Fluorinated compounds are increasingly used in medicinal, agricultural, and material science applications. NMR probes and procedures were historically employed to get hydrogen and carbon spectra.
Fluorine’s NMR characteristics provide chemists with new tools and additional obstacles in comprehensive structure elucidation.
This webinar will explore how NMR probes have changed over time, highlight a recent breakthrough in probe technology, and describe new experimental methods that could help anyone wanting to utilize NMR to confirm structures containing fluorine.
Image Credit: JEOL USA, Inc.
About the Presenter
Tim began working for JEOL USA, Inc. in 2013 as an NMR Applications Chemist. He is in charge of teaching and supporting clients who use JEOL NMR spectrometers, writing papers on the latest breakthroughs in NMR technology, and assisting the sales and marketing teams at JEOL USA.
He also visits and speaks at conferences on essential NMR issues, such as structural elucidation, quantification, and chemistry education.