1H NMR spectra part 31: 1H chemical shifts of amides in DMSO solvent.

Magn Reson Chem

The Chemistry Department, University of Liverpool, Crown St., Liverpool, L69 7ZD, UK.

Published: July 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The (1)H chemical shifts of 48 amides in DMSO were analyzed, revealing significant solvent shifts for NH protons but smaller negative shifts for nearby protons.
  • The study compared observed solvent shifts with calculated values, noting good agreement for NH protons but discrepancies for other shifts like Δδ(CHO).
  • The findings indicate that electric field effects primarily influence NH shifts, with the analysis showing strong correlations between chemical shifts and π density on adjacent atoms, as well as minimal impact from substituent effects and steric interactions.

Article Abstract

The (1)H chemical shifts of 48 amides in DMSO solvent are assigned and presented. The solvent shifts Δδ (DMSO-CDCl3 ) are large (1-2 ppm) for the NH protons but smaller and negative (-0.1 to -0.2 ppm) for close range protons. A selection of the observed solvent shifts is compared with calculated shifts from the present model and from GIAO calculations. Those for the NH protons agree with both calculations, but other solvent shifts such as Δδ(CHO) are not well reproduced by the GIAO calculations. The (1)H chemical shifts of the amides in DMSO were analysed using a functional approach for near ( ≤ 3 bonds removed) protons and the electric field, magnetic anisotropy and steric effect of the amide group for more distant protons. The chemical shifts of the NH protons of acetanilide and benzamide vary linearly with the π density on the αN and βC atoms, respectively. The C=O anisotropy and steric effect are in general little changed from the values in CDCl3. The effects of substituents F, Cl, Me on the NH proton shifts are reproduced. The electric field coefficient for the protons in DMSO is 90% of that in CDCl3. There is no steric effect of the C=O oxygen on the NH proton in an NH…O=C hydrogen bond. The observed deshielding is due to the electric field effect. The calculated chemical shifts agree well with the observed shifts (RMS error of 0.106 ppm for the data set of 257 entries).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrc.4079DOI Listing

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