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Published byColby Welding Modified over 9 years ago
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SURVEY OF SPECTRA HYDROCARBONS (C-H ABSORPTIONS) ALCOHOLS ACIDS
N-H 3400 C-H 3000 C=N 2250 C=C 2150 C=O 1715 C=C 1650 C-O = HYDROCARBONS (C-H ABSORPTIONS) ALCOHOLS ACIDS (O-H ABSORPTIONS) AMINES (N-H ABSORPTIONS) SURVEY OF SPECTRA
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Typical Infrared Absorption Regions
WAVELENGTH (mm) 2.5 4 5 5.5 6.1 6.5 15.4 C=O C=N C-Cl O-H C-H C N Very few bands C-O N-H C C C=C C-N X=C=Y C-C N=O N=O * (C,O,N,S) 4000 2500 2000 1800 1650 1550 650 FREQUENCY (cm-1)
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BASE VALUES Guideposts for you to memorize.
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BASE VALUES O-H 3600 N-H 3400 C-H 3000 C N 2250 C C 2150 C=O 1715
These are the minimum number of values to memorize. (+/- 10 cm-1) O-H 3600 N-H 3400 C-H 3000 C N 2250 C C 2150 C=O 1715 C=C 1650 C O ~1100 large range
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C-H STRETCH
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Typical Infrared Absorption Regions
WAVELENGTH (mm) C-H 2.5 4 5 5.5 6.1 6.5 15.4 C=O C=N C-Cl O-H C-H C N Very few bands C-O N-H C C C=C C-N X=C=Y C-C * (C,O,N,S) N=O N=O 4000 2500 2000 1800 1650 1550 650 FREQUENCY (cm-1) We will look at this area first
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The C-H stretching region
BASE VALUE = 3000 cm-1 C-H sp stretch ~ 3300 cm-1 UNSATURATED C-H sp2 stretch > 3000 cm-1 3000 divides C-H sp3 stretch < 3000 cm-1 SATURATED C-H aldehyde, two peaks (both weak) ~ 2850 and 2750 cm-1
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STRONGER BONDS HAVE LARGER FORCE CONSTANTS
AND ABSORB AT HIGHER FREQUENCIES increasing frequency (cm-1) 3300 3100 3000 2900 = =C-H =C-H -C-H -CH=O (weak) sp-1s sp2-1s sp3-1s aldehyde increasing s character in bond increasing CH Bond Strength increasing force constant K CH BASE VALUE = 3000 cm-1
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METHYLENE GROUP STRETCHING VIBRATIONS
Two C-H bonds share a central carbon (hydrogens attached to the same carbon) in-phase Symmetric Stretch ~2853 cm-1 out-of-phase Asymmetric Stretch ~2926 cm-1 Any time you have two or more of the same kind of bond sharing a central atom you will have symmetric and asymmetric modes.
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METHYL GROUP STRETCHING VIBRATIONS
Three C-H bonds share a central carbon (hydrogens attached to the same carbon) in-phase Symmetric Stretch ~2872 cm-1 out-of-phase Asymmetric Stretch ~2962 cm-1
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Hexane CH stretching vibrations ALKANE CH bending vibrations
discussed shortly CH stretching vibrations includes CH3 sym and asym CH2 sym and asym
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C-H BENDING
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THE C-H BENDING REGION CH2 bending ~ 1465 cm-1
CH3 bending (asym) appears near the CH2 value ~ 1460 cm-1 CH3 bending (sym) ~ 1375 cm-1
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METHYLENE GROUP BENDING VIBRATIONS
Scissoring Wagging ~1465 cm-1 ~1250 cm-1 ~720 cm-1 ~1250 cm-1 Rocking Twisting in-plane out-of-plane Bending Vibrations
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METHYLENE AND METHYL BENDING VIBRATIONS
CH2 CH3 C-H Bending, look near 1465 and 1375 cm-1 asym sym 1465 1460 1375 these two peaks frequently overlap and are not resolved
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METHYLENE AND METHYL BENDING VIBRATIONS
ADDITIONAL DETAILS FOR SYM CH3 The sym methyl peak splits when you have more than one CH3 attached to a carbon. CH2 CH3 asym sym one peak 1465 1460 1375 geminal dimethyl 1380 1370 two peaks (isopropyl) t-butyl 1390 1370 two peaks
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Hexane ALKANE CH2 rocking > 4C CH3 bend CH2 bend CH stretch
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ALKENE 1-Hexene =CH C=C CH2 CH3 bend CH oops CH
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AROMATIC Toluene CH3 Ar-H C=C benzene Ar-H oops
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ALKYNE 1-Hexyne C=C = CH2, CH3 C-H =C-H =
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O-H STRETCH
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Typical Infrared Absorption Regions
O-H WAVELENGTH (mm) 2.5 4 5 5.5 6.1 6.5 15.4 C=O C=N C-Cl O-H C-H C N Very few bands C-O N-H C C C=C C-N X=C=Y C-C N=O N=O * (C,O,N,S) 4000 2500 2000 1800 1650 1550 650 FREQUENCY (cm-1)
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The O-H stretching region
O-H cm-1 (alcohol, free) O-H cm-1 (alcohols & acids, H-bonding) 3600 3300 H-BONDED FREE broadens shifts
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Effect of Hydrogen-Bonding on O-H Stretching
Free OH Free OH C-H H-bonded OH H-bonded OH C-H C-H Pure Liquid Dilute Solution Very Dilute Solution (a) (b) (c) “neat” 1-Butanol
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HYDROGEN-BONDED HYDROXYL
Many kinds of OH bonds of different lengths and strengths This leads to a broad absorption. “Neat” solution. Longer bonds are weaker and lead to lower frequency. Hydrogen bonding occurs in concentrated solutions ( for instance, undiluted alcohol ).
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“FREE” HYDROXYL The “free” hydroxyl vibrates without interference from any other molecule. Distinct bond has a well-defined length and strength. Solvent molecules surround but do not hydrogen bond. Occurs in dilute solutions of alcohol in an “inert” solvent like CCl4.
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ALCOHOL Cyclohexanol neat solution O-H H-bond CH2 C-O C-H
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CARBOXYLIC ACID Butanoic Acid neat solution O-H H-bond C-O CH2 C-H C=O
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CARBOXYLIC ACID DIMER Strong hydrogen bonding in the dimer weakens the OH bond and leads to a broad peak at lower frequency.
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N-H STRETCH
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Typical Infrared Absorption Regions
N-H WAVELENGTH (mm) 2.5 4 5 5.5 6.1 6.5 15.4 C=O C=N C-Cl O-H C-H C N Very few bands C-O N-H C C C=C C-N X=C=Y C-C N=O N=O * (C,O,N,S) 4000 2500 2000 1800 1650 1550 650 FREQUENCY (cm-1)
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The N-H stretching region
N-H cm-1 Primary amines give two peaks Secondary amines give one peak Tertiary amines give no peak symmetric asymmetric
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PRIMARY AMINE aliphatic 1-Butanamine NH2 scissor CH3 CH2 NH2
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3-Methylbenzenamine PRIMARY AMINE aromatic -CH3 Ar-H NH2 benzene Ar-H
oops
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SECONDARY AMINE N -Ethylbenzenamine NH CH3 Ar-H oops benzene
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N,N -Dimethylaniline TERTIARY AMINE Ar-H -CH3 no N-H CH3 benzene Ar-H
oops
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