Correlation of deuterium quadrupolar tensor orientation via spin diffusion under slow magic-angle sample spinning

1998 ◽  
Vol 283 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 262-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhehong Gan ◽  
Pierre Robyr ◽  
R.R. Ernst
2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurynas Dagys ◽  
Sergejus Balčiūnas ◽  
Jûras Banys ◽  
Feliksas Kuliešius ◽  
Vladimir Chizhik ◽  
...  

The 1H–13C cross-polarization magic angle spinning (CP MAS) kinetics was studied in poly(vinyl phosphonic acid) (pVPA), i.e. material with high degrees of freedom of proton motion along H-bonded chains. It has been shown that the CP kinetic data for the adjacent 1H–13C spin pairs can be described in the frame of the isotropic spin-diffusion approach. The rates of spin diffusion and spin-lattice relaxation as well as the parameters accounting for spin coupling and the effective size of spin clusters have been determined. The local order parameter S ≈ 0.63±0.02, determined as the ratio of the measured dipolar 1H–13C coupling constant and the calculated static dipolar coupling constant, is significantly lower than the values deduced for related sites in other polymers and in series of amino acids. This means that the local disorder of the C–H bonds in pVPA is between those for rather rigid C–H bond configurations having S = 0.8–1.0 and highly disordered –CH3 groups (S ~ 0.4). This effect can be attributed to the presence of the proton transfer path where proton motion is easy to activate. The activation energy for the proton motion Ea = 59±7 kJ/mol was determined from the impedance spectroscopy data analysing the temperature and frequency dependences of the complex dielectric permittivity of pVPA. The rates of proton spin-lattice relaxation and spin diffusion are of the same order and both run in the time scale of milliseconds.


The combination of cross polarization, dipolar decoupling and magic angle spinning results in liquid-like high-resolution 13 C and 15 N n.m.r. spectra of a wide variety of solid materials. Structural determinations based on such 13 C n.m.r. spectra include the measurement of the extent to which pyrolysed polyacrylonitrile fibres (Orion) retain aliphatic character during the first step of the production of a carbon fibre, the determination of the chemical identity of the cross links formed from an acetyleneterminated polyimide resin, and the characterization of the metabolic products of a bacterial fermentation of wood lignin. All of these non-destructive analyses are performed on intact heterogeneous samples. The high resolution of the carbon experiment can also be exploited by obtaining proton spin-lattice relaxation parameters for chemically different protons in solids. Because of spin diffusion, these parameters are dependent on spatial proximity and so are helpful in measuring the homogeneity of solid blends of polymers such as poly(phenylene oxide) and polystyrene. High-resolution 13 C n.m.r. spectra of polymers can also be used for measuring microscopic chain dynamics. 13 C rotating-frame relaxation parameters observed for polycarbonate and poly (ethylene terephthalate) are related to the effects on motion of annealing, additives and structural substitutions. Individual relaxation rates are observed for individual carbons, so the behaviour of side groups is cleanly separated from that of the main chain. All of the line-narrowing and sensitivity-enhancing techniques applied to 13 C n.m.r. of solids work equally well for 15 N n.m.r. Use of 15 N rotating-frame and cross-polarization parameters leads to the assessment of the relative concentrations of 13 C - 15 N and 12 C - 15 N pair concentrations in the main chains of multiply labelled proteins. Such measurements can be used to characterize the rate of protein turnover in fully expanded soybean leaves, as well as the details of protein synthesis in cultured soybean cotyledons.


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