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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Applications to Organic Chemistry.pdf

Taken from Introdution: The development of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy subsequent to the initial discoveries by Purcell and Bloch in 1946 is now recognized as one of the most important events in the last fifty years for the advancement of organic chemistry. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques are throwing new light on many difficult organic problems. With the possible exception of gas-liquid chromatography, no new experimental method has been so rapidly accepted or proved so widely applicable. It is the purpose of this book to present the elements of NMR spectroscopy in a form suitable for practical use by organic chemists. Examples of applications will be mainly drawn from high resolution proton resonance spectroscopy, but the principles so illustrated will often be useful in dealing with other types of NMR spectroscopy.

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