Suppression of Protonated Organic Solvents in NMR Spectroscopy Using a Perfect Echo Low-Pass Filtration Pulse Sequence.
Peter W A HowePublished in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
Proton NMR spectra are usually acquired using deuterated solvents, but in many cases it is necessary to obtain spectra on samples in protonated solvents. In these cases, the intense resonances of the protonated solvents need to be suppressed to maximize sensitivity and spectral quality. A wide range of highly effective solvent suppression methods have been developed, but additional measures are needed to suppress the 13C satellites of the solvent. Because the satellites represent 1.1% of the original solvent signal, they remain problematic if unsuppressed. The recently proposed DISPEL pulse sequences suppress 13C satellites extremely effectively, and this Technical Note demonstrates that combining DISPEL and presaturation results in exceptionally effective solvent suppression. An important element in the effectiveness is volume selection, which is inherent within the DISPEL sequence. Spectra acquired in protonated dimethlysulfoxide and tetrahydrofuran show that optimum results are obtained by modifying the phase cycle, cycling the pulse-field gradients, and using broadband 13C inversion pulses to reduce the effects of radiofrequency offset and inhomogeneity.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- blood pressure
- magnetic resonance
- density functional theory
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- contrast enhanced
- high resolution
- optical coherence tomography
- solar cells
- high intensity
- amino acid
- magnetic resonance imaging
- diffusion weighted
- computed tomography
- catheter ablation
- atrial fibrillation