Note to users. If you're seeing this message, it means that your browser cannot find this page's style/presentation instructions -- or possibly that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing, and what you can do to make your experience of our site the best it can be.


Science 19 October 1984:
Vol. 226. no. 4672, pp. 282 - 288
DOI: 10.1126/science.226.4672.282

Articles

High-Resolution Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of Solids

Gary E. Maciel 1

1 Professor in the Department of Chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523.

The development of line-narrowing techniques, such as magic-angle spinning (MAS) and high-power decoupling, has led to powerful high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance approaches for solid samples. In favorable cases (for instance, where high abundances of protons are present) cross polarization (CP) provides a means of circumventing the time bottleneck caused by inefficient spinlattice relaxation in many solids. The combined CP-MAS approach for carbon-13 with proton decoupling has become a popular and routine experiment for organic solids. For many nuclides with spin quantum number /> frac12 the central nuclear magnetic resonance transition can be employed in high-resolution experiments that involve rapid sample spinning. A continuing stream of advances holds great promise for the use of high-resolution techniques for the characterization of solids by a wide range of nuclides.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
A Bax and L Lerner (1986)
Science 232, 960-967
   Abstract »    PDF »



To Advertise     Find Products


Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)