I'm having a difficult time trying to figure out a specific isomer for C12H14O4.
Based on the IR spectrum I was given... There is significant absorption at 1765cm-1 which means there is a C=O bond. There's also a benzene ring since there is absorption at 1600cm-1. Please correct me if I'm wrong anywhere.
Based on the C NMR spectrum, there are 5 peaks meaning 5 types of carbon. With only 5 types of carbon and a total of 12 carbons in the molecular formula, the benzene ring must be disubstituted with symmetry. The first C-NMR peak is at approximately 8ppm, so there must be an R-CH3 terminal group. The next peak is at 28ppm for an R-CH2-R fragment. There are 3 peaks within 116ppm-129ppm for benzene ring.
For the H NMR spectrum... there are 4 peaks meaning 4 types of hydrogen. The first peak is at 1.1ppm (triplet multiplicity meaning 2 neighbours or 2 coupled hydrogens... which results in a CH3 coupled to 2 hydrogens), next peak is at 2.4 (quartet meaning 3 neighbours/coupled hydrogens... which results in a CH3 coupled to 3 hydrogens deshielded by an O), next peak is at 6.9 (doublet meaning 1 neighbour... results in Arene-H disubstituted with para configuration for symmetry) and last peak is at 7.2 (triplet, 2 neighbours... which results in Arene-H disubstituted with para configuration for symmetry)
As for the integration for H NMR, my TA wrote down 6H (triplet), 4H (Quartet), 3H (doublet), 1H (triplet). I'm not sure if she's right.. but her reasoning was this: "The peak at 1.1ppm is about... 6cm long so that translates to 6H....etc".
I've tried MANY MANY isomers but every single time, something didn't match up. I even found a site that gave me all 291 isomers for that molecular formula... I went through all of them and none of them matched up (unless I overlooked something). But honestly, all the people in my lab section who received this same problem have had no luck... the TA spent a good 45 minutes helping us out but in the end, she couldn't even figure it out and just said to "go home and think about it". Since there is a C=O bond, there has to be an ester functional group or carboxylic acid group on both ends of the disubstituted benzene ring. This is assuming that my entire group analyzed the spectras correctly... Any help is appreciated!