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NMR Spectroscopy in Organic Chemistry

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  • © 1970

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Part of the book series: Physical Methods in Organic Chemistry (PMOC)

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

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About this book

In recent years high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance spec­ troscopy has found very wide application in organie chemistry in structural and physicochemical investigations and. also in the study of the characteristics of organic compounds which are re­ lated to the distribution of the electron cloud in the molecules. The vigorous development of this method, which may really be re­ garded as an independent branch of science, is the result of ex­ tensive progress in NMR technology, the refinement of its theory, and the accumulation of large amounts of experimental material, which has been correlated by empiricallaws and principles. The literature directly concerned with the NMR method and its applica­ tion has now grown to such an extent that a complete review of it is practically impossible. Therefore the authors have limited themselves to an examination of only the most important, funda­ mental, and general investigations. The book consists of six chapters. In the first chapter we have attempted to present the fundamentals of the NMR method in such a way that the reader with little knowledge of the subject will be able to use the method in practical work for investigating simple compounds and solving simple problems. The three subsequent chapters give a deeper analysis of the method, while the last two chapters and the appendix illustrate the various applications of NMR spectroscopy in organic chemistry.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Lensovet Institute of Technology, Leningrad, USSR

    B. I. Ionin, B. A. Ershov

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