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Combined Spectroscopy…
When identifying a compound we may not get all necessary information from a single type of spectroscopy. Most often we combine techniques e.g. Empirical formula, mass spec and IR spec to allow us to obtain all necessary information
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Combined Spectroscopy…
You have an unlabelled sample that is either: Butanal Butan-2-one Plan how you would identify which it is: Using spectroscopy Using chemical tests
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Combined Spectroscopy…
Using spectroscopy: Identify the functional groups present using IR spectra Predict the possible fragments for each isomer Assign the peaks of the mass spec Determine the nature of the compound
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Combined Spectroscopy…
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Combined Spectroscopy…
The two C=O peaks cannot be distinguished by their wavenumber
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Combined Spectroscopy…
Butanal and butan-2-on have very similar fragments e.g. Butanal CH2CHO m/z = 43 Butan-2-one C3H7 m/z = 43 However there is (at least) one peak that tells them apart…
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Combined Spectroscopy…
m/z = 42 -CH2CO-
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Therefore we have Butan-2-one
Combined Spectroscopy… Therefore we have Butan-2-one
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Combined Spectroscopy…
Chemical test: Reflux both samples with acidified Potassium Dichromate Butanal shows orange to green Butan-2-one shows no change
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Combined Spectroscopy…
A chemist has 2 unlabelled isomer samples: propanoic acid and 1-hydroxypropan-2-one. What information would we ideally want to be able to tell which is which?
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Combined Spectroscopy…
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Combined Spectroscopy…
Mass spec can be used to confirm the identity of Y as 1-hydroxypropan-2-one m/z = 31 -CH2OH
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