The effects of sample conductivity on the efficacy of dynamic nuclear polarization for sensitivity enhancement in solid state NMR spectroscopy
Autor: | Asya Svirinovsky-Arbeli, Michal Leskes, Daniel Krotkov, Krishnendu Kundu, Dina Rosenberg, Akiva Feintuch, Lothar Houben, Sharly Fleischer, Ran Damari |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Radiation Materials science 010405 organic chemistry Carbonization chemical and pharmacologic phenomena General Chemistry Conductivity 010402 general chemistry 01 natural sciences 0104 chemical sciences Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance Chemical engineering Electrical resistivity and conductivity Polarization (electrochemistry) Spectroscopy Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) Instrumentation Electrical conductor |
Zdroj: | Solid State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance. 99:7-14 |
ISSN: | 0926-2040 |
Popis: | In recent years dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) has greatly expanded the range of materials systems that can be studied by solid state NMR spectroscopy. To date, the majority of systems studied by DNP were insulating materials including organic and inorganic solids. However, many technologically-relevant materials used in energy conversion and storage systems are electrically conductive to some extent or are employed as composites containing conductive additives. Such materials introduce challenges in their study by DNP-NMR which include microwave absorption and sample heating that were not thoroughly investigated so far. Here we examine several commercial carbon allotropes, commonly employed as electrodes or conductive additives, and consider their effect on the extent of solvent polarization achieved in DNP from nitroxide biradicals. We then address the effect of sample conductivity systematically by studying a series of carbons with increasing electrical conductivity prepared via glucose carbonization. THz spectroscopy measurements are used to determine the extent of μw absorption. Our results show that while the DNP performance significantly drops in samples containing the highly conductive carbons, sufficient signal enhancement can still be achieved with some compromise on conductivity. Furthermore, we show that the deleterious effect of conductive additives on DNP enhancements can be partially overcome through pulse-DNP experiments. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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