scholarly journals Progress in Low Field Benchtop NMR Spectroscopy in Chemical and Biochemical Analysis

Author(s):  
Martin Grootveld ◽  
Benita Percival ◽  
Miles Gibson ◽  
Yasan Osman ◽  
Mark Edgar ◽  
...  

The employment of spectroscopically-resolved NMR techniques as analytical probes have previously been both prohibitively expensive and logistically challenging in view of the large sizes of high-field facilities. However, with recent advances in the miniaturisation of magnetic resonance technology, low-field, cryogen-free “benchtop” NMR instruments are seeing wider use. Indeed, these miniaturised spectrometers are utilised in areas ranging from food and agricultural analyses through to human biofluid assays and disease monitoring. Therefore, it is both intrinsically timely and important to highlight current applications of this analytical strategy, and also provide an outlook for the future, where this approach may be applied to a wider range of analytical problems, both qualitatively and quantitatively<br>

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Grootveld ◽  
Benita Percival ◽  
Miles Gibson ◽  
Yasan Osman ◽  
Mark Edgar ◽  
...  

The employment of spectroscopically-resolved NMR techniques as analytical probes have previously been both prohibitively expensive and logistically challenging in view of the large sizes of high-field facilities. However, with recent advances in the miniaturisation of magnetic resonance technology, low-field, cryogen-free “benchtop” NMR instruments are seeing wider use. Indeed, these miniaturised spectrometers are utilised in areas ranging from food and agricultural analyses through to human biofluid assays and disease monitoring. Therefore, it is both intrinsically timely and important to highlight current applications of this analytical strategy, and also provide an outlook for the future, where this approach may be applied to a wider range of analytical problems, both qualitatively and quantitatively<br>


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 493-520
Author(s):  
Po-Hsiu Chien ◽  
Kent J. Griffith ◽  
Haoyu Liu ◽  
Zhehong Gan ◽  
Yan-Yan Hu

Establishing structure–property correlations is of paramount importance to materials research. The ability to selectively detect observable magnetization from transitions between quantized spin states of nuclei makes nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy a powerful probe to characterize solids at the atomic level. In this article, we review recent advances in NMR techniques in six areas: spectral resolution, sensitivity, atomic correlations, ion dynamics, materials imaging, and hardware innovation. In particular, we focus on the applications of these techniques to materials research. Specific examples are given following the general introduction of each topic and technique to illustrate how they are applied. In conclusion, we suggest future directions for advanced solid-state NMR spectroscopy and imaging in interdisciplinary research.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2103 (1) ◽  
pp. 012199
Author(s):  
G S Patrin ◽  
M M Mataev ◽  
K Zh Seitbekova ◽  
Ya G Shiyan ◽  
V G Plekhanov

Abstract The magnetostatic and magnetic resonance properties of the Y0.5Sr0.5Cr0.5Mn0.5O3 polycrystalline system have been experimentally studied. The intracrystalline ferromagnetic interaction turned out to be prevalent while the intercrystalline interaction appears to have antiferromagnetic character. We found that two absorption lines are observed in the spectrum in the magnetic ordering region at T < 80 K. The high-field line corresponds to the interacting parts of polycrystal related to the disordered shells and the low-field peak is system of ferromagnetic particles.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (12) ◽  
pp. 3003-3011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard E. Perkier ◽  
Michael J. Mcglinchey

The 500 MHz 1H and 125 MHz 13C spectra of ergosteryl and 7-dehydrocholesteryl acetate were recorded in C6D6 and CDCl3 and assigned using two-dimensional NMR techniques. It is shown that incorporation of an Fe(CO)3 or a Rh(acac) moiety onto the ring B diene system affects the chemical shifts of neighbouring protons and carbons. These changes are discussed in terms of the anisotropic properties of the organometallic fragments.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Beau W. Webber

AbstractThe intention of this discussion is as a simple introduction for general—non-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)-specialist—materials scientists, to make them aware as to how some of the materials science measurements that they need to make might possibly be addressed by simple physical measurements using low-cost time-domain NMR apparatus. The intention is to include a minimum of complex NMR detail, while enabling general material-scientists to see that simple easily understood time-domain NMR might be of use to them. That is how I have tried to structure this discussion. It seems to me be generally forgotten how much of materials science is actually physics, as opposed to chemistry, and the extent to which simple time-domain NMR may be used to make measurements of the physical properties of materials. There frequently seems to be an assumption that if NMR is mentioned that it is chemical analysis methods that are under discussion, or possibly magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These are both extremely powerful techniques, but to forget about the physics that often governs the properties of the sample can be a significant mistake. Key material science properties are often described in different fields using the terms mobility/dynamics/stiffness/viscosity/rigidity of the sample. These properties are usually dependent on atomic and molecular motion in the sample. We will discuss a method, time-domain NMR, that appears often to be ignored, to obtain quantitative or comparative information on these properties. The intention of this paper is not to probe the material properties of some interesting system, but to discuss in as clear a manner as possible a particular technique, “low-field time-domain NMR”, to bring this technique and its advantages to the attention of other material scientists. Thus we discuss time-domain NMR and MRI, as methods of measuring the physical properties of liquid and solid materials. Time-domain NMR is also a good technique for measuring pore-size distributions from the nano-meter to microns, using a technique known as NMR cryoporometry (NMRC). Standard MRI protocols may be combined with NMRC, so that spatial resolution of pore dimensions may also be obtained. Low-field time-domain NMR is, at its fundamentals, a very approachable and easily comparative technique, where the material properties may often be extracted from the time-domain data much more simply than from say high-field high-resolution spectral data. In addition, low-field time-domain NMR apparatus is typically a factor of 10 to 100 times cheaper than high-field high-resolution solid-state NMR systems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mehran Shams Kondori

Recent advances in ultra-high field magnetic resonance imaging have addressed substantial technological challenges in both hardware and software. These challenges, including transmit field inhomogeneity, primarily are due to the onset of far-field effects at the resonance frequencies at 7Tesla and 10.5Tesla MRI which becomes more demanding at higher field strengths. The advent of parallel imaging techniques in reception (multi-channel radio-frequency arrays), transmission (parallel transmit or pTx), and reconstruction (especially using deep learning models) has been an effort to address such challenges. Here, the most recent notable advances in MRI in both hardware and software fronts and their implications for human brain neuroscience applications are reviewed.


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