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Topic: Practical NMR calculation  (Read 1857 times)

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Offline poonilization

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Practical NMR calculation
« on: May 04, 2015, 07:53:15 PM »
Hi, i'm having a little trouble with this example we went through during lectures. http://i.gyazo.com/147dd0540e365077c7894eab7d1dc02e.png

I understand there are more nuclei alligned parallel to the external magnetic field (B0) and therefore N1/2 > N-1/2

You sub ΔE, k and T into the equation and get 1.0000479 as the ratio of N1/2 to N-1/2, and that in 1 mole N1/2 + N-1/2 has to = NA

but i dont understand how to calculate the exact number of nucleii in the spin up state (N1/2) and spin down state (N-1/2)

Could anyone please explain how i would get to the exact number of spin up states (N1/2) and spin down states (N-1/2) given in the example?

Offline mjc123

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Re: Practical NMR calculation
« Reply #1 on: May 05, 2015, 05:28:43 AM »
You have N1/2/N-1/2 = 1+δ, where δ is very small. In this case we can make the accurate approximation
N1/2 = 1/2 NA(1+δ/2) and N-1/2 = 1/2 NA(1-δ/2)
because N1/2/N-1/2 = (1+δ/2)(1-δ/2)-1 = (1+δ/2)(1+δ/2+...) and powers of δ higher than 1 can be ignored.

Offline poonilization

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Re: Practical NMR calculation
« Reply #2 on: May 05, 2015, 06:49:55 AM »
Thank you very much, makes more sense now :)

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