Lecture 11. Magnetic Equivalence, Spin Systems, and Pople Notation.
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 11 ก.ย. 2024
- This video is part of a 28-lecture graduate-level course titled "Organic Spectroscopy" taught at UC Irvine by Professor James S. Nowick. The course covers infrared (IR) spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, the latter of which is the main focus. Topics covered in the NMR spectroscopy part of the course include chemical shifts, spin-spin coupling, dynamic effects in NMR spectroscopy, and 2D NMR spectroscopy (COSY, HMQC, HMBC, TOCSY, NOESY, ROESY).
Any questions or concerns regarding this class, please e-mail: jsnowick at uci.edu.
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For all intents and purposes I really like this professor. :)
Amazing Lecture!
Nice Lecture. Thanks a lot
very helpfull..thanks..
Is spin system notation and poples notations same. ???
helpful, but I still don't understand magnetic non-equivalence very well... guess I'll watch another one
If you look at the relationship between either of the H's to the same F, one is trans while the other is cis, hence the magnetic non-equivalency.
What is splitting pattern in ch2cf2
You still don't explain how to do pople notation in your videos