"a polymer was
formed by reacting an alcohol and an acid" ... or ... "a polymer was
reacted with an alcohol and an acid."
Anyway, here's how I always tutor people struggling with NMR:
NMR is just a big jigsaw puzzle... except you don't know what the pieces look like. The NMR describes what the pieces look like. you have to figure out what the pieces are... then put the puzzle together.
So how do you determine what puzzle pieces you have? There are 3 main pieces of information you derive from looking at an NMR spectrum: chemical shift, integration, and multiplicity. for each signal in an NMR, you need to address those three pieces of information in order to draw one puzzle piece.
Take this NMR for example (C
4H
8O
2):
http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/spectra/fnmr/FNMR001634.PDFThere are three signals in the NMR. We'll go left to right.
First, a quartet just above 4 ppm. Just above 4 ppm tells us something about the electronic environment of the proton(s) which give rise to that signal. We know that as protons become more deshielded, the signal moves downfield. Protons around 4 usually mean the proton(s) are next to an electronegative element: O, Cl, F, ... We only have O in the given formula, so the protons giving rise to the signal around 4 ppm are probably attached to a carbon atom attached to an oxygen. The puzzle piece so far is C-O.
The integration is derived from measuring the ratio of the heights of the integration curves given on the spectrum. I'll save you the trouble and let you know that, from left to right, the integration values are 2:3:3. So the signal at 4 ppm has an integration of 2. That means there are 2 equivalent protons that resonate (give rise to a signal) at 4 ppm. The puzzle piece now is -
H2C-O. (I've bolded the protons we're discussing at this time)
The multiplicity is a quartet. Multiplicity arises from protons on adjacent carbon atoms. n+1 rule tells us that a quartet means that the protons resonating at 4 ppm are on a carbon adjacent to a carbon with 3 protons of its own. The puzzle piece is completed at H
3C-
H2C-O.
Next signal is a singlet just above 2 ppm. Same analysis. 2 ppm tells us there's some electron withdrawing ability of adjacent groups, but not a strong one... not really enough information from the chemical shift. Integration is 3. this is a big clue that the protons resonating at 2 ppm are probably on a methyl group. Multiplicity is a singlet, which means the protons are on a carbon atom adjacent to something without any protons of its own. So the puzzle piece for the middle signal is
H3C-.
Final signal is a triplet just above 1 ppm. 1 ppm tells us it's probably alkyl, i.e. just part of a hydrocarbon chain. Integration of 3 is also a clue it might be a methyl group, and the multiplicity is a triplet - which means the protons are on a carbon atom adjacent to a carbon atom with 2 protons of its own. puzzle piece =
H3C-H
2C.
Now we need to start putting the puzzle pieces together. I hope you see the overlap in puzzle pieces 1 and 3. They both have a CH
3-CH
2 subunit. That means the pieces probably overlap and the two puzzle pieces can be combined. Now we take those two puzzle pieces and make them one:
H3C-
H2C-O. We also still have the 2nd piece:
H3C-.
At this point, there's no obvious way to connect the puzzle piece is there? Well, there's at least one more piece of information we have (and in this case, two). The molecular formula was given as C
4H
8O
2. We have two puzzle pieces, which together account for C
3H
8O
1. That means we still have one carbon atom and one oxygen atom unaccounted for. We also have the
13C spectrum (above the
1H). Note the signal around 170. this is characteristic of a C=O double bond. This nicely accounts for the remaining elements and allows us to combine all the puzzle pieces.
See, C=O is missing 2 substituents on C.
H3C- needs to form one more bond to C and
H3C-
H2C-O needs to form one more bond on O. They can both be tethered through the carbonyl to finally complete the puzzle and derive the structure for ethyl acetate: H
3C-C(O)-O-CH
2-CH
3.
Take home message was: 1) build puzzle pieces addressing chemical shift, integration, and multiplicity. 2) Look for overlap among puzzle pieces and combine puzzle pieces where appropriate. 3) Subtract known puzzle pieces from molecular formula (if given) to figure out 'whats missing.'
Hope that helps.