Lets say you have this compound:
I know that 19F atoms can couple with each other over much greater distances, so while protons couldn't couple across the whole benzene ring, 19F atoms on the other hand can. Firstly, what peaks would you expect to see from that compound? I'd expect to see 3 peaks, but I'm baffled by what splitting would occur.
Firstly lets start with 3 atoms together, lets say they're at positions 1,2 and 3 starting from the let (so the lone 19F atom is at position 5). Atoms 1 and 3 are equivalent, so they wont couple, but they'll both couple with atom 2, forming a regular doublet I presume. But then theres atom 5. That will couple with them too won't it, so in this case will it split the doublet into a doublet of doublets because atom 5 is in such a different electronic environment?
Then atom 2, it will couple with its two neighbours forming a triplet, but can it couple with atom 5 (located para to it) or is that too far away for it to couple? Someone told me that the presence of electron withdrawing groups affects this. So lets change the compound to this:
Now the ring is more electron deficient, will that increase the range of 19F-19F coupling, making it more possible for flourine 2 and flourine 5 to couple?
Then what about this compound:
Should be an easy one, there are 2 unique 19F atoms there, so you get two peaks but how does the splitting work? I would have expected flourines 1 and 4 to couple with flourines 2 and 3, forming a triplet, then the same thing happening for fluorines 3 and 4, but the real life spectrum I saw, didn't have two triplets. It has 2 peaks, but they're not triplets. Heres one of them:
The phase is corrected. What the hell is this multiplet? Both peaks (they're pretty far apart) have these weird multiplets. The spectrum is proton decoupled. Why are there so many peaks points, I expected to see triplets.