The more I read into this the more complicated it becomes.
propane, isobutane and neopentane have increasing δ values for C2 respectively as predicted. However C1 (CH3 of neopentane has a more downfield shift than the quaternary carbon.
I need to sleep on this one and try again in the morning.
This anomalous chemical shift difference in neopentane can be explained by the α, β, γ and occasionally δ effect of neighbouring substituents. All texts give you formulae and data to use these to predict carbon chemical shifts. No surprises the calculated data fits the observed.
Most texts give you the numbers and formulae for branched alkanes and then swiftly move on to inductive effects of halogens and mesomeric effects of enol ethers but none I have seen address how carbons exert these α, β & γ effects. Not that I can see anyway.
This is so frustrating! If it's not inductive and anisotropic influence is unlikely to have a significant effect on long distance atoms due to the inverse square law how is this possible?
I am no physicist but is it possible that the large increase in the localised magnetic field on the quaternary carbon that this in turn induces an even greater magnetic field adjacent to it?
So we have B
0 from the magnet an increased B
Local at the quaternary carbon due to the anisotropic effect of the four C-C sigma bonds. This B
Local is the sum of B
0 and the fields generated by the four methyl groups. Could this induce a greater field on the methyl groups sigma bonds, making their B
Local slightly stronger than that of the induced field at the quaternary carbon?
I'll draw another picture and see if one of our physicist friends can help out.
I am not happy with the answer "it just does" which is what seems to be the general consensus in the texts that I have read.
Maybe this makes zero sense, I am very tired if so then just ignore me until I stop filling in the gaps with nonsense.