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. 2004 Dec;171(2):314-23.
doi: 10.1016/j.jmr.2004.09.009.

Cross polarization, radio frequency field homogeneity, and circuit balancing in high field solid state NMR probes

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Cross polarization, radio frequency field homogeneity, and circuit balancing in high field solid state NMR probes

Eric K Paulson et al. J Magn Reson. 2004 Dec.

Abstract

Homogeneous radio frequency (RF) fields are important for sensitivity and efficiency of magnetization transfer in solid state NMR experiments. If the fields are inhomogeneous the cross polarization (CP) experiment transfers magnetization in only a thin slice of sample rather than throughout the entire volume. Asymmetric patterns have been observed in plots of the CP signal versus RF field mismatch for an 800 MHz solid-state NMR probe where each channel is resonated in a single-ended mode. A simple model of CP shows these patterns can be reproduced if the RF fields for the two nuclei are centered at different places in the coil. Experimental measurements using B1 field imaging, nutation arrays on extremely short NMR samples, and de-tuning experiments involving disks of copper incrementally moved through the coil support this model of spatially offset RF fields. We have found that resonating the high frequency channel in a double-ended or "balanced" mode can alleviate this field offset problem, and have implemented this in a three-channel solid state NMR probe of our own design.

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