The three isomers of dichlorobenzene are commonly named ortho-chlorobenzene, meta-chlorobenzene, and para-chlorobenzene. These three isomers are difficult to distinguish using proton NMR, but they are instantly identifiable usingNMR.

  1. Describe how carbon NMR distinguishes these three isomers.
  2. Explain why they are difficult to distinguish using proton NMR.

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. Considering the symmetry of structures, ortho-xylene would have 3 carbon signals from the ring, meta-xylene would have 4 carbon signals from the ring and para-xylene would have only 2 carbon signals from the ring.
  2. Unless the substituent on the benzene ring is electron withdrawing or electron donating, ring protons absorb at roughly the same position as methyl group has no electronic effect on the ring hydrogens, thus, proton NMR will not be able to distinguish between these isomers.

Step by step solution

01

Explanation of part (a):

Considering the symmetry of structures, ortho-xylene would have 3 carbon signals from the ring and total of 4 peaks whereas meta-xylene would have 4 carbon signals from the ring and total of 5 peaks and para-xylene would have only 2 carbon signals from the ring and total of 3 peaks. Thus, these compounds would be instantly identifiable by number of peaks in carbon-NMR.

02

Explanation of part (b):

The proton-NMR would not be able to distinguish these isomers as there is no powerful electron withdrawing or donating substituent attached to the ring and methyl group has essentially no electronic effect on the ring hydrogens, thus all ring protons will absorb at roughly same chemical shift. Para isomer would give clean singlet and ortho and meta isomers would have only slightly broadened singlets for their protons. Very high field NMR would only be able to distinguish these isomers.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

A laboratory student was converting cyclohexanol to cyclohexyl bromide by using one equivalent of sodium bromide in a large excess of concentrated sulfuric acid. The major product she recovered was not cyclohexyl bromide, but a compound of formula C6H10that gave the following 13CNMR spectrum:

  1. Propose a structure for this product.
  2. Assign the peaks in the 13CNMR spectrum to the carbon atoms in the structure.
  3. Suggest modifications in the reaction to obtain a better yield of cyclohexyl bromide.

Predict the theoretical number of different NMR signals produced by each compound and give approximate chemical shifts. Point out any diastereotopic relationships.

  1. 2-bromobutane
  2. Cyclopentanol
  3. Ph-CHBr-CH2Br
  4. Vinyl chloride

Question: An unknown compound has the molecular formula C9H11Br. Its proton NMR spectrum shows the following absorptions: singlet, d7.1, integral 44 mm singlet, d2.3, integral 130 mm singlet, d2.2, integral 67 mm Propose a structure for this compound.

Phenyl Grignard reagent adds to 2-methylpropanal to give the secondary alcohol shown. The proton NMR of 2-methylpropanal shows the two methyl groups as equivalent (one doublet at δ 1.1), yet the product alcohol, a racemic mixture, shows two different 3H doublets, one at δ 0.75 and one around δ 1.0

(a)Draw a Newmann projection of the product along the C1-C2 axis.
(b)Explain why the two methyl groups have different NMR chemical shifts. What is the term applied to protons such as these?

The following proton NMR spectrum is of a compound of molecular formula C3H80.

  1. Propose a structure for this compound.
  2. Assign peaks to show which protons give rise to which signals in the spectrum.
See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Chemistry Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free