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Enhancing the NMR signals of plant oil components using hyperpolarisation relayed via proton exchange.

Adel AlshehriBen J TicknerWissam IaliSimon B Duckett
Published in: Chemical science (2023)
In this work, the limited sensitivity of magnetic resonance is addressed by using the hyperpolarisation method relayed signal amplification by reversible exchange (SABRE-Relay) to transfer latent magnetism from para -hydrogen, a readily isolated spin isomer of hydrogen gas, to components of key plant oils such as citronellol, geraniol, and nerol. This is achieved via relayed polarisation transfer in which an [Ir(H) 2 (IMes)(NH 2 R) 3 ]Cl type complex produces hyperpolarised NH 2 R free in solution, before labile proton exchange between the hyperpolarisation carrier (NH 2 R) and the OH-containing plant oil component generates enhanced NMR signals for the latter. Consequently, up to ca. 200-fold 1 H (0.65% 1 H polarisation) and 800-fold 13 C NMR signal enhancements (0.65% 13 C polarisation) are recorded for these essential oils in seconds. Remarkably, the resulting NMR signals are not only diagnostic, but prove to propagate over large spin systems via a suitable coupling network. A route to optimise the enhancement process by varying the identity of the carrier NH 2 R, and its concentration is demonstrated. In order to prove utility, these pilot measurements are extended to study a much wider range of plant-derived molecules including rhodinol, verbenol, (1R)- endo -(+)-fenchyl alcohol, (-)-carveol, and linalool. Further measurements are then described which demonstrate citronellol and geraniol can be detected in an off-the-shelf healthcare product rose geranium oil at concentrations of just a few tens of μM in single scan 1 H NMR measurements, which are not visible in comparable thermally polarised NMR experiments. This work therefore presents a significant expansion of the types of molecules amenable to hyperpolarisation using para -hydrogen and illustrates a real-world application in the diagnostic detection of low concentration analytes in mixtures.
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