TY - JOUR
T1 - Indirectly detected satellite-transition quadrupolar NMR via progressive saturation of the proton reservoir
AU - Wolf, Tamar
AU - Kossoy, Anna Eden
AU - Frydman, Lucio
PY - 2023/3/15
Y1 - 2023/3/15
N2 - Static satellite-transitions (ST) NMR line shapes from half-integer quadrupolar nuclei could be very informative: they can deliver information on local motions over a wide range of timescales, and can report on small changes in the local electronic environments as reflected by the quadrupolar parameters. Satellite transitions, however, are typically “invisible” for half-integer quadrupolar nuclei due to their sheer breadth, leading to low signal-to-noise ratio –especially for unreceptive low-gamma or dilute quadrupolar nuclei. Very recently we have introduced a method for enhancing the NMR sensitivity of unreceptive X nuclei in static solids dubbed PROgressive Saturation of the Proton Reservoir (PROSPR), which opens the possibility of magnifying the signals from such spins by repeatedly imprinting frequency-selective X-driven depolarizations on the much more sensitive 1H NMR signal. Here, we show that PROSPR's efficacy is high enough for enabling the detection of static ST NMR for challenging species like 35Cl, 33S and even 17O –all at natural-abundance. The ensuing ST-PROSPR NMR experiment thus opens new approaches to probe ultra-wideline (6–8 MHz wide) spectra; these highly pronounced anisotropies can in turn deliver new vistas about dynamic changes in solids, as here illustrated by tracking ST line shapes as a function of temperature during thermally-driven events.
AB - Static satellite-transitions (ST) NMR line shapes from half-integer quadrupolar nuclei could be very informative: they can deliver information on local motions over a wide range of timescales, and can report on small changes in the local electronic environments as reflected by the quadrupolar parameters. Satellite transitions, however, are typically “invisible” for half-integer quadrupolar nuclei due to their sheer breadth, leading to low signal-to-noise ratio –especially for unreceptive low-gamma or dilute quadrupolar nuclei. Very recently we have introduced a method for enhancing the NMR sensitivity of unreceptive X nuclei in static solids dubbed PROgressive Saturation of the Proton Reservoir (PROSPR), which opens the possibility of magnifying the signals from such spins by repeatedly imprinting frequency-selective X-driven depolarizations on the much more sensitive 1H NMR signal. Here, we show that PROSPR's efficacy is high enough for enabling the detection of static ST NMR for challenging species like 35Cl, 33S and even 17O –all at natural-abundance. The ensuing ST-PROSPR NMR experiment thus opens new approaches to probe ultra-wideline (6–8 MHz wide) spectra; these highly pronounced anisotropies can in turn deliver new vistas about dynamic changes in solids, as here illustrated by tracking ST line shapes as a function of temperature during thermally-driven events.
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssnmr.2023.101862
DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssnmr.2023.101862
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0926-2040
JO - Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
JF - Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
M1 - 101862
ER -