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Solvent Suppression in Pure Shift NMR.

Emma L GatesJonathan P BradleyDaniel B G BerryMathias NilssonGareth A MorrisRalph W AdamsLaura Castañar
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Intense solvent signals in 1 H solution-state NMR experiments typically cause severe distortion of spectra and mask nearby solute signals. It is often infeasible or undesirable to replace a solvent with its perdeuterated form, for example, when analyzing formulations in situ, when exchangeable protons are present, or for practical reasons. Solvent signal suppression techniques are therefore required. WATERGATE methods are well-known to provide good solvent suppression while enabling retention of signals undergoing chemical exchange with the solvent signal. Spectra of mixtures, such as pharmaceutical formulations, are often complicated by signal overlap, high dynamic range, the narrow spectral width of 1 H NMR, and signal multiplicity. Here, we show that by combining WATERGATE solvent suppression with pure shift NMR, ultrahigh-resolution 1 H NMR spectra can be acquired while suppressing intense solvent signals and retaining exchangeable 1 H signals. The new method is demonstrated in the analysis of cyanocobalamin, a vitamin B12 supplement, and of an eye-drop formulation of atropine.
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