Are the signal intensities (of the peaks) in both 13C and 1H NMR spectra proportional to the number of carbon and hydrogen nuclei?
I am a little confused about whether the heigh of an NMR peak gives an indication as to how many C or H nuclei their are in that environment, i.e. a peak of strong intensity indicates many C or H nuclei compared to a peak of low intensity. One person has told me that the height of the peaks are not relevent at all, whereas someone else has said that they are (which I think must be the case myself). I know sometimes H spectra tells you the number of H nuclei by intergration, whereas C spectra do not. Please could you confirm for me what is actually true here.