Microtesla SABRE Enables 10% Nitrogen-15 Nuclear Spin Polarization

Thomas Theis(Duke University), Milton L. Truong(Vanderbilt University), Aaron M. Coffey(Vanderbilt University), Roman V. Shchepin(Vanderbilt University), Kevin W. Waddell(Vanderbilt University), Fan Shi(Southern Illinois University Carbondale), Boyd M. Goodson(Southern Illinois University Carbondale), Warren S. Warren(Duke University), Eduard Y. Chekmenev(Vanderbilt University)
Journal of the American Chemical Society
January 13, 2015
Cited by 371Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Parahydrogen is demonstrated to efficiently transfer its nuclear spin hyperpolarization to nitrogen-15 in pyridine and nicotinamide (vitamin B(3) amide) by conducting "signal amplification by reversible exchange" (SABRE) at microtesla fields within a magnetic shield. Following transfer of the sample from the magnetic shield chamber to a conventional NMR spectrometer, the (15)N NMR signals for these molecules are enhanced by ∼30,000- and ∼20,000-fold at 9.4 T, corresponding to ∼10% and ∼7% nuclear spin polarization, respectively. This method, dubbed "SABRE in shield enables alignment transfer to heteronuclei" or "SABRE-SHEATH", promises to be a simple, cost-effective way to hyperpolarize heteronuclei. It may be particularly useful for in vivo applications because of longer hyperpolarization lifetimes, lack of background signal, and facile chemical-shift discrimination of different species.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis