Hi there @theorganicchemistrytutor, I'm sure you get this very often however I would like to congratulate you on your devotion to helping people like myself fundamentally understand algebra and chemistry. You cover a wide range of things I'm interested in and I am very thankful for your free lessons. You are one of the great channels out there that allow people to harness the power of self teaching, for free.
There are no words to express how thankful I am for your devotion and hard work that have helped us (students) to understand difficult concepts from just watching your lessons. Gold bless your soul.
You are a legend to chemistry students around! I really don't know what I'd do without your videos that help immensely. My professor decides to teach this half ass and expect us to know it 100% for the exam.
Wow, this video is incredibly informative and detailed. The explanation of carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy is clear and concise, covering everything from the basics of broadband decoupled C-NMR to DEPT C-13 NMR spectroscopy. The examples provided, such as 2-butanol and 2-methylbutane, really help to illustrate how to assign chemical shifts to different carbons given the C-13 NMR spectrum. I especially appreciated the discussion on how to propose a structure given the molecule and using factors such as IHD and the number of signals present in the spectrum. The video also does a great job of explaining the different chemical shifts of functional groups, including alkyl groups, halogens, amines, alkenes, alkynes, ethers, alcohols, benzene rings, aldehydes, ketones, esters, and carboxylic acids. The score system for ranking the chemical shifts of sp3 carbon atoms is also very useful. Overall, this video is a must-watch for anyone studying organic chemistry
wow you are one of the most intelectually deticated personels in relation of chemistry I've heard and seen of in a long time, your work and effot is amazing keep it up.
im starting to undertand this after a week lmao thank you. I was feeling so lost and i cant even make a meeting with my professor cause i have severe social anxieaty :( so you literally just saved me
i am a chemistry student from Marburg university Germany. i really 100 percent appreciate the effort u use to bring such an understanding video. i may have wasted money in buying books but u are indeed a great Tutor. thanks
Christ, this was so obvious I feel dumb! Killin' myself to figure out NMR and how to properly analyse the spectra, but I feel confident now, hopefully the exam will go fine! You've definitely helped me, you're a great tutor. Keep up the good work!
Seriously, I attented a whole semester of lectures about nmr spectroscopy (held by a physicist, considered the best of his field) and I did not understand a single thing. After watching this video I am pretty sure I will get through the exam.
hi your explanation is amazingly easy to understand and the enormous amount of examples u furnish to understand the concept with a detailed mechanistic approach is invaluable
I flunked my chem classes because my teacher didn't know how to teach. I did find a couple of tutors that got me to understand and went on to get a great job and helped others thru rough times in Math & chem.
Thank you so much sir your explanation makes complex problems to lowest level and to be truth even lower primary students (grade 3) can understand it, what a great gifted from our God lord,, thanks my brother God bless you,, keep up the good work
Thank you so much for this video. The topics are explained in such a concise and clear way. Watching your videos has helped me appreciate the beauty of chemistry, I'm planning on rocking a JG hoodie when I ace my Orgo class!
Very helpful and made the concepts very clear and easy to understand. I would like to note, however, that the integration (peak height) of the C13 peaks is the result of the number of protons on the carbon not the number of equivalent carbons.
You’ve helped me a great deal in General Chem 1/2 and Organic Chem 1/2. I was wondering if you can cover Med. Chem? I’m going to Pharmacy School soon thanks too you. So i know i’ll need some help lol.
This so funny to me cause you should learn Med.Chem at Pharmacy School but instead you have to come here for some real help. All the best in Pharmacy School
Hey I just had to write a comment since you kind of saved my ass in quarantine with ALL of your spectroscopy videos I watched after having a breakdown over my so called "MSc.-Level-scipts"... Thank you so so so much.
Hi there. I am a pharmacy student at İnönü University in Turkey. I have a Pharmaceutical Chemistry Lab quiz tomorrow and I'll be able to do something about it thanks to you.
I just finished the 1hr and half lecture or tutorial, thank you so much!!!! The video is so amazing, I really appreciate your sharing! and I am so obsessing about your voice :D
We need teachers like him in our universities 🙏💕 those PhD holder professors can't teach like this , and only insult students by saying that , you guyz are not hardworking , you guyz are not paying attention , you guyz are just passing your time in university, you have no interest in studies ..bla bla bla 😑 but the reason they can't teach properly , they even make simple things so much difficult with their extraordinary explanation that either we get confused or we just give up by thinking that we are not intelligent .. and when we ask questions they start scolding Infront of everyone and make fun of us ...😤 We are not duffer students , we need right teachers who teach us without make us feel dumb !!!❤️🌟✨
You should open a college. College today ranked by how much research they have, how successful students graduate there are, but they really has problem on how good they teaching.
First of all, thank you for the perfect explanation, simple and clean. But i want to make a question: why does ketones have more cs than , for example, carboxylic acid? I mean : does not the electronegativity of Oxygen "take off" the electrons from the Carbon atom, reducing his screen for the external magnetic field, causing an increase of chemical shift ? I do not understand that. Thank you an keep it up !
Very helpful video! Thank you so much. I have a question. Do we get another peak If the adjacent nitrogen protonates for a certain percentage of the molecule (e.g. 10mol% of CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH2 is protonated and form CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH3+; do we see two separate peaks for the adjacent C of the N for these two molecules).
Well i'm about 5 months late but maybe this will help someone else... The carbon that has the score of 4 but is neighboring a tertiary carbon will end up having a higher "score". The other carbon with a score of 4 has a neighboring secondary carbon giving it a lower score than the other one. think of the neighboring carbon(s) as a tie breaker in these situations.
How can we see 13C peaks in a molecule containing large number of carbons? Even though only 1.1% of 13C exist The larger the molecule less likely all Carbon are 13C
very useful : ) one confusion: when you talking about the triple bond group example, I think the carbon with triple bond should be 3° not secondary carbon. Please check~ I learn all chemical analysis stuff by your video.
Can someone explain the 13C of 2,2,4trimethyl-1,3pentandiol.cuz this system wont work for that.and there are similar ch3 groups having different peaks.
Can you do some problems that combine IR, H NMR, and C NMR? e.g. formula C5H8Cl2 what is the structure? IR (cm-1): 2950 1H NMR (δ): 1.4 (4H, triplet), 1.2 (4H, triplet) 13C NMR (ppm): 62 (singlet), 26 (triplet), 23 (triplet) i want to cry :( :(
I know too late for you, may be other needs this; it is secondary caron not tertiary... the role is how many carbon atom attached to that carbon, if only one it is primary, if 2 carbon the secondary and so on .... nitrogen has the same principle, how many carbons attached to that nitrogen atom... sorry for the delay
Even though the signal height is proportional to the number of identical H atoms in 1H NMR, in C13 NMR it doesn't work like that. because it affects so many factors that determine the number of identical C atoms present. So the height of a signal is not proportional to the number of identical C atoms in 13C NMR. So are these examples correct? please answer me....
Organic Chemistry PDF Worksheets: www.video-tutor.net/orgo-chem.html
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Hi there @theorganicchemistrytutor, I'm sure you get this very often however I would like to congratulate you on your devotion to helping people like myself fundamentally understand algebra and chemistry. You cover a wide range of things I'm interested in and I am very thankful for your free lessons. You are one of the great channels out there that allow people to harness the power of self teaching, for free.
aww
There are no words to express how thankful I am for your devotion and hard work that have helped us (students) to understand difficult concepts from just watching your lessons. Gold bless your soul.
You are a legend to chemistry students around! I really don't know what I'd do without your videos that help immensely. My professor decides to teach this half ass and expect us to know it 100% for the exam.
When someone actually explains this stuff, it's not that bad. Thanks man!
Dude, you are better than khan academy and the handsome beard dude at teaching organic chem. Well for me atleast, keep it up bro
the handsome beard dude.. Do u mean professor Dave?
@@captainoaoaoa6908 Ooooh he knows alot about the science stuffff~~~
Eliott rintoul is also up there for chemistry
@@Exhalted1 if you're an a level student especially
@@sparky844 professor dave explains
Wow, this video is incredibly informative and detailed. The explanation of carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy is clear and concise, covering everything from the basics of broadband decoupled C-NMR to DEPT C-13 NMR spectroscopy. The examples provided, such as 2-butanol and 2-methylbutane, really help to illustrate how to assign chemical shifts to different carbons given the C-13 NMR spectrum. I especially appreciated the discussion on how to propose a structure given the molecule and using factors such as IHD and the number of signals present in the spectrum. The video also does a great job of explaining the different chemical shifts of functional groups, including alkyl groups, halogens, amines, alkenes, alkynes, ethers, alcohols, benzene rings, aldehydes, ketones, esters, and carboxylic acids. The score system for ranking the chemical shifts of sp3 carbon atoms is also very useful. Overall, this video is a must-watch for anyone studying organic chemistry
i STRUGGLED with this in ochem 1 and within an hour you've helped me understand it in ochem 2!! thank you!!!!
wow you are one of the most intelectually deticated personels in relation of chemistry I've heard and seen of in a long time, your work and effot is amazing keep it up.
I took me just 1 night to go through each example you've used above to understand a 7 lesson Graduate NMR Class! May God bless you!
im starting to undertand this after a week lmao thank you. I was feeling so lost and i cant even make a meeting with my professor cause i have severe social anxieaty :( so you literally just saved me
i am a chemistry student from Marburg university Germany. i really 100 percent appreciate the effort u use to bring such an understanding video. i may have wasted money in buying books but u are indeed a great Tutor. thanks
Christ, this was so obvious I feel dumb! Killin' myself to figure out NMR and how to properly analyse the spectra, but I feel confident now, hopefully the exam will go fine! You've definitely helped me, you're a great tutor. Keep up the good work!
Seriously, I attented a whole semester of lectures about nmr spectroscopy (held by a physicist, considered the best of his field) and I did not understand a single thing. After watching this video I am pretty sure I will get through the exam.
You're a legend. Thankyou for being the reason im passing this class!
hi your explanation is amazingly easy to understand and the enormous amount of examples u furnish to understand the concept with a detailed mechanistic approach is invaluable
I flunked my chem classes because my teacher didn't know how to teach. I did find a couple of tutors that got me to understand and went on to get a great job and helped others thru rough times in Math & chem.
I love your videos. I hope you can make a living off of this because you deserve it!
Thank you so much sir your explanation makes complex problems to lowest level and to be truth even lower primary students (grade 3) can understand it, what a great gifted from our God lord,, thanks my brother God bless you,, keep up the good work
Thank you so much for this video. The topics are explained in such a concise and clear way. Watching your videos has helped me appreciate the beauty of chemistry, I'm planning on rocking a JG hoodie when I ace my Orgo class!
Thank you so much, I went through all the spectroscopy videos and I think I get it now.
this is pure gold. Thank you so much. I would love to show you my appreciation in reallife too because you make me smile from the bottom of my heart
Very helpful and made the concepts very clear and easy to understand. I would like to note, however, that the integration (peak height) of the C13 peaks is the result of the number of protons on the carbon not the number of equivalent carbons.
I can not thank you enough for everything you've taught me God bless you
You’ve helped me a great deal in General Chem 1/2 and Organic Chem 1/2. I was wondering if you can cover Med. Chem?
I’m going to Pharmacy School soon thanks too you. So i know i’ll need some help lol.
I'm a Pharm.D student and I'm using his videos!
This so funny to me cause you should learn Med.Chem at Pharmacy School but instead you have to come here for some real help. All the best in Pharmacy School
Respected Sir
You explained everything so systematically..... Wonderful job.... Thank you so much. 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you so much
I can't express words to say you thanks.
Very very good way of teaching
Hey I just had to write a comment since you kind of saved my ass in quarantine with ALL of your spectroscopy videos I watched after having a breakdown over my so called "MSc.-Level-scipts"...
Thank you so so so much.
Where can i get more of such videos please?
@@nathanielukah5058 www.khanacademy.org/science/organic-chemistry/spectroscopy-jay
Hi there. I am a pharmacy student at İnönü University in Turkey. I have a Pharmaceutical Chemistry Lab quiz tomorrow and I'll be able to do something about it thanks to you.
Whoever you are, you are the best!!!
I just finished the 1hr and half lecture or tutorial, thank you so much!!!! The video is so amazing, I really appreciate your sharing! and I am so obsessing about your voice :D
Thank you for providing comedic relief by choosing to place a peak at 69 when you could have easily moved it.
I just love it..... Thank you so much for your heard work behind this masterpiece....
God bless you
I would like to thank you so so much
your videos makes me get an A in my Spectroscopy exams
We need teachers like him in our universities 🙏💕 those PhD holder professors can't teach like this , and only insult students by saying that , you guyz are not hardworking , you guyz are not paying attention , you guyz are just passing your time in university, you have no interest in studies ..bla bla bla 😑 but the reason they can't teach properly , they even make simple things so much difficult with their extraordinary explanation that either we get confused or we just give up by thinking that we are not intelligent .. and when we ask questions they start scolding Infront of everyone and make fun of us ...😤 We are not duffer students , we need right teachers who teach us without make us feel dumb !!!❤️🌟✨
This taught me more about 13C NMR than 4 years of high school chemistry and 1.5 years of a biochem degree ever have
You should open a college. College today ranked by how much research they have, how successful students graduate there are, but they really has problem on how good they teaching.
Many thanks for your edifying lectures on chemistry
RESPECT!!!! Thanks man! You nailed it as always
Thank you .thank you soo much for this...first time I understand to the best level..
you saved me. Had to understand nmr in 2 days to not fail my laboratory module...
Thanks for the clear explanation!! It helps alot!!
All your videos are fantastic, thanks for your help. Can you make a review video for the ACS Organic Chemistry I and II exam?
Thank you, all the way from the University of Peradeniya in Sri Lanka
You are #1 in NMR, bro!
OMGGGGG!! Are you taking Orgo 2 now, anyways thank you sooo muchh! I love you...respect for you
I JUST WANT TO SAY "THANK YOU!!!!!"
It is more than helpful. Thank you
CIE exam in 3 days with chem 1st , thank you saved me😌🙏
Thank you so much sir for the detailed video .. stay blessed ✨
You may have saved my grades :-)
thankyou for the hard work
I am astonished to have the vedio. I love it.
Very helpful and explanatory!
Iam from iraq . I appreciate your explain ..thank you so much
This is so very thorough
you are literally the best! thank you so much!
Dude, my spectroscopy teacher’s salary should go to your wallet, thank you!
😂😂😂😂
This guy is a legend
It was an amazing lecture...thank u so much for this 😊
you are a true legend.
First of all, thank you for the perfect explanation, simple and clean. But i want to make a question: why does ketones have more cs than , for example, carboxylic acid? I mean : does not the electronegativity of Oxygen "take off" the electrons from the Carbon atom, reducing his screen for the external magnetic field, causing an increase of chemical shift ? I do not understand that. Thank you an keep it up !
Bc carboxylic acids have resonance
May be this will help me in the future.
crystal clear, thank you dude
For example, #6, wasn't the carbon b a tertiary carbon with a score value of 3 due to 3 primaries around?
i am wondering the same
you really helped me,thank youu🥰🥰❤️
Really very informative.
Great job...thank you.
Thx dude, that helps a lot
It's very good video 👍
You are amazing.it help me alot
Very helpful video! Thank you so much. I have a question. Do we get another peak If the adjacent nitrogen protonates for a certain percentage of the molecule (e.g. 10mol% of CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH2 is protonated and form CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-NH3+; do we see two separate peaks for the adjacent C of the N for these two molecules).
So how do you explain why at 10:48min why does a secondary carbon has a higher chemical shift than tertiary carbon if they both have a score of 4?
Well i'm about 5 months late but maybe this will help someone else... The carbon that has the score of 4 but is neighboring a tertiary carbon will end up having a higher "score". The other carbon with a score of 4 has a neighboring secondary carbon giving it a lower score than the other one. think of the neighboring carbon(s) as a tie breaker in these situations.
@@scottwatson6901 " but maybe this will help someone else" I was that someone, thank you king!
Better than my prof ngl
are you can do a videos about IR & UV spectroscopy please please 😭
How can we see 13C peaks in a molecule
containing large number of carbons? Even though only 1.1% of 13C exist
The larger the molecule less likely all Carbon are 13C
I love you youre the GOAT
Thank you ! ❤❤❤❤
Pls explain the N+1 splitting pattern for long condensed organic compound and for double, tripple bond
The reason I love Ochem
im confused. how come around 1:22:00 when he talks about H NMR he's not using the adjacent carbon's hydrogens to determine the split pattern?
saved my life
very useful : )
one confusion: when you talking about the triple bond group example, I think the carbon with triple bond should be 3° not secondary carbon. Please check~
I learn all chemical analysis stuff by your video.
A carbon with a triple bond cannot be bound to three R-groups and cannot therefore be a tertiary carbon, since a carbon atom cannot form five bonds.
I was wondering the same thing! Cb should have a score of 5 and Cc a score of 7.
Can someone explain the 13C of 2,2,4trimethyl-1,3pentandiol.cuz this system wont work for that.and there are similar ch3 groups having different peaks.
Why does 13C have such a wider range as compared to 1H NMR?
Thank you sooo much and please provide us COSY NOSY lecture... please
very helpful
@TheOrganicChemistryTutor At 29:25 Isnt carbon A a tertiary carbon, making the score of carbon B 4 which would give the higher chemical shift anyways?
Thank you!!! :)
u r ausome thank u😭💙
thank you very much
Sir can you make video on 2 d nmr spectroscopy and please explain tocsy cosy hmbc hsqc spectra ? I will really appreciate it.
EXCELLENT
Can you do some problems that combine IR, H NMR, and C NMR? e.g.
formula C5H8Cl2 what is the structure?
IR (cm-1): 2950
1H NMR (δ): 1.4 (4H, triplet), 1.2 (4H, triplet)
13C NMR (ppm): 62 (singlet), 26 (triplet), 23 (triplet)
i want to cry :( :(
25:00 Why do you call the second carbon in 2-chlorobutane as tertiary, while later naming the first carbon in 1-chlorobutane as primary?
as far as I can tell, he is wrong.
I know too late for you, may be other needs this; it is secondary caron not tertiary...
the role is how many carbon atom attached to that carbon, if only one it is primary, if 2 carbon the secondary and so on .... nitrogen has the same principle, how many carbons attached to that nitrogen atom...
sorry for the delay
Any help please...what's the number of carbons does cyclohezone has on 13 cnmr
Even though the signal height is proportional to the number of identical H atoms in 1H NMR, in C13 NMR it doesn't work like that. because it affects so many factors that determine the number of identical C atoms present. So the height of a signal is not proportional to the number of identical C atoms in 13C NMR. So are these examples correct? please answer me....
Man U R amazing
Literally I go to class just for attendance and quiz sake
The answer for the ex 10: can be CH3-CO-CH(OH)-CH3 at 1:20:54 ??