Investigations in nuclear magnetic resonance.
Abstract
Itoh and Kamiya?^ in their work on K?Cu?Cl?·2H?O have estimated
that some of the unpaired electron spin density may lie on the protons
of the water molecules. In the recent ENDOR study by van Ormondt
et?al.?^ already referred to in Ch. V,
the magnitude of the isotropic hyperfine interaction with the two
water protons has been determined to be +0.890?MHz. A possible
dipolar contribution from this transferred electron spin density as
well as the g?tensor anisotropy may be expected to have appreciable
effect on the angular variation of the shifts due to the paramagnetic
interaction.
Nevertheless, we have been able to demonstrate in our study a
method for investigating the Fake interaction in the presence of
paramagnetic shift; the paramagnetic nature of the interaction causing
the asymmetry in the NMR spectra has been verified by the experiments
at different fields and temperatures. The results obtained regarding
the angular variation of the paramagnetic shifts are generally consistent
with a dipolar model for this interaction. The Fake variation
as well as the H?bonding picture in this case are closely similar to
the situation in the isomorphous diamagnetic magnesium acetate. As
will be seen in the next chapter, this seems to be largely true of
nickel acetate also.
The investigations that have been described in Chapters V,
VI and VII clearly establish that in the case of all the isomorphous
acetates of magnesium, cobalt and nickel, the angular variation of
the Fake splitting and the hydrogen bonding are closely similar.
The presence of the free water protons as inferred from the IR investigations
has been confirmed by the NMR investigations described
in this thesis, by means of a bifurcated bond for the water
protons. The X?ray investigations for nickel and cobalt acetate
tetrahydrates yield improbable values for 2?, while in the case of
the magnesium salt the proton coordinates are not known. The water
proton positions in nickel and cobalt acetate tetrahydrates have been
determined in our investigation more accurately. In the case of
magnesium acetate, the ambiguities in the X?ray structural data have
not permitted a similar accurate location of the protons of H?O(2).
The paramagnetic shift in the case of cobalt and nickel acetate
tetrahydrate has been studied in the ac plane and their angular variation
has been shown to correspond with the known magnetic data in the two
cases.
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- Physics (PHY) [671]

