A group of chemically equivalent protons.
Tetramethylsilane (TMS); appears at 0.0 ppm as a single sharp peak.
Higher ppm value (left side of spectrum); protons are more deshielded.
The area under the peak, proportional to the number of protons giving that signal.
Relative numbers; they must be scaled to match the total number of H in the molecule.
Coupling with non-equivalent neighboring protons 2–3 bonds away.
Because of rapid proton exchange, causing spin decoupling (no clear coupling pattern)
The distance between lines in a multiplet, measured in Hz.
About 6–8 Hz.
Vicinal coupling is stronger, long-range is weaker/smaller J.
If proton A couples to proton B, they share the same J value between them.
The proton is being split by two different sets of non-equivalent neighbors, each with its own J.
Splitting by one set (n₁) giving a doublet and another set (n₂) giving a triplet → combined dt.
One coupling to one proton (doublet) and another coupling to three protons (quartet).
The proton couples to three different sets of non-equivalent protons
When they can be interchanged by rotation or a symmetry operation (axis, plane).
Symmetry makes some protons equivalent, so you see fewer signals than the number of H atoms.
To perform a [4+2] cycloaddition between α-terpinene (diene) and an N-phenylmaleimide derivative (dienophile) to form a bicyclic cycloadduct.
An approach that aims to make chemical processes safer and more environmentally friendly by reducing waste, using safer solvents, improving atom economy, and minimizing hazards.
Use of benign solvents — CPME is a greener, safer alternative to traditional organic solvents.
It is a green solvent, low-toxicity, stable, and has a suitable boiling point for refluxing the reaction.
It is the diene required for the [4+2] cycloaddition.
It is the dienophile, an electron-poor alkene that readily undergoes Diels–Alder cycloaddition.
To ensure complete consumption of the limiting reagent, the N-phenylmaleimide derivative.
To maintain a constant elevated temperature so the reaction proceeds efficiently without losing solvent.
Methanol precipitates the product, allowing it to crystallize by cooling.
Cold MeOH improves the purity of the solid by washing away impurities without redissolving the product.
Disappearance of alkene C=C stretches from both reagents and retention of the imide C=O peaks.
Confirmation of the cycloaddition product’s structure and identification of the R-group on the N-phenylmaleimide.
The N-phenylmaleimide derivative.
It has good atom economy, requires no strong reagents, produces minimal waste, and uses a safer solvent.
A bridged bicyclic cycloadduct.
To maximize crystal formation and product isolation.
It is a concerted reaction where two π bonds break and two σ bonds form simultaneously.
An electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction.
Alkylation and Acylation.
They act as Lewis acid catalysts that generate the electrophile.
It is easier to handle/storage, though both are hygroscopic.
By the Lewis acid forming a complex with the alkyl halide, which then dissociates into a carbocation and FeCl₄⁻.
It can produce poly-alkylated products due to increased ring activation after the first substitution.
Because carbocations can rearrange to form more stable carbocations before reacting.
A hydride shift creates a more stable secondary carbocation, which reacts preferentially.
An acylium ion (R–C≡O⁺).
The acylium ion is resonance-stabilized, so rearrangement is unnecessary/unfavorable.
An aryl ketone.
t he methoxy group is electron-donating, activating the ring.
Mainly the para position (less steric hindrance).
To safely vent HCl gas generated during the reaction.
Dichloromethane (DCM).
It can cause emulsions, which make layer separation difficult.
Brine (saturated NaCl).
t o quench the reaction, dissolve inorganic byproducts, and separate the layers.
To dry the organic layer by removing dissolved water.
TLC, IR, and ¹H NMR.
Appearance of a strong C=O stretch (~1680–1750 cm⁻¹).
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) gas.
The acyl chloride.
Because lone-pair resonance donation increases electron density at the ortho/para positions.
An organomagnesium halide (R–Mg–X).
To form carbon–carbon bonds by reacting the Grignard reagent with electrophiles.
Because Grignard reagents react with water or any acidic protons, destroying the reagent.
Anhydrous diethyl ether or THF.
It is protonated and forms an alkane, destroying the reagent.
The alkyl dimer (R–R) from Wurtz coupling with unreacted alkyl halide.
Oxygen inserts into the Mg–C bond, forming hydroperoxides.
Secondary alcohols (except formaldehyde → primary alcohol).
Tertiary alcohols.
Carboxylic acids (after acid workup).
Tertiary alcohols after two additions of the Grignard reagent.
The carbonyl carbon of aldehydes, ketones, esters, or acyl chlorides.
An alkoxide intermediate.
An acidic workup such as HCl or NH₄Cl solution.
4,4′-dimethoxybenzophenone (a ketone).
A tertiary alcohol.
To remove all traces of moisture, which destroy the reagent.
To add the Grignard reagent slowly (dropwise) to control the reaction.
To prevent atmospheric moisture from entering the reaction.
To ensure the reaction proceeds efficiently at a constant temperature.
Saturated aqueous ammonium chloride.
It protonates the alkoxide and safely destroys excess Grignard reagent.
Diethyl ether.
Loss of the C=O ketone stretch and appearance of O–H alcohol stretch.
The Grignard reagent (added in measured 1 equivalent).
Addition of hydrogen or removal of oxygen from a molecule.
A hydride donor, delivering H⁻ to carbonyl groups.
Only aldehydes and ketones (at low temperatures).
Aldehydes, ketones, esters, carboxylic acids, and amides.
LiAlH₄ is much more reactive.
Hydride is a strong nucleophile and reacts violently with water.
Hydride transfer to the carbonyl carbon.
An alkoxide.
An acidic workup to protonate the alkoxide → alcohol.
A primary alcohol.
A secondary alcohol.
Reduce an unknown aldehyde or ketone to identify which alcohol was formed.
It allows controlled hydride transfer while not instantly destroying NaBH₄.
To quench NaBH₄ safely and avoid excessive gas release.=
It forms the organic layer containing the alcohol product.
To help remove dissolved water from the organic layer.
2:1 hexane : ethyl acetate.
