Principle of NMR spectroscopy MCQs With Answer

Principle of NMR Spectroscopy MCQs With Answer (M. Pharm)

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a cornerstone of Modern Pharmaceutical Analytical Techniques, offering unparalleled insight into molecular structure, dynamics, and purity. This quiz focuses on the core principles of NMR—nuclear spin behavior in a magnetic field, Larmor precession, chemical shift, shielding/deshielding, scalar coupling, relaxation, FT acquisition, and practical parameters such as shimming, locking, and spectral width. Designed for M. Pharm students, these MCQs emphasize conceptual clarity and application-oriented understanding relevant to drug analysis, impurity profiling, and structural elucidation. Work through the questions to strengthen your grasp of NMR fundamentals and build a solid foundation for advanced 1D/2D experiments and quantitative NMR applications in pharmaceutical research.

Q1. Which statement best describes the fundamental principle of NMR spectroscopy?

  • NMR detects transitions of electrons between spin states in an external electric field.
  • NMR measures absorption of radiofrequency energy by nuclei with non-zero spin placed in a strong magnetic field at their Larmor frequency.
  • NMR monitors vibrational transitions of nuclei driven by infrared light.
  • NMR relies on scattering of X-rays by electron density.

Correct Answer: NMR measures absorption of radiofrequency energy by nuclei with non-zero spin placed in a strong magnetic field at their Larmor frequency.

Q2. What is the Larmor precession frequency (in Hz) of a nucleus in a magnetic field B0?

  • ν0 = γ B0
  • ν0 = (γ/2π) B0
  • ν0 = γ B0 / (2π B1)
  • ν0 = h γ B0

Correct Answer: ν0 = (γ/2π) B0

Q3. Why is tetramethylsilane (TMS) used as a chemical shift reference in 1H and 13C NMR?

  • It has strongly deshielded protons that resonate downfield of most analytes.
  • It gives a single, sharp, highly shielded signal and is chemically inert and volatile.
  • It covalently binds to all analytes ensuring internal calibration.
  • It contains no hydrogen or carbon and hence does not interfere.

Correct Answer: It gives a single, sharp, highly shielded signal and is chemically inert and volatile.

Q4. In NMR, chemical shift δ is reported in which unit and defined as?

  • Hz; frequency difference divided by spectrometer frequency.
  • ppm; (νsample − νref)/νspectrometer × 106.
  • Tesla; proportional to B0.
  • ppm; independent of reference compound.

Correct Answer: ppm; (νsample − νref)/νspectrometer × 106.

Q5. How does an electronegative substituent affect the chemical shift of nearby protons?

  • Increases electron density, causing upfield shift (lower δ).
  • Decreases shielding via −I effect, causing downfield shift (higher δ).
  • Has no effect on chemical shift; only temperature matters.
  • Only changes J-coupling constants, not δ.

Correct Answer: Decreases shielding via −I effect, causing downfield shift (higher δ).

Q6. Which statement about spin–spin coupling (J) is correct?

  • J is measured in ppm and scales with B0.
  • J is measured in Hz and is largely independent of B0.
  • J only occurs between magnetically equivalent nuclei.
  • J results from through-space dipolar interactions exclusively.

Correct Answer: J is measured in Hz and is largely independent of B0.

Q7. For a proton with n equivalent vicinal neighbors (no exchange, first-order), the observed multiplicity is:

  • n
  • 2n + 1
  • n + 1
  • 2n

Correct Answer: n + 1

Q8. In 1H NMR, the area under a resonance is proportional to:

  • The gyromagnetic ratio of the observed nucleus.
  • The number of chemically equivalent protons contributing to that signal.
  • The magnetic field strength squared.
  • The T2 relaxation time only.

Correct Answer: The number of chemically equivalent protons contributing to that signal.

Q9. Which pair correctly matches relaxation mechanisms with their descriptions?

  • T1: transverse dephasing; T2: longitudinal recovery.
  • T1: spin–lattice (longitudinal) relaxation; T2: spin–spin (transverse) dephasing.
  • T1 and T2 are identical and field-independent.
  • T1 governs linewidth; T2 governs NOE.

Correct Answer: T1: spin–lattice (longitudinal) relaxation; T2: spin–spin (transverse) dephasing.

Q10. The primary advantage of Fourier Transform (FT) NMR over continuous-wave (CW) NMR is:

  • It eliminates the need for superconducting magnets.
  • It permits pulsed excitation, time-domain acquisition (FID), signal averaging, and rapid multi-dimensional experiments for improved sensitivity.
  • It increases chemical shift dispersion in ppm.
  • It removes the need for sample spinning.

Correct Answer: It permits pulsed excitation, time-domain acquisition (FID), signal averaging, and rapid multi-dimensional experiments for improved sensitivity.

Q11. To prevent aliasing during FID digitization, the chosen spectral width (SW) must satisfy:

  • SW < 2 × highest frequency component to reduce noise.
  • SW ≥ 2 × the highest frequency offset from the carrier (Nyquist criterion).
  • SW equals the reference frequency exactly.
  • SW is irrelevant in FT-NMR.

Correct Answer: SW ≥ 2 × the highest frequency offset from the carrier (Nyquist criterion).

Q12. Which is true about 13C NMR of organic molecules?

  • 13C has 100% natural abundance and is highly sensitive.
  • Broadband 1H decoupling simplifies spectra by removing 1H–13C couplings and enhances signal via NOE.
  • 13C chemical shifts are reported relative to DSS, not TMS.
  • 13C spectra always show integrals proportional to carbon count.

Correct Answer: Broadband 1H decoupling simplifies spectra by removing 1H–13C couplings and enhances signal via NOE.

Q13. Regarding DEPT experiments in 13C NMR, which statement is correct?

  • DEPT displays all carbons including quaternary with distinct phases.
  • In DEPT-135, CH and CH3 appear positive, CH2 negative, and quaternary carbons are absent.
  • DEPT distinguishes carbons based on chemical shift anisotropy only.
  • DEPT signals are unaffected by proton decoupling.

Correct Answer: In DEPT-135, CH and CH3 appear positive, CH2 negative, and quaternary carbons are absent.

Q14. The Nuclear Overhauser Effect (NOE) primarily provides information on:

  • Through-bond scalar couplings up to three bonds.
  • Through-space proximity of nuclei within about 5 Å via dipolar cross-relaxation.
  • Chemical exchange rates on the millisecond timescale only.
  • Electron spin density at the nucleus.

Correct Answer: Through-space proximity of nuclei within about 5 Å via dipolar cross-relaxation.

Q15. What is the purpose of the field–frequency lock in solution NMR?

  • To lock the sample tube position and prevent spinning.
  • To use the deuterium signal of the solvent to stabilize spectrometer frequency and compensate for B0 drift.
  • To suppress residual solvent protons via selective saturation.
  • To increase the gyromagnetic ratio of detected nuclei.

Correct Answer: To use the deuterium signal of the solvent to stabilize spectrometer frequency and compensate for B0 drift.

Q16. Which statement about quadrupolar nuclei (I > 1/2) is correct?

  • They typically have slow relaxation and very sharp lines in solution NMR.
  • Their rapid quadrupolar relaxation often broadens or collapses couplings, leading to weak/broad signals (e.g., 14N).
  • They cannot be observed by NMR.
  • They always give resolved first-order multiplets.

Correct Answer: Their rapid quadrupolar relaxation often broadens or collapses couplings, leading to weak/broad signals (e.g., 14N).

Q17. Which parameter changes with magnetic field strength B0 while the others remain essentially constant?

  • J-coupling constants (Hz)
  • Chemical shift in ppm
  • Chemical shift in Hz
  • Multiplicity (pattern) from scalar coupling in first-order spectra

Correct Answer: Chemical shift in Hz

Q18. In protic compounds, rapid exchange of –OH or –NH protons usually leads to which observation in 1H NMR at room temperature?

  • Strong, well-resolved coupling to neighboring CH protons.
  • Broad singlets with suppressed scalar coupling and temperature/solvent dependence.
  • Complete disappearance of all non-exchanging signals.
  • Upfield shift due solely to ring current effects.

Correct Answer: Broad singlets with suppressed scalar coupling and temperature/solvent dependence.

Q19. For accurate quantitative 1H NMR integrations (qNMR), which acquisition condition is most critical?

  • Use a relaxation delay (D1) ≥ 5 × the longest T1 of the nuclei being integrated.
  • Apply strong continuous decoupling during acquisition.
  • Use the narrowest possible spectral width for better resolution.
  • Minimize number of scans to prevent saturation.

Correct Answer: Use a relaxation delay (D1) ≥ 5 × the longest T1 of the nuclei being integrated.

Q20. Which 2D experiment correlates directly bonded 1H and 13C nuclei (one-bond heteronuclear couplings)?

  • COSY
  • NOESY
  • HSQC
  • HMBC

Correct Answer: HSQC

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