TY - JOUR
T1 - A quasi-optical and corrugated waveguide microwave transmission system for simultaneous dynamic nuclear polarization NMR on two separate 14.1 T spectrometers
AU - Dubroca, Thierry
AU - Smith, Adam N.
AU - Pike, Kevin J.
AU - Froud, Stuart
AU - Wylde, Richard
AU - Trociewitz, Bianca
AU - McKay, Johannes
AU - Mentink-Vigier, Frederic
AU - van Tol, Johan
AU - Wi, Sungsool
AU - Brey, William
AU - Long, Joanna R.
AU - Frydman, Lucio
AU - Hill, Stephen
N1 - The facility development was supported by the National Science Foundation grants CHE-1229170 and the National Institute of Health grant P41 GM122698 and S10 OD108519. A portion of this work was performed at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, which is supported by National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreements No. DMR-1644779, DMR-1157490 and the State of Florida. The authors would like to thank Robert Griffin, Melanie Rosay, and Jagadishwar Sirigiri for useful suggestions, David Morris for the design and manufacturing of the sweep coil for the Overhauser DNP instrument, Bailey Trzcinski for the microwave power calibration measurements and Jim Rocca and Malathy Elumalai for their assistance with VnmrJ 4.2 training, software and firmware upgrades.
PY - 2018/4
Y1 - 2018/4
N2 - Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is an intrinsically insensitive technique, with Boltzmann distributions of nuclear spin states on the order of parts per million in conventional magnetic fields. To overcome this limitation, dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) can be used to gain up to three orders of magnitude in signal enhancement, which can decrease experimental time by up to six orders of magnitude. In DNP experiments, nuclear spin polarization is enhanced by transferring the relatively larger electron polarization to NMR active nuclei via microwave irradiation. Here, we describe the design and performance of a quasi-optical system enabling the use of a single 395 GHz gyrotron microwave source to simultaneously perform DNP experiments on two different 14.1 T (1H 600 MHz) NMR spectrometers: one configured for magic angle spinning (MAS) solid state NMR; the other configured for solution state NMR experiments. In particular, we describe how the high power microwave beam is split, transmitted, and manipulated between the two spectrometers. A 13C enhancement of 128 is achieved via the cross effect for alanine, using the nitroxide biradical AMUPol, under MAS-DNP conditions at 110 K, while a 31P enhancement of 160 is achieved via the Overhauser effect for triphenylphosphine using the monoradical BDPA under solution NMR conditions at room temperature. The latter result is the first demonstration of Overhauser DNP in the solution state at a field of 14.1 T (1H 600 MHz). Moreover these results have been produced with large sample volumes (∼100 µL, i.e. 3 mm diameter NMR tubes).
AB - Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is an intrinsically insensitive technique, with Boltzmann distributions of nuclear spin states on the order of parts per million in conventional magnetic fields. To overcome this limitation, dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) can be used to gain up to three orders of magnitude in signal enhancement, which can decrease experimental time by up to six orders of magnitude. In DNP experiments, nuclear spin polarization is enhanced by transferring the relatively larger electron polarization to NMR active nuclei via microwave irradiation. Here, we describe the design and performance of a quasi-optical system enabling the use of a single 395 GHz gyrotron microwave source to simultaneously perform DNP experiments on two different 14.1 T (1H 600 MHz) NMR spectrometers: one configured for magic angle spinning (MAS) solid state NMR; the other configured for solution state NMR experiments. In particular, we describe how the high power microwave beam is split, transmitted, and manipulated between the two spectrometers. A 13C enhancement of 128 is achieved via the cross effect for alanine, using the nitroxide biradical AMUPol, under MAS-DNP conditions at 110 K, while a 31P enhancement of 160 is achieved via the Overhauser effect for triphenylphosphine using the monoradical BDPA under solution NMR conditions at room temperature. The latter result is the first demonstration of Overhauser DNP in the solution state at a field of 14.1 T (1H 600 MHz). Moreover these results have been produced with large sample volumes (∼100 µL, i.e. 3 mm diameter NMR tubes).
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2018.01.015
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2018.01.015
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1090-7807
VL - 289
SP - 35
EP - 44
JO - JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
JF - JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
ER -