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Low‐field, not low quality: 1D simplification, selective detection, and heteronuclear 2D experiments for improving low‐field NMR spectroscopy of environmental and biological samples.

Authors :
Downey, Katelyn
Bermel, Wolfgang
Soong, Ronald
Lysak, Daniel H.
Ronda, Kiera
Steiner, Katrina
Costa, Peter M.
Wolff, William W.
Decker, Venita
Busse, Falko
Goerling, Benjamin
Haber, Agnes
Simpson, Myrna J.
Simpson, Andre J.
Source :
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry. May2024, Vol. 62 Issue 5, p345-360. 16p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07491581
Volume :
62
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176474211
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mrc.5401