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Topic: unusual Carbon NMR shift  (Read 2893 times)

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Offline alphahydroxy

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unusual Carbon NMR shift
« on: February 21, 2007, 09:35:54 AM »
Just a quick question - does anyone know what kind of group might give rise to a 13C NMR shift of 229 ppm ?

I've got a sample, it's contaminated with a little triphenyl phosphine by the looks of things, but I can't really see anything in the proton spectrum that correlates to the mystery signal in the carbon.

Or does anyone know a good place to find such information without having to trawl through the shift ranges of a hundred and one differnet functionalities...?


any help appreciated!


cheers

« Last Edit: February 21, 2007, 12:36:14 PM by alphahydroxy »

Offline movies

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Re: unusual Carbon NMR shift
« Reply #1 on: February 21, 2007, 12:44:46 PM »
Sounds like a thiocarbonyl.  There might be some ketone carbons that show up there too, but those are usually in the 220-190 range.

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