Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling

A current-switched superconducting field-cycling NMR spectrometer has been designed and built for studying the role of quantum tunnelling in molecular dynamics. The instrument is designed for work in the solid state with sample temperatures extending from 4K up to 300K. The maximum field-switching...

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Main Author: wu, weimin
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10155/
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author wu, weimin
author_facet wu, weimin
author_sort wu, weimin
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description A current-switched superconducting field-cycling NMR spectrometer has been designed and built for studying the role of quantum tunnelling in molecular dynamics. The instrument is designed for work in the solid state with sample temperatures extending from 4K up to 300K. The maximum field-switching rate is 10Ts-1. Among the samples studied in this thesis is the nuclear spin-relaxation and proton tunnelling. Concerted double proton transfer in the hydrogen bonds of carboxylic acid dimers is well established as the model system for translational quantum tunnelling. The model system has been chosen to illustrate the smooth quantum-to-classical transition and at all temperatures the proton transfer is characterised by a single correlation time. Quadrupolar interactions introduce an additional relaxation to the proton spin polarisation. The enhanced relaxation of the proton spin appears as a dip in the proton magnetisation curve. This technique is employed to measure the quadrupolar transition frequency of 14N and 35Cl and determine the structure of heroin hydrochloride. The introduction of a second spin species has a significant effect on the spin-lattice relaxation. Compared with homonuclear systems, the spectral density acquires additional components characterised by the sum and difference Larmor frequencies of the two nuclei. Further, instead of a single relaxation time, there are four elements of a relaxation matrix. Therefore, the magnetisation recovery becomes bi-exponential and the initial polarisation state of the second nucleus strongly affects the magnetisation recovery of the nucleus which is being observed. We shall report on the results of spin-lattice relaxation investigations on 1H-13C, 1H-19F systems. The role of heteronuclear interactions in spin-lattice relaxation and the newly developed methodology of field-cycling relaxometry will be discussed. This represents the first 13C field-cycling NMR experiment and the first to measure the field dependence of the off-diagonal element of the relaxation matrix.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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language English
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publishDate 2006
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spelling nottingham-101552025-02-28T11:07:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10155/ Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling wu, weimin A current-switched superconducting field-cycling NMR spectrometer has been designed and built for studying the role of quantum tunnelling in molecular dynamics. The instrument is designed for work in the solid state with sample temperatures extending from 4K up to 300K. The maximum field-switching rate is 10Ts-1. Among the samples studied in this thesis is the nuclear spin-relaxation and proton tunnelling. Concerted double proton transfer in the hydrogen bonds of carboxylic acid dimers is well established as the model system for translational quantum tunnelling. The model system has been chosen to illustrate the smooth quantum-to-classical transition and at all temperatures the proton transfer is characterised by a single correlation time. Quadrupolar interactions introduce an additional relaxation to the proton spin polarisation. The enhanced relaxation of the proton spin appears as a dip in the proton magnetisation curve. This technique is employed to measure the quadrupolar transition frequency of 14N and 35Cl and determine the structure of heroin hydrochloride. The introduction of a second spin species has a significant effect on the spin-lattice relaxation. Compared with homonuclear systems, the spectral density acquires additional components characterised by the sum and difference Larmor frequencies of the two nuclei. Further, instead of a single relaxation time, there are four elements of a relaxation matrix. Therefore, the magnetisation recovery becomes bi-exponential and the initial polarisation state of the second nucleus strongly affects the magnetisation recovery of the nucleus which is being observed. We shall report on the results of spin-lattice relaxation investigations on 1H-13C, 1H-19F systems. The role of heteronuclear interactions in spin-lattice relaxation and the newly developed methodology of field-cycling relaxometry will be discussed. This represents the first 13C field-cycling NMR experiment and the first to measure the field dependence of the off-diagonal element of the relaxation matrix. 2006 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10155/1/thesis.pdf wu, weimin (2006) Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. NMR Field-cycling proton tunnelling spin relaxation NQR
spellingShingle NMR
Field-cycling
proton tunnelling
spin relaxation
NQR
wu, weimin
Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
title Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
title_full Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
title_fullStr Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
title_full_unstemmed Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
title_short Field-cycling NMR investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
title_sort field-cycling nmr investigations of nuclear spin relaxation and proton tunnelling
topic NMR
Field-cycling
proton tunnelling
spin relaxation
NQR
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10155/