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  2. Deuterated DMSO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuterated_DMSO

    13 C NMR Spectrum of DMSO-d 6. Pure deuterated DMSO shows no peaks in 1 H NMR spectroscopy and as a result is commonly used as an NMR solvent. [2] However commercially available samples are not 100% pure and a residual DMSO-d 5 1 H NMR signal is observed at 2.50ppm (quintet, J HD =1.9Hz). The 13 C chemical shift of DMSO-d 6 is 39.52ppm (septet ...

  3. Dimethyl sulfoxide (data page) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethyl_sulfoxide_(data_page)

    Structure and properties Index of refraction, [1] n D: 1.4795 at 20 °C 1.4787 at 21 °C Abbe number? Dielectric constant, [2] ε r: 48 ε 0 at 20 °C Bond strength? Bond length? Bond angle? Magnetic susceptibility? Surface tension [2] 43 dyn/cm at 20 °C Viscosity: 2.14 mPa·s [2] at 20 °C 1.1 mPa·s [1] at 27 °C

  4. Sulfoxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfoxide

    cis-RuCl 2 (dmso) 4, a representative metal complex of a sulfoxide. Three DMSO ligands are S-bonded to Ru, one is O-bonded. Sulfoxides, especially DMSO, form coordination complexes with transition metals. Depending on the hard-soft properties of the metal, the sulfoxide binds through either the sulfur or the oxygen atom. The latter is ...

  5. Dimethyl sulfoxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethyl_sulfoxide

    Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is an organosulfur compound with the formula (CH 3) 2 S O.This colorless liquid is the sulfoxide most widely used commercially. It is an important polar aprotic solvent that dissolves both polar and nonpolar compounds and is miscible in a wide range of organic solvents as well as water.

  6. Carbon-13 NMR satellite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon-13_NMR_satellite

    Carbon satellites in physics and spectroscopy, are small peaks that can be seen shouldering the main peaks in the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum.These peaks can occur in the NMR spectrum of any NMR active atom (e.g. 19 F or 31 P NMR) where those atoms adjoin a carbon atom (and where the spectrum is not 13 C-decoupled, which is usually the case).

  7. Nuclear magnetic resonance decoupling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_Magnetic_Resonance...

    This way, the number of equivalent sets of carbon atoms in a chemical structure can be counted by counting singlet peaks, which in 13 C spectra tend to be very narrow (thin). Other information about the carbon atoms can usually be determined from the chemical shift , such as whether the atom is part of a carbonyl group or an aromatic ring, etc.

  8. Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-dimensional_nuclear...

    (Techniques have also been devised for generating heteronuclear correlation spectra, in which the two axes correspond to different isotopes, such as 13 C and 1 H.) Diagonal peaks correspond to the peaks in a 1D-NMR experiment, while the cross peaks indicate couplings between pairs of nuclei (much as multiplet splitting indicates couplings in 1D ...

  9. Deuterated solvent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/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 .