The options which control the specific NMR features are discussed below. None of them requires an argument, they can all be put in the same line.
NMR output
At the end of the six perturbation runs, the results are printed. This includes the magnetic susceptibility and the chemical shielding. For the chemical shielding, there are two values: the raw and the net ones. The raw shielding correspond to a molecule in vacuum, without the susceptibility correction, whereas the net shielding contains that correction for a spherical sample. It consists of an additive constant to all eigenvalues, which is printed out at the end of the net shielding.
In more detail, the results are:
What to look at?
If you search for the values which are peaked in a spectrum, you have
to take the isotropic shieldings (the iso column of the
output). If the system is a gas, take the raw shielding, if it is
condensed matter, take the net shielding. If your system is a molecule in
vacuo, but the experimentalists measure it in a solvent, add the
susceptibility correction to the raw shieldings by yourself.
Why are my numbers so strange in absolute value?
One more point shall be mentioned: For all nuclei except hydrogen,
pseudopotentials screen the core electrons. The chemical shielding,
however, is very sensitive to core and semi-core electrons. This can
be corrected through a semi-empirical additive constant in many
cases. This constant still needs to be added to the values given from
the program. It depends on the nucleus, on the pseudopotential, and on
the xc-functional.
In other cases, the calculated chemical shieldings are completely
meaningless due to this deficiency. Then, you have to use a
pseudopotential which leaves out the semicore states such that they
are correctly taken into account. Example: carbon shieldings can be
corrected very well through a constant number, silicon shieldings
cannot. For Si, you have to take the
shell completely into the
valence band, requiring a cutoff larger than 300Ry.
How to compare to experiment?
Usually, experimentalists measure the difference between
the resonance frequency of the desired system and that of a reference
system, and they call it
(the series shift) instead of
(the series shielding). To make life more complicated,
they usually define the shift of nucleus A of molecule
X with respect to reference molecule ref as
.
Example: To calculate
,
where TMS=tetramethylsilane, the standard reference molecule for
H-shifts, one would have to calculate the H-shielding of TMS and of
CH
and subtract them. Unfortunately, TMS is nontrivial to
calculate, because it is a large molecule and the geometry is
complicated (and the shieldings probably must be calculated taking
into account vibrational and rotational averaging). Thus, in most
cases it is better to take for instance the CH
shielding as a
(computational) reference, and transform the shieldings relative to
CH
to those relative to TMS through the experimental shielding of
CH
with respect to TMS.
While doing so, you should not forget that the shielding is a property which is usually not yet fully converged when energies and bonding are. Therefore, the reference molecule should be calculated with the same computational parameters as the desired system (to reproduce the same convergence error). In particular, computational parameters include the type of the pseudopotential and its projectors, the xc-functional and the cutoff.
What accuracy can I expect?
This is a difficult question, and there is no overall answer. First,
one has to consider that on the DFT-pseudopotential level of theory,
one will never reach the accuracy of the quantum chemistry community.
However, for ``normal'' systems, the absolute accuracy is typically
0.5-1 ppm for hydrogen and about 5-20ppm for Carbon. The spread
between extreme regions of the carbon spectrum is not reached: instead
of 200ppm, one only reaches 150ppm between aliphatic and aromatic
atoms, for instance. The anisotropy and the principal values of the
shielding tensor can be expected to be about 10-20% too small. For
hydrogen shieldings, these values are usually better, the error
remains in the region of a single ppm.