I'm stuck at a spectra that I'm supposed to solve. I only received the 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR since it was supposed to be an easy structure.
I was trying to solve it for 30 minutes, I couldn't get the number of carbons to add up, so I suggested that the spectrum was of a heteroaromatic (2,4,6-trimethylpyridine). The TA said that it was correct, and I told them how I was having difficulties figuring out that it was a heteroaromatic.
Then he told me that heteroaromatics's aromatic carbon has chemical shifts far from eachother, so that was an easy way to tell...
13C-NMR for 2,4,5-trimethylpyridine looked like this:
Chemical shift Multiplicity
156.3 s
146.3 s
120.2 d
23.3 q
19.9 q
The top three peaks are the supposedly aromatic region...
Can anyone explain why they're far apart from eachother for heteroaromatics?
I have no idea... it isn't written in any of my text books and I can't find anything about it googling it.
Thanks in advance.