CHEM 130 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Nitro Compound, Substituent, Methyl Group

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27 Aug 2016
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Chemical shifts are related to the electronegativity of substituents. We shall start with protons on saturated carbon atoms. If you study table 11. 1 you will see that the protons in a methyl group are shifted more and more as the atom attached to them gets more electronegative. When we are dealing with simple atoms as substituents, these effects are straightforward and more or less additive. If we go on adding electronegative chlorine atoms to a carbon atom, electron density is progressively removed from it and the carbon nucleus and the hydrogen atoms attached to it are progressively deshielded. The truth is that shifts and electronegativity are not perfectly correlated. The key property is indeed electron withdrawal but it is the electron-withdrawing power of the whole substituent in comparison with the carbon and hydrogen atoms in the ch skeleton that matters. A nitro group is much more electron-withdrawing than an amino group.

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