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1.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(31): 7007-7013, 2023 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37523253

ABSTRACT

We propose a mechanism for dynamic nuclear polarization that is different from the well-known Overhauser effect, solid effect, cross effect, and thermal mixing processes. We term it Resonant Mixing (RM), and we show that it arises from the evolution of the density matrix for a simple electron-nucleus coupled spin pair subject to weak microwave irradiation, the same interactions as the solid effect. However, the SE is optimal when the microwave field is off-resonance, whereas RM is optimal when the microwave field is on-resonance and involves the mixing of states by the microwave field together with the electron-nuclear coupling. Finally, we argue that this mechanism is responsible for the observed dispersive-shaped DNP field profile for trityl samples near the electron paramagnetic resonance center.

2.
J Magn Reson ; 353: 107511, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37385067

ABSTRACT

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) improves the sensitivity of NMR spectroscopy by the transfer of electron polarization to nuclei via irradiation of electron-nuclear transitions with microwaves at the appropriate frequency. For fields > 5 T and using g ∼ 2 electrons as polarizing agents, this requires the availability of microwave sources operating at >140 GHz. Therefore, microwave sources for DNP have generally been continuous-wave (CW) gyrotrons, and more recently solid state, oscillators operating at a fixed frequency and power. This constraint has limited the DNP mechanisms which can be exploited, and stymied the development of new time domain mechanisms. We report here the incorporation of a microwave source enabling facile modulation of frequency, amplitude, and phase at 9 T (250 GHz microwave frequency), and we have used the source for magic-angle spinning (MAS) NMR experiments. The experiments include investigations of CW DNP mechanisms, the advantage of frequency-chirped irradiation, and a demonstration of an Overhauser enhancement of ∼25 with a recently reported water-soluble BDPA radical, highlighting the potential for affordable and compact microwave sources to achieve significant enhancement in aqueous samples, including biological macromolecules. With the development of suitable microwave amplifiers, it should permit exploration of multiple new avenues involving time domain experiments.

3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(1): 95-100, 2023 Jan 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36573841

ABSTRACT

We recently used selective 2H labeling of BDPA to investigate the Overhauser Effect (OE) dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) mechanism in insulating solids doped with 1,3-bis(diphenylene)-2-phenylallyl (BDPA), and established that the α and γ 1H spins on the fluorene rings are responsible for generating a zero quantum (ZQ) mediated positive bulk polarization. Here, we establish that the phenyl 1H spins relax via double-quantum (DQ) processes and therefore contribute negative enhancements which attenuate the OE-DNP. With measurements at different magnetic field strengths, we show that phenyl-d5-BDPA offers >50% improvement in OE-DNP enhancement compared to h21-BDPA attaining a maximum of ∼90 at 14.1 T and 5 kHz MAS, the highest observed OE-DNP enhancement to date under these conditions. The approach may be utilized to optimize other polarizing agents exhibiting an OE, an important DNP mechanism with a favorable field and spinning frequency dependence.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(48): 20281-20290, 2021 12 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34813311

ABSTRACT

The Overhauser effect (OE), commonly observed in NMR spectra of liquids and conducting solids, was recently discovered in insulating solids doped with the radical 1,3-bisdiphenylene-2-phenylallyl (BDPA). However, the mechanism of polarization transfer in OE-DNP in insulators is yet to be established, but hyperfine coupling of the radical to protons in BDPA has been proposed. In this paper we present a study that addresses the role of hyperfine couplings via the EPR and DNP measurements on some selectively deuterated BDPA radicals synthesized for this purpose. Newly developed synthetic routes enable selective deuteration at orthogonal positions or perdeuteration of the fluorene moieties with 2H incorporation of >93%. The fluorene moieties were subsequently used to synthesize two octadeuterated BDPA radicals, 1,3-[α,γ-d8]-BDPA and 1,3-[ß,δ-d8]-BDPA, and a BDPA radical with perdeuterated fluorene moieties, 1,3-[α,ß,γ,δ-d16]-BDPA. In contrast to the strong positive OE enhancement observed in degassed samples of fully protonated h21-BDPA (ε ∼ +70), perdeuteration of the fluorenes results in a negative enhancement (ε ∼ -13), while selective deuteration of α- and γ-positions (aiso ∼ 5.4 MHz) in BDPA results in a weak negative OE enhancement (ε ∼ -1). Furthermore, deuteration of ß- and δ-positions (aiso ∼ 1.2 MHz) results in a positive OE enhancement (ε ∼ +36), albeit with a reduced magnitude relative to that observed in fully protonated BDPA. Our results clearly show the role of the hyperfine coupled α and γ 1H spins in the BDPA radical in determining the dominance of the zero and double-quantum cross-relaxation pathways and the polarization-transfer mechanism to the bulk matrix.


Subject(s)
Allyl Compounds/chemistry , Fluorenes/chemistry , Free Radicals/chemistry , Allyl Compounds/chemical synthesis , Deuterium/chemistry , Fluorenes/chemical synthesis , Free Radicals/chemical synthesis , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
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