phase as more soluble components move slower through the column

17
Q

how do you determine the concentrations of components in a sample using peak integration?

A

external calibration

1) prepare standard solutions of known concentrations of the compound being tested
2) obtain gas chromatograms for each standard solution
3) plot a calibration curve of peak area against concentration
4) obtain a gas chromatogram of the compound being investigated under the same conditions
5) use the calibration curve to measure the concentration of the compound

18
Q

test for alkenes?

A

add bromine water, bromine water decolourised as added across double bond - orange to colourless

19
Q

test for haloalkanes?

A

add silver nitrate and ethanol and heat to 50C in water bath, precipitate of silver halide formed
chloro = white precipitate,
bromo =cream ppt,
iodo = yellow ppt

20
Q

how do the rates of hydrolysis change in haloalkanes?

A

chloro silver halide precipitate forms more slowly, bromo forms quicker than chloro but slower than iodo, iodo forms the quickest.

because Cl-Cl bond stronger so more energy required to break so takes longer

21
Q

test for primary/secondary alcohols and aldehydes?

A

acidified (with dilute sulfuric acid) potassium dichromate (VI) K2Cr2O7 and warm in a water bath, orange to green

dichromate (VI) ions reduced to chromium (III) ions as dichromate is oxidising agent

primary alcohol = oxidised to aldehyde then carboxylic acid

secondary alcohol = oxidised to aldehyde then ketone

tertiary alcohol can’t be oxidised (no hydrogens present on C with OH, 2H must be removed to form C=O) so no colour change

22
Q

test for carboxylic acids/

A

aqueous sodium carbonate (CO3^2-), effervescence,

neutralising with a carbonate produces CO2

23
Q

how does carbon-13 NMR work?

A

radiation is absorbed by the nuclei of the atoms and measured using a spectrometer. the absorptions of energy are detected and displayed on the spectra in reference to TMS

24
Q

what details does C-13 NMR give about molecules?

A
  • the number of carbon-13 environments from the number of peaks
  • the types of carbon environments from the carbon shifts
25
Q

what does the peak at 0ppm on a C-13 spectra show?

A

reference peak, peak for TMS

26
Q

how can carbons in the same environment have one with a slightly higher chemical shift?

A

carbons nearer to an electronegative atom/molecule (e.g. O) will have a slightly higher chemical shift due to deshielding

27
Q

what details does high resolution proton NMR spectroscopy give about compounds?

A
  • number of proton environments (remember if no protons on C then no proton environment) - number of peaks - not including TMS peak! same enivronment = same peak (only one)
  • number of protons on adjacent atoms - splitting pattern due to spin-spin coupling- n+1 rule so e.g. triplet has 2 on adjacent atom - only occurs if don’t have same environment
  • number of protons in environment = area under peak (relative peak areas)
  • types of proton environments present - chemical shift
28
Q

Use of TMS as the reference compound for chemical shifts

A

ppm = number of Hz more than 100mil Hz resonance frequency for TMS,

  • lowest chemical shift value bc protons as shielded as possible (tetrahedral) and shielding decreases shift values
  • soluble in most organic solvents
  • chemically inert
  • protons in identical environments
29
Q

how does shielding/deshielding effect chemical shift values in proton NMR?

A

shielding- orbiting electrons shield, exposes protons to a smaller magnetic field (by setting up their own magnetic field in opposition) so a lower frequency is required for resonance, so chemical shift lower

deshielding - electronegative atoms attract electrons away so proton experiences stronger magnetic field, frequency required for resonance is higher, higher chemical shift

30
Q

why are deuterated solvents used in proton NMR?

A

so the solvent doesn’t interfere with the spectra produced,
deuterium = isotope of hydrogen with +1 neutron so doesn’t spin/create magnetic field so doesn’t change spectra

deuterium replaces H in solvent

31
Q

example of deuterated solvent

A

CDCL3

32
Q

why are O-H and N-H groups difficult to identify on proton NMR spectra?

A

appear as singlets which could be interpreted as a single proton attached to a carbon with no other protons because the protons are labile (not permanently attached to other atom) so not bonded long enough for spin-spin coupling with adjacent protons to form a splitting pattern

33
Q

how can O-H and N-H groups be identified in proton NMR?

A

deuterate the sample with heavy water (D2O), this replaces all protons with D (proton exchange) so a peak isn’t formed for the OH/NH environment

34
Q

what is the base peak on mass spec?

A

peak with highest relative intensity, greatest abundance of one fragment