Hello All Does anyone have any ideas on what might give a phosphorus signal at negative 74 ppm (cf phosphoric acid)? There's a very small signal in many of my 31P spectra at -74 ppm. It's not a spectrometer artefact and it it present in samples prepared by different people on- and off-site using different tubes and different sources of solvents. The samples are chemically variable too, alkyl/aryl-phosphines in organic solvents, phosphates in water but there's this little curiousity at -74 ppm. Thank-you. asked Nov 12 '13 at 01:56 Craig |
Hello, I need more information and also some pictures, ... which spectrometer, Bruker,Varian/Agilent, JEOL, ... have you changed the middle of the spectra, ... moving tof or O1? Or have you changed the spectral window (SW)??? Is the signal/peak phaseable? Thanks for more information Uli answered Nov 12 '13 at 07:56 Ulrich Haunz Hello Uli. It appears that the signal is an artefact after all. To answer your questions - Bruker, moved O1, changed SW, out-of-phase. It seems to appear only with certain combinations of O1 and SW and a genuine 31P signal. I'll send pictures by email. - Craig (Nov 19 '13 at 05:10) |
Hi Craig, Do you see it if you run a spectrum of an empty tube? Pete answered Nov 14 '13 at 01:56 Pete Gierth Hello Pete. On a blank of tube + CDCl3, there is no signal. - Craig (Nov 19 '13 at 05:11) |