Everything about Carbon-13 totally explained
Carbon-13 (
13C) is a natural,
stable isotope of
carbon and one of the
environmental isotopes. It makes up about 1.1% of all natural carbon on
Earth. Pure carbon-13 costs about 700
USD per gram.
Detection by NMR spectroscopy
Because of its nuclear
spin properties, this isotope responds to a
resonant radio frequency (RF) signal. The absorption and emission of the RF signal by the
nuclei can be monitored and detected using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, most commonly known as
NMR spectroscopy. This is a technique that gives information on the identity and number of atoms adjacent to other atoms in said molecule, thereby giving clues to the structure of an organic molecule. Since
12C has zero spin, it doesn't give an NMR signal, and since only 1% of the atoms in a molecule are
13C, it's unlikely that carbon-carbon coupling is seen. Acquiring a
13C NMR spectrum can take from a couple of minutes to hours because many scans have to be summed together in order to have results distinguishable from background noise.
In
biological NMR proteins can be deliberately labelled with
13C (and usually
nitrogen-15) to facilitate
structure determination. This is achieved by growing
microorganisms
genetically engineered to express the protein on a
growth medium with
13C labeled glucose as the only carbon source. In this way proteins with a
13C content of almost 100% can be produced.
Detection by mass spectroscopy
A
mass spectrogram of an organic compound will usually contain a small peak of one mass unit greater than the apparent molecular ion peak (M). This is known as the M+1 peak and originates due to the presence of
13C atoms. A molecule containing one carbon atom will be expected to have an M+1 peak of approximately 1.1% of the size of the M peak as 1.1% of the carbon atoms will be
13C rather than
12C. Similarly a molecule containing two carbon atoms will be expected to have an M+1 peak of approximately 2.2% of the size of the M peak, as there's double the previous likelihood that a molecule will contain a
13C atom.
In the above the mathematics and chemistry have been simplified, however it can be used effectively to give the number of carbon atoms for small to medium sized organic molecules. In the following formula the result should be rounded to the nearest
integer:
C = number of C atoms
X =
amplitude of the M ion peak
Y = amplitude of the M+1 ion peak
13C-enriched compounds are used in the research of metabolic processes by means of mass spectroscopy. Such compounds are safe because they're non-radioactive. In addition,
13C is used to quantitate proteins (quantitative
proteomics). One important application is `stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture´ (
SILAC).
Further Information
Get more info on 'Carbon-13'.
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