Zero- to Ultralow-field Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
Zero and ultralow-field nuclear magnetic resonance (ZULF NMR) is an NMR modality where experiments are performed in fields at which spin-spin interactions within molecules and materials are stronger than Zeeman interactions. This typically occurs at external fields of microtesla strength or below, c...
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Zusammenfassung: | Zero and ultralow-field nuclear magnetic resonance (ZULF NMR) is an NMR
modality where experiments are performed in fields at which spin-spin
interactions within molecules and materials are stronger than Zeeman
interactions. This typically occurs at external fields of microtesla strength
or below, considerably smaller than Earth's field. In ZULF NMR, the measurement
of spin-spin couplings and spin relaxation rates provides a nondestructive
means for identifying chemicals and chemical fragments, and for conducting
sample or process analyses. The absence of the symmetry imposed by a strong
external magnetic field enables experiments that exploit terms in the nuclear
spin Hamiltonian that are suppressed in high-field NMR, which in turn opens up
new capabilities in a broad range of fields, from the search for dark matter to
the preparation of hyperpolarized contrast agents for clinical imaging.
Furthermore, as in ZULF NMR the Larmor frequencies are typically in the audio
band, the nuclear spins can be addressed with d.c. magnetic field pulses, and
highly sensitive magnetometers are used for detection. In contrast to
high-field NMR, the low-frequency signals readily pass through conductive
materials such as metals, and heterogeneous samples do not produce resonance
line broadening, meaning that high-resolution spectroscopy is possible. Notable
practical advantages of ZULF NMR spectroscopy are the low cost and relative
simplicity and portability of the spectrometer system. In recent years ZULF NMR
has become more accessible, thanks to improvements in magnetometer sensitivity
and their commercial availability, and the development of hyperpolarization
methods that provide a simple means to boost signal strengths by several orders
of magnitude. These topics are reviewed and a perspective on potential future
avenues of ZULF-NMR research is presented. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.09048 |