I think what you mean are things like alcohols (OH) carboxyl (COOH) and Amine (NH
2). With these functional groups the Hydrogen is on the other side of the oxygen/nitrogen, thus we get singlets.
eg. C
H3C
H2O
HThe
H in hydroxyl is shielded by the oxygen and forms a singlet.
The
H2 will form only a quartette due to the
H3 on the left, the OH does not interfere with the signal.
The
H3 will form a triplette due to the
H2 to its right.
Hope this makes sense. There are also few videos on spectroscopy and such in my youtube channel, you can see the link below.
Just clarifying something;
I read that functional groups of Hydrogen do not cause any splitting of the NMR signal of their neighboring protons. Is this true? Can someone show me an example