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1.
Magn Reson Chem ; 62(6): 429-438, 2024 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38230451

RESUMEN

In recent years there has been a renewed interest in benchtop NMR. Given their lower cost of ownership, smaller footprint, and ease of use, they are especially suited as an educational tool. Here, a new experiment targeted at upper-year undergraduates and first-year graduate students follows the conversion of D-glucose into ethanol at low-field. First, high and low-field data on D-glucose are compared and students learn both the Hz and ppm scales and how J-coupling is field-independent. The students then acquire their own quantitative NMR datasets and perform the quantification using an Electronic Reference To Access In Vivo Concentration (ERETIC) technique. To our knowledge ERETIC is not currently taught at the undergraduate level, but has an advantage in that internal standards are not required; ideal for following processes or with future use in flow-based benchtop monitoring. Using this quantitative data, students can relate a simple chemical process (fermentation) back to more complex topics such as reaction kinetics, bridging the gaps between analytical and physical chemistry. When asked to reflect on the experiment, students had an overwhelmingly positive experience, citing agreement with learning objectives, ease of understanding the protocol, and enjoyment. Each of the respondents recommended this experiment as a learning tool for others. This experiment has been outlined for other instructors to utilize in their own courses across institutions, with the hope that a continued expansion of low-field NMR will increase accessibility and learning opportunities at the undergraduate level.


Asunto(s)
Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Etanol/química , Glucosa/análisis , Estudiantes , Humanos , Universidades
2.
Magn Reson Chem ; 62(6): 463-473, 2024 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38282484

RESUMEN

Benchtop NMR provides improved accessibility in terms of cost, space, and technical expertise. In turn, this encourages new users into the field of NMR spectroscopy. Unfortunately, many interesting samples in education and research, from beer to whole blood, contain significant amounts of water that require suppression in 1H NMR in order to recover sample information. However, due to the significant reduction in chemical shift dispersion in benchtop NMR systems, the sample signals are much closer to the water resonance compared to those in a corresponding high-field NMR spectrum. Therefore, simply translating solvent suppression experiments intended for high-field NMR instruments to benchtop NMR systems without careful consideration can be problematic. In this study, the effectiveness of several popular water suppression schemes was evaluated for benchtop NMR applications. Emphasis is placed on pulse sequences with no, or few, adjustable parameters making them easy to implement. These fall into two main categories: (1) those based on Pre-SAT including Pre-SAT, PURGE, NOESY-PR, and g-NOESY-PR and (2) those based on binomial inversion including JRS and W5-WATERGATE. Among these schemes, solvent suppression sequences based on Pre-SAT offer a general approach for easy solvent suppression for samples with higher analyte concentrations (sucrose standard and Redbull™). However, for human urine, binomial-like sequences were required. In summary, it is demonstrated that highly efficient water suppression approaches can be implemented on benchtop NMR systems in a simple manner, despite the limited spectral dispersion, further illustrating the potential for widespread implementation of these approaches in education and research.

3.
Magn Reson Chem ; 62(5): 345-360, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37811556

RESUMEN

Understanding environmental change is challenging and requires molecular-level tools to explain the physicochemical phenomena behind complex processes. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a key tool that provides information on both molecular structures and interactions but is underutilized in environmental research because standard "high-field" NMR is financially and physically inaccessible for many and can be overwhelming to those outside of disciplines that routinely use NMR. "Low-field" NMR is an accessible alternative but has reduced sensitivity and increased spectral overlap, which is especially problematic for natural, heterogeneous samples. Therefore, the goal of this study is to investigate and apply innovative experiments that could minimize these challenges and improve low-field NMR analysis of environmental and biological samples. Spectral simplification (JRES, PSYCHE, singlet-only, multiple quantum filters), selective detection (GEMSTONE, DREAMTIME), and heteronuclear (reverse and CH3/CH2/CH-only HSQCs) NMR experiments are tested on samples of increasing complexity (amino acids, spruce resin, and intact water fleas) at-high field (500 MHz) and at low-field (80 MHz). A novel experiment called Doubly Selective HSQC is also introduced, wherein 1H signals are selectively detected based on the 1H and 13C chemical shifts of 1H-13C J-coupled pairs. The most promising approaches identified are the selective techniques (namely for monitoring), and the reverse and CH3-only HSQCs. Findings ultimately demonstrate that low-field NMR holds great potential for biological and environmental research. The multitude of NMR experiments available makes NMR tailorable to nearly any research need, and low-field NMR is therefore anticipated to become a valuable and widely used analytical tool moving forward.


Asunto(s)
Aminoácidos , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética
4.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 464: 229-37, 2016 Feb 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26619133

RESUMEN

HYPOTHESIS: Shear-induced droplet diffusion of flowing hard spheres is relatively well understood and has been extensively studied both experimentally and via simulations. The same however is not true of soft spheres, specifically emulsions, despite their broad and extensive industrial relevance. Here we seek to demonstrate that appropriate NMR techniques can be used to quantitatively measure shear-induced droplet diffusion. Limited literature indicates that dilute dispersions of soft spheres experience significantly larger shear-induced droplet diffusion relative to otherwise equivalent hard sphere suspensions. Here we explore whether this effect persists to high concentrations. EXPERIMENTS: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) pulsed field gradient (PFG) techniques were used to measure shear-induced droplet diffusion for capillary flow of various water-in-oil (w/o) emulsions in a direction transverse to flow. Two adaptations were necessary - the acquired signal was analyzed so as to quantitatively distinguish restricted molecular diffusion within the emulsion droplets from shear-induced diffusion of the droplets, whilst flow-compensated PFG pulse sequences were shown to be necessary to account for any erroneous effects due to flow. A range of w/o emulsions were considered to enable measurement of shear-induced droplet diffusion as a function of both water content and mean shear rate. The surfactant content of these emulsions was adjusted such that they presented similar (stationary) emulsion droplet size distributions (DSD) which were also measured using NMR PFG techniques. FINDINGS: The droplet shear-induced diffusion data for the emulsion systems were compared against relevant results from the literature. Consistent with predictions for dilute systems, significantly greater droplet diffusion was measured relative to hard sphere suspensions at all concentrations, and a quadratic dependence was found between droplet diffusion and mean droplet size. For more concentrated emulsions, a peak in the droplet diffusion-concentration relationship was observed for the first time in emulsions, prior to the onset of emulsion inversion.

5.
Langmuir ; 31(32): 8786-94, 2015 Aug 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26102311

RESUMEN

Benchtop nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) pulsed field gradient (PFG) and relaxation measurements were used to monitor the clathrate hydrate shell growth occurring in water droplets dispersed in a continuous cyclopentane phase. These techniques allowed the growth of hydrate inside the opaque exterior shell to be monitored and, hence, information about the evolution of the shell's morphology to be deduced. NMR relaxation measurements were primarily used to monitor the hydrate shell growth kinetics, while PFG NMR diffusion experiments were used to determine the nominal droplet size distribution (DSD) of the unconverted water inside the shell core. A comparison of mean droplet sizes obtained directly via PFG NMR and independently deduced from relaxation measurements showed that the assumption of the shell model-a perfect spherical core of unconverted water-for these hydrate droplet systems is correct, but only after approximately 24 h of shell growth. Initially, hydrate growth is faster and heat-transfer-limited, leading to porous shells with surface areas larger than that of spheres with equivalent volumes. Subsequently, the hydrate growth rate becomes mass-transfer-limited, and the shells become thicker, spherical, and less porous.

6.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 401(4): 1441-52, 2011 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21713419

RESUMEN

The stratigraphies of decorated walls in ancient Herculaneum, Italy, were analyzed by single-sided (1)H NMR. A large version of the NMR-MOUSE® with a maximum penetration depth of 25 mm was used to map proton density profiles at different positions of the Mosaic of Neptune and Amphitrite showing considerable differences between different tesserae and the mortar bed at different times of the year. In the House of the Black Room, different mortar layers were observed on painted walls as well as different proton content in different areas due to different moisture levels and different conservation treatments. The proton density profiles of the differently treated areas indicated that one method leads to higher moisture content than the other. Untreated wall paintings from different times were profiled in a recently excavated room at the Villa of the Papyri showing two different types of mortar layer structures which identify two different techniques of preparing the walls for painting. Reflectance Fourier mid-infrared spectroscopy and in situ X-ray fluorescence measurements complemented the NMR measurements and provided additional insight into the identification of organic coatings as well as the nature of the pigments used, respectively. The information acquired nondestructively by NMR is valued for elaborating conservation strategies and for identifying different schools of craftsmen who prepared the mortar supports of the wall paintings.

7.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 397(7): 3117-25, 2010 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20559628

RESUMEN

A compact and mobile single-sided (1)H NMR sensor, the NMR-MOUSE, has been employed in the nondestructive characterization of the layer structure of historic walls and wall paintings. Following laboratory tests on a model hidden fresco, paint and mortar layers were studied at Villa Palagione and the Seminario Vescovile di Sant' Andrea in Volterra, Italy. Different paint and mortar layers were identified, and further characterized by portable X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy where accessible. In the detached and restored fresco "La Madonna della Carcere" from the Fortezza Medicea in Volterra, paint and mortar layers were discriminated and differences in the moisture content of the adhesive that fixes the detached wall painting to its support were found in both restored and original sections. These investigations encourage the use of the portable and single-sided NMR technology for nondestructive studies of the layer structure and conservation state of historic walls.

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