Ekstasis-//7
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2005
- Messages
- 665
Hi,
I was wondering if someone could help me understand how to interpret a NMR analysis? I have seen these provided by a number of RC vendors. I know one in particular vendor posted NMR in the past was of 6-APB and those who interpreted it commented about it showing the 6-APB was quite impure and quite possibly some of the impurities looked nasty (toxic).
I'd love to be able to look at one of these and get a basic idea what it's telling me. This would be very useful as some vendors like to place their company logo watermark all over the NMR so it would not be possible to post all NMR's on bluelight for help with interpreting. Probably the length of my understanding at the moment would be interpreting a mass spectrum analysis. (Which seems to be a pretty lousy method of analysis without something else.
I've included a link to an NMR of 2-FA (2-FluroAmphetamine) as an example. I have no idea if this is relatively pure and/or what impurities this may show.
http://i53.tinypic.com/2m4cboo.jpg
While we are at the chemistry questions can I ask something else? It's probably basic but I haven't figured it out yet. What kind of bond is the HCl component attached to in an organic psychoactive alkaloid (for example something simple like amphetamine)? So far I can see pictures on Wikipedia that show a covalently bonded molecule as a HCl salt it has just a Cl atom shown separately along side it. I'm trying to figure out why there is not a HCl molecule and why it is not shown as covalently bonded? How does it attach to the freebase molecule and then in turn makes (at least some molecules) change from non polar to polar? The picture makes it look more like an ionic bond but an ionic bond this is only a bond between metals and non metals isn't it? The structural and empirical formula should be different for a freebase and for the molecule as a salt containing HCl or SO4 ect shouldn't it? I'm guessing then usually I'm looking at a structural forumla which is for the freebase as opposed to the salt?
I was wondering if someone could help me understand how to interpret a NMR analysis? I have seen these provided by a number of RC vendors. I know one in particular vendor posted NMR in the past was of 6-APB and those who interpreted it commented about it showing the 6-APB was quite impure and quite possibly some of the impurities looked nasty (toxic).
I'd love to be able to look at one of these and get a basic idea what it's telling me. This would be very useful as some vendors like to place their company logo watermark all over the NMR so it would not be possible to post all NMR's on bluelight for help with interpreting. Probably the length of my understanding at the moment would be interpreting a mass spectrum analysis. (Which seems to be a pretty lousy method of analysis without something else.
I've included a link to an NMR of 2-FA (2-FluroAmphetamine) as an example. I have no idea if this is relatively pure and/or what impurities this may show.
http://i53.tinypic.com/2m4cboo.jpg
While we are at the chemistry questions can I ask something else? It's probably basic but I haven't figured it out yet. What kind of bond is the HCl component attached to in an organic psychoactive alkaloid (for example something simple like amphetamine)? So far I can see pictures on Wikipedia that show a covalently bonded molecule as a HCl salt it has just a Cl atom shown separately along side it. I'm trying to figure out why there is not a HCl molecule and why it is not shown as covalently bonded? How does it attach to the freebase molecule and then in turn makes (at least some molecules) change from non polar to polar? The picture makes it look more like an ionic bond but an ionic bond this is only a bond between metals and non metals isn't it? The structural and empirical formula should be different for a freebase and for the molecule as a salt containing HCl or SO4 ect shouldn't it? I'm guessing then usually I'm looking at a structural forumla which is for the freebase as opposed to the salt?
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