RESUMO
Triplet dynamic nuclear polarization (triplet-DNP) is a technique that can obtain high nuclear polarization under moderate conditions. However, in order to obtain practically useful polarization, large single crystals doped with a polarizing agent must be strictly oriented with respect to the magnetic field to sharpen the electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra, which is a fatal problem that prevents its application to truly useful biomolecular targets. Instead of this conventional physical approach of controlling crystal orientation, here, we propose a chemical approach, i.e., molecular design of polarizing agents; pentacene molecules, the most typical triplet-DNP polarizing agent, are modified so as to make the triplet electron distribution wider and more isotropic without loss of the triplet polarization. The thiophene-modified pentacene exhibits a sharper and stronger ESR spectrum than the parent pentacene, and state-of-the-art quantum chemical calculations revealed that the direction of the spin polarization is altered by the modification with thiophene moieties and the size of D and E parameters are reduced from parent pentacene due to the partial delocalization of spin densities on the thiophene moieties. The triplet-DNP with the new polarizing agent successfully exceeds the previous highest 1H polarization of glassy materials by a factor of 5. This demonstrates the feasibility of a polarizing agent that can surpass pentacene, the best polarizing agent for more than 30 y since triplet-DNP was first reported, in the unoriented state. This work provides a pathway toward practically useful high nuclear polarization of various biomolecules by triplet-DNP.
RESUMO
The generation of spin polarization is key in quantum information science and dynamic nuclear polarization. Polarized electron spins with long spin-lattice relaxation times (T1) at room temperature are important for these applications but have been difficult to achieve. We report the realization of spin-polarized radicals with extremely long T1 at room temperature in a metal-organic framework (MOF) in which azaacene chromophores are densely integrated. Persistent radicals are generated in the MOF by charge separation after photoexcitation. Spin polarization of a triplet generated by photoexcitation is successfully transferred to the persistent radicals. Pulse electron spin resonance measurements reveal that the T1 of the polarized radical in the MOF is as long as 214 µs with a relatively long spin-spin relaxation time T2 of the radicals of up to 0.98 µs at room temperature. The achievement of extremely long spin polarization in MOFs with nanopores accessible to guest molecules will be an important cornerstone for future highly sensitive quantum sensing and efficient dynamic nuclear polarization.
RESUMO
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) using transient electron spin polarization generated by photoexcitation can improve nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) sensitivity far beyond the thermal equilibrium limit for analysis in life science and drug discovery. However, DNP of liquid water at room temperature remains an important challenge. Here, we propose a new method called hyperpolarization relay, in which the nonequilibrium polarization of electron spins is transferred to proton spins in the nanocrystals and then to proton spins in bulk water. Molecular nanocrystals doped with a polarizing agent that generates a highly polarized photoexcited triplet are synthesized by a reprecipitation method while controlling the size of the nanocrystals. The triplet-DNP sequence of repeated laser and microwave irradiation enhances the NMR signal of bulk water as well as nanocrystals. The smaller size of the nanocrystals increases the efficiency of polarization transfer from the nanocrystals to water due to the increased surface area. A series of control experiments and simulations based on Solomon equations confirmed the hyperpolarization relay mechanism.
Assuntos
Nanopartículas , Água , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Micro-Ondas , PrótonsRESUMO
Dynamic nuclear polarization utilizing photoexcited triplet electrons (triplet-DNP) has great potential for room-temperature hyperpolarization of nuclear spins. However, the polarization transfer to molecules of interest remains a challenge due to the fast spin relaxation and weak interaction with target molecules at room temperature in conventional host materials. Here, we demonstrate the first example of DNP of guest molecules in a porous material at around room temperature by utilizing the induced-fit-type structural transformation of a crystalline yet flexible metal-organic framework (MOF). In contrast to the usual hosts, 1 H spin-lattice relaxation time becomes longer by accommodating a pharmaceutical model target 5-fluorouracil as the flexible MOF changes its structure upon guest accommodation to maximize the host-guest interactions. Combined with triplet-DNP and cross-polarization (CP), this system realizes an enhanced 19 Fâ NMR signal of guest target molecules.
RESUMO
The spin-polarized triplet state generated by light irradiation has potential for applications such as triplet dynamic nuclear polarization (triplet-DNP). Recently, we have reported free-base porphyrins as versatile and biocompatible polarizing agents for triplet-DNP. However, the electron polarization of free-base porphyrins is not very high, and the dilemma is that the high polarization of metalloporphyrins is accompanied by a too short spin-lattice relaxation time to be used for triplet-DNP. We report here that the introduction of electron-withdrawing fluorine groups into Zn porphyrins enables a long enough spin-lattice relaxation time (>1 µs) while maintaining a high polarization (Px:Py:Pz = 0:0:1.0) at room temperature. Interestingly, the spin-lattice relaxation time of Zn porphyrin becomes much longer by introducing fluorine substituents, whereas the spin-lattice relaxation time of free-base porphyrin becomes shorter by the fluorine substitution. Theoretical calculations suggest that this is because the introduction of the electron-withdrawing fluorine substituents reduces the spin density on Zn atoms and weakens the spin-orbit interaction.
RESUMO
While dynamic nuclear polarization using photo-excited triplet electrons (triplet-DNP) can improve the sensitivity of nuclear magnetic resonance at room temperature, it has not been carried out in water. Here, we report the first example of triplet-DNP in water by downsizing the conventional bulk crystals to nanocrystals.
RESUMO
Dynamic nuclear polarization with photo-excited triplet electrons (Triplet-DNP) is demonstrated using 6,13-diphenylpentacene (DPPentacene). DPPentacene is soluble in various organic solvents, while pentacene, which is used in most of the triplet-DNP experiments, has limited solubility. An enhancement factor of 81 is obtained for 1H spins in the glass of ethanol-d6 : water = 80 : 20 (w/w) doped with 0.1 mM DPPentacene at 90 K in 0.67 T.
RESUMO
While dynamic nuclear polarization based on photoexcited triplet electrons (triplet-DNP) has the potential to hyperpolarize nuclear spins of target substrates in the low magnetic field at room temperature, there has been no triplet-DNP system offering structural rigidity and substrate accessibility. Here, we report the first example of triplet-DNP of nanoporous metal-organic frameworks. Accommodation of a carboxylate-modified pentacene derivative in a partially deuterated ZIF-8 (D-ZIF-8) results in a clear 1H NMR signal enhancement over thermal equilibrium.
RESUMO
Dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) has recently gained attention as a method to enhance the sensitivity of liquid NMR spectroscopy and MRI. We demonstrate dissolution of the sample hyperpolarized by DNP using photoexcited triplet electrons in 0.38 T at room temperature. The achieved polarization of 0.8% is 6100 times as high as that at thermal equilibrium under the condition. The result is an important step for DNP using photoexcited triplet electrons to become widely used in chemical and biomedical research.
RESUMO
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP), a means of transferring spin polarization from electrons to nuclei, can enhance the nuclear spin polarization (hence the NMR sensitivity) in bulk materials at most 660 times for (1)H spins, using electron spins in thermal equilibrium as polarizing agents. By using electron spins in photo-excited triplet states instead, DNP can overcome the above limit. We demonstrate a (1)H spin polarization of 34%, which gives an enhancement factor of 250,000 in 0.40 T, while maintaining a bulk sample (â¼ 0.6 mg, â¼ 0.7 × 0.7 × 1 mm(3)) containing >10(19) (1)H spins at room temperature. Room temperature hyperpolarization achieved with DNP using photo-excited triplet electrons has potentials to be applied to a wide range of fields, including NMR spectroscopy and MRI as well as fundamental physics.
Assuntos
Partículas Elementares , Campos Magnéticos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Modelos Químicos , Temperatura , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
Dynamic electron polarization (DEP), induced by quenching of photoexcited species by stable radicals, can hyperpolarize electron spins in solution at room temperature. Recently, development of technologies based on electron spin polarization such as dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) has been progressing, where it is important to design molecules that achieve long-lasting DEP in addition to high DEP. Hybridization by linking dyes and radicals is a promising approach for efficient DEP, but strong interactions between neighboring dyes and radicals often result in the rapid decay of DEP. In this study, we introduce a flexible linker into the hybrid system of porphyrin and TEMPO to achieve both efficient DEP and long-lasting DEP. The structural flexibility of the linker switches the interaction between the radical and the triplet, which promotes the DEP process by bringing the radical and the triplet into close proximity, while avoiding abrupt relaxation due to strong interactions. As a result, the new hybridized system exhibits a larger DEP than the unlinked system, while at the same time achieving a DEP lasting more than 10 µs.
RESUMO
Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) significantly improves the sensitivity of magnetic resonance imaging, and its most important medical application is cancer diagnosis via hyperpolarized 13C-labeled pyruvate. Unlike cryogenic DNP, triplet-DNP uses photoexcited triplet electrons under mild conditions. However, triplet-DNP of pyruvate has not been observed because of incompatibility of the hydrophobic polarizing agent with hydrophilic pyruvate. This work demonstrates that supramolecular complexation with ß-cyclodextrin can disperse 4,4'-(pentacene-6,13-diyl)dibenzoate (NaPDBA), a pentacene derivative with hydrophilic substituents, even in the presence of high sodium pyruvate concentrations. The polarization of photoexcited triplet electron spins in NaPDBA was transferred to the 13C spins of sodium pyruvate via triplet-DNP of 1H spins in water and 1H-to-13C cross-polarization. This provides an important step toward the widespread use of ultra-sensitive MRI for cancer diagnosis.
RESUMO
Singlet fission (SF), converting a singlet excited state into a spin-correlated triplet-pair state, is an effective way to generate a spin quintet state in organic materials. Although its application to photovoltaics as an exciton multiplier has been extensively studied, the use of its unique spin degree of freedom has been largely unexplored. Here, we demonstrate that the spin polarization of the quintet multiexcitons generated by SF improves the sensitivity of magnetic resonance of water molecules through dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). We form supramolecular assemblies of a few pentacene chromophores and use SF-born quintet spins to achieve DNP of water-glycerol, the most basic biological matrix, as evidenced by the dependence of nuclear polarization enhancement on magnetic field and microwave power. Our demonstration opens a use of SF as a polarized spin generator in bio-quantum technology.
RESUMO
We propose a scalable and practical implementation of spin amplification which does not require individual addressing nor a specially tailored spin network. We have demonstrated a gain of 140 in a solid-state nuclear spin system of which the spin polarization has been increased to 0.12 using dynamic nuclear polarization with photoexcited triplet electron spins. Spin amplification scalable to a higher gain opens the door to the single spin measurement for a readout of quantum computers as well as practical applications of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to infinitesimal samples which have been concealed by thermal noise.
RESUMO
Triplet dynamic nuclear polarization (triplet-DNP) achieves nuclear spin polarization at moderate temperatures by using spin polarization of photoexcited triplet electrons. The applications of triplet-DNP for biomolecules have been hampered because acenes, the only polarizing agents used so far, tend to aggregate and lose their polarization in biomolecular matrices. Here, we report for the first time use of porphyrins as polarizing agents of triplet-DNP and propose a new concept of aggregation-tolerant polarizing agents. Sodium salts of tetrakis(4-carboxyphenyl)porphyrin (TCPPNa) can be dispersed in amorphous as well as crystalline biomolecular matrices, and importantly, it can generate polarized triplet electrons even in a slightly aggregated state. Triplet-DNP of crystalline erythritol containing slightly aggregated TCPPNa can achieve more than 120-fold signal enhancement. Because TCPPNa is also the first biocompatible triplet-DNP polarizing agent, this work provides a crucial step forward for the biological and medical applications of triplet-DNP.
Assuntos
Materiais Biocompatíveis/química , Porfirinas/química , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Estrutura MolecularRESUMO
Triplet dynamic nuclear polarization (triplet-DNP) allows hyperpolarization at a moderate temperature. While the triplet-DNP of water is strongly desired, water-soluble triplet polarizing agents have not yet been reported. Herein, the first example of triplet-DNP of crystalline ice is demonstrated by molecularly dispersing a novel water-soluble polarizing agent into ice.
RESUMO
Dynamic nuclear polarization with photo-excited triplet electrons (triplet-DNP) has the potential to enhance the sensitivity of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at a moderate temperature. While many efforts have been devoted to achieving a large nuclear polarization based on triplet-DNP, the application of triplet-DNP has been limited to nuclear physics experiments. The recent introduction of materials chemistry into the field of triplet-DNP has achieved air-stable and water-soluble polarizing agents as well as the hyperpolarization of nanomaterials with a large surface area such as nanoporous metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and nanocrystal dispersion in water. This Feature Article overviews the recently-emerged materials chemistry of triplet-DNP that paves new paths towards unprecedented biological and medical applications.
Assuntos
Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Estruturas Metalorgânicas/química , Nanopartículas/química , Campos Eletromagnéticos , Espectroscopia de Ressonância de Spin Eletrônica , Elétrons , Modelos Teóricos , Porosidade , Solubilidade , Propriedades de Superfície , Temperatura , ÁguaRESUMO
Triplet dynamic nuclear polarization (triplet-DNP), a method to enhance nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sensitivity using photoexcited triplet electrons, has great potential to hyperpolarize nuclear spins at room temperature. Since the first report of room-temperature triplet-DNP in 1990, pentacene has been the only and best option of triplet polarizing agent. However, the poor air stability of pentacene has severely limited the applicability of triplet-DNP. We report the first example of polarizing agents with significant air stability as well as high polarizing ability comparable to pentacene. The introduction of electron-withdrawing diaza-substitution to pentacene and tetracene reduces the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital level and endows much improved stability under the ambient conditions. Importantly, the diaza-substituted pentacene and tetracene offer similar, or even slightly better, 1H NMR signal enhancement compared with pentacene in the prototypical triplet-DNP test using p-terphenyl crystals. This work removes one of the largest obstacles toward the application of triplet-DNP for the hyperpolarization of biological molecules.