Chemical shift is usually expressed in
parts per million (ppm) by
frequency, because it is calculated from : \delta = \frac{\nu_\text{sample} - \nu_\text{ref}}{\nu_\text{ref}}, where is the absolute resonance frequency of the sample, and is the absolute resonance frequency of a standard reference compound, measured in the same applied magnetic field . Since the numerator is usually expressed in
hertz, and the denominator in
megahertz, is expressed in ppm. The detected frequencies (in Hz) for 1H, 13C, and 29Si nuclei are usually referenced against TMS (
tetramethylsilane), TSP (
trimethylsilylpropanoic acid), or
DSS, which by the definition above have a chemical shift of zero if chosen as the reference. Other standard materials are used for setting the chemical shift for other nuclei. Thus an NMR signal observed at a frequency 300 Hz higher than the signal from TMS, where the TMS resonance frequency is 300 MHz, has a chemical shift of : \frac{300~\text{Hz}}{300 \times 10^6~\text{Hz}} = 1 \times 10^{-6} = 1~\text{ppm}. Although the absolute resonance frequency depends on the applied magnetic field, the chemical shift is independent of external magnetic field strength. On the other hand, the resolution of NMR will increase with applied magnetic field.
Tau scale In early
proton NMR publications, the scale was also used, defined as = 10 ppm - TMS. It fell out of use around 1970.
Referencing methods Practically speaking, diverse methods may be used to reference chemical shifts in an NMR experiment, which can be subdivided into
indirect and
direct referencing methods. If substances other than the solvent itself are used for internal referencing, the sample has to be combined with the reference compound, which may affect the chemical shifts. •
External referencing, involving sample and reference contained separately in coaxial cylindrical tubes. If this method is used without field/frequency locking, shimming procedures between the sample and the reference need to be avoided as they change the applied magnetic field (and thereby influence the chemical shift). These may be negated by inclusion of calibrated reference compounds. ==The induced magnetic field==