Abstract:
First and foremost I would like to thank the Lord almighty for the life he has given me.
My stay and study at Durham University was funded and supported by Canon Collins
Trust to whom I am very thankful. I would also like to pass my gratitude to the National
University of Lesotho for releasing me on staff development leave, my dependants’
allowance, and funding my travel both ways.
I would like to thank my supervisory team: Dr. Alan M. Kenwright for his supervision
and training and demonstrated kindness and patience. He motivated and encouradme
during this period. I am also grateful to him for coming up with original ideas of a project
on which I worked.
Dr. John Sanderson cannot be forgotten for his co-supervisory role. I am also grateful to
Dr. Elizabeth Grayson for the supervision in chemistry and for the protection and
deprotection of the mannoside compounds. Dr. Louise Natrajan, I thank you for the
lanthanide complexes I worked on. I would also like to thank Mr. Ian McKeag and Mrs
Catherine Heffernan who contributed a lot to my training in solution state NMR.
Other groups of people who contributed to my training need to be mentioned: all my
lectures in the taught modules, the mass spectrometry facility and all the Chemistry
Department staff.
Last but not least my family members. Most importantly my wife and son who suffered
the loneliness of my being thousands of miles away from them without complaint. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a robust, non invasive technique
applicable in structure determination as well as in the study of dynamic behaviour of
chemical compounds. This thesis is in two sections, the first dealing mainly with a
structure determination application of NMR and the second dealing mainly with a study
of dynamic behaviour.
Section 1
NMR characterisation of carbohydrates has proved challenging because of the limited
chemical shift ranges of both the proton and carbon signals. The broad signals due to the
labile hydroxyl protons cause further complications by overlapping proton signals from
the ring. Protecting group chemistry is vital in the preparation and manipulation of
synthetic carbohydrates and can potentially help with the assignment of the (otherwise
extremely complicated) NMR spectra of carbohydrates. However, the widely used benzyl
protecting group can make the spectrum more difficult to interpret because the benzyl
CH2 proton signals often come in the same region of the spectrum as the anomeric
protons, usually used as reporter groups of carbohydrates and the benzyl CH2 carbon
signals come in the same region as the carbohydrate ring carbons. This section reports the
invetsigation and application of a family of alternative protecting groups, namely various
fluorobenzyl groups, which have not been used in carbohydrate chemistry before. With
pentafluorobenzyl, the proton chemical shift dispersion is improved, and the CH2 and
carbohydrate ring carbon signals are shifted to lower frequency, considerably simplifying
the task of assigning the carbon spectrum, facilitating the interpretation of all 1H-13C
correlation experiments (HSQC, HMQC, HMBC).
Section 2
Cyclen complexes of lanthanide (III) ions have found use in magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), luminescence imaging and assay studies. In particular, europium (III) complexes
have potential in anlytical, forensic, and biomedical applications based on their
impressive emissive properties. However, the emissive properties are modulated by the
thermodynamic stability and kinetic inertness of the complexes. For biomedical
applications, chelation is necessary to avoid europium toxicity that may be triggerd by
accidental dissociation of the complex and release of the metal in vivo. A new cyclen
europium(III) complex with pyridyl pendant ligands instead of the usual acetate groups
has been synthesised by a group at Manchester University. The pyridyl ligands confer
higher emmisive intensities to the complex, to enable applicability of the complex in time
gated measurements. The chemical structure determination of the compound was
accomplished by 1H, 13C, COSY, HMQC / HSQC and EXSY NMR experiments.
Selective inversion experiments data were evaluated using the CIFIT simulation program,
and showed that in aqueous solutions from -0.2º C to 107.6º C the dominant dynamic
process is flipping of the pendant (pyridyl) arms, and isomerism is biased towards the
twisted square antiprism (TSAP).