Deuterated solvent
Deuterated solvents are a group of compounds where one or more hydrogen atoms are substituted by deuterium atoms.
These isotopologues of common solvents are often used in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.[1]
Examples
- Heavy water
- Deuterated acetone
- Deuterated benzene
- Deuterated chloroform
- Deuterated dichloromethane
- Deuterated DMF
- Deuterated DMSO
- Deuterated ethanol
- Deuterated methanol
- Deuterated THF
References
- ^ Hanson, John E. (2013). "5. NMR Spectroscopy in Nondeuterated Solvents (No-D NMR): Applications in the Undergraduate Organic Laboratory". NMR Spectroscopy in the Undergraduate Curriculum. ACS Symposium Series. Vol. 1128. American Chemical Society. pp. 69–81. doi:10.1021/bk-2013-1128.ch005.
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Deuterated NMR solvents
- Deuterated acetone - (CD3)2C=O
- Deuterated benzene - C6D6
- Deuterated chloroform - CDCl3
- Deuterated dichloromethane - CD2Cl2
- Deuterated DMF - (CD3)2NCOD
- Deuterated DMSO - (CD3)2S=O
- Deuterated ethanol - C2D5OD
- Deuterated methanol - CD3OD
- Deuterated THF - (C4D8)O
- Deuterated water - D2O
- Reference
- 1H and 13C chemical shifts
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