Issue 12, 2022

A transition from solid effect to indirect cross effect with broadband microwave irradiation

Abstract

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) at high magnetic fields has become a prominent technique for signal enhancement in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). In static samples, the highest DNP enhancement is usually observed for high radical concentrations in the range of 15–40 mM. Under these conditions, the dominant DNP mechanism for broad-line radicals is the electron–electron spectral-diffusion-based indirect cross effect (iCE). To further increase the DNP performance, broadband microwave irradiation is often applied. Until now, the theory of iCE was not rigorously combined with broadband microwave irradiation. This paper fills this gap by extending the iCE theory to explicitly include broadband irradiation. We demonstrate that our theory allows for quantitative fitting of the DNP spectra lineshapes using four different datasets acquired at 3.4 T and 7 T. We find that the DNP mechanism changes with an increase in the excitation bandwidth. While with narrowband continuous-wave irradiation the DNP mechanism is a combination of the solid effect (SE) and iCE, it shifts toward iCE with increasing excitation bandwidth until, at high bandwidth, the iCE completely dominates the DNP spectrum – this effect was not accounted for previously.

Graphical abstract: A transition from solid effect to indirect cross effect with broadband microwave irradiation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Nov 2021
Accepted
23 Feb 2022
First published
28 Feb 2022

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022,24, 7311-7322

A transition from solid effect to indirect cross effect with broadband microwave irradiation

D. Shimon and I. Kaminker, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022, 24, 7311 DOI: 10.1039/D1CP05096F

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