Asked by ~christina~
UV
I was just wondering how a solvent would affect the spectra of a compound.
Like a polar or nonpolar solvent for example:
polar: Methylene chloride
Nonpolar: cyclohexane, hexane, or ethanol
Thanks
I was just wondering how a solvent would affect the spectra of a compound.
Like a polar or nonpolar solvent for example:
polar: Methylene chloride
Nonpolar: cyclohexane, hexane, or ethanol
Thanks
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
This may be just a hint of what you are looking for.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080621111634AAE3LO0
And I consider ethanol as somewhat polar, at least more polar than the other two solvents you list.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080621111634AAE3LO0
And I consider ethanol as somewhat polar, at least more polar than the other two solvents you list.
Answered by
~christina~
Yes I saw that. I thoroughly looked this up before I came here...
That doesn't tell me what will I see.
What does "Agregate," mean?
I found out what I needed, I think.
Thank you for looking, Dr.Bob.
That doesn't tell me what will I see.
What does "Agregate," mean?
I found out what I needed, I think.
Thank you for looking, Dr.Bob.
Answered by
Dr Russ
There are corrections to Woodward's rules for solvents which would help here. These below are for the uv max of a conjugated carbonyl and are in nm.
water + 8
chloroform - 1
ether - 7
cyclohexane - 11
dioxane - 5
hexane - 11
so the lower polarity solvent shifts the maximum to a lower wavelength and the more polar solvent to a higher wavelength.
water + 8
chloroform - 1
ether - 7
cyclohexane - 11
dioxane - 5
hexane - 11
so the lower polarity solvent shifts the maximum to a lower wavelength and the more polar solvent to a higher wavelength.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.