COSY
Correlation Spectroscopy (COSY) is a two-dimensional NMR technique that correlates proton chemical shifts through scalar coupling (J-coupling), revealing which protons are magnetically coupled and hence bonded through multiple bonds. Developed by Aue, Bartholdi, and Ernst in 1976, COSY became one of the most important tools in structural elucidation, enabling chemists to map out proton connectivity patterns and deduce molecular topology without isotopic labeling.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Aue, W. P., Bartholdi, E., & Ernst, R. R. (1976). Two-dimensional spectroscopy. Application to nuclear magnetic resonance. The Journal of Chemical Physics, 64(5), 2229-2246. · DOI 10.1063/1.432450
- Bax, A., & Davis, D. G. (1985). MLEV-17-based two-dimensional homonuclear magnetization transfer spectroscopy. Journal of Magnetic Resonance, 65(2), 355-360. · DOI 10.1016/0022-2364(85)90018-6
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