Artigo Revisado por pares

High-Frequency Dynamic Nuclear Polarization in the Nuclear Rotating Frame

2000; Elsevier BV; Volume: 144; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1006/jmre.2000.2025

ISSN

1096-0856

Autores

Christian T. Farrar, Dennis A. Hall, Gary J. Gerfen, Mélanie Rosay, Jan Henrik Ardenkjær‐Larsen, Robert G. Griffin,

Tópico(s)

Solid-state spectroscopy and crystallography

Resumo

A proton dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) NMR signal enhancement (ϵ) close to thermal equilibrium, ϵ = 0.89, has been obtained at high field (B0 = 5 T, νepr = 139.5 GHz) using 15 mM trityl radical in a 40:60 water/glycerol frozen solution at 11 K. The electron-nuclear polarization transfer is performed in the nuclear rotating frame with microwave irradiation during a nuclear spin-lock pulse. The growth of the signal enhancement is governed by the rotating frame nuclear spin–lattice relaxation time (T1ρ), which is four orders of magnitude shorter than the nuclear spin–lattice relaxation time (T1n). Due to the rapid polarization transfer in the nuclear rotating frame the experiment can be recycled at a rate of 1/T1ρ and is not limited by the much slower lab frame nuclear spin–lattice relaxation rate (1/T1n). The increased repetition rate allowed in the nuclear rotating frame provides an effective enhancement per unit time1/2 of ϵt = 197. The nuclear rotating frame-DNP experiment does not require high microwave power; significant signal enhancements were obtained with a low-power (20 mW) Gunn diode microwave source and no microwave resonant structure. The symmetric trityl radical used as the polarization source is water-soluble and has a narrow EPR linewidth of 10 G at 139.5 GHz making it an ideal polarization source for high-field DNP/NMR studies of biological systems.

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