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Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Relaxivities: Investigations of Ultrahigh‐Spin Lanthanide Clusters from 10 MHz to 1.4 GHz
15
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Nuclear ImagingRelaxation ProcessEngineeringSpin SystemsSpin TexturesMagnetic ResonanceSpin DynamicNmr Relaxation PropertiesMagnetismNuclear Quadrupole ResonanceElectron Paramagnetic ResonanceParamagnetic Relaxation EnhancementBiophysicsRelaxometryPhysicsSolution Nmr SpectroscopyMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyUltrahigh-frequency Nmr SetupCondensed Matter PhysicsApplied PhysicsResonanceDynamic Nuclear PolarizationUltrahigh‐spin Lanthanide ClustersMedicine
Paramagnetic relaxation enhancement is often explored in magnetic resonance imaging in terms of contrast agents and in biomolecular nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy for structure determination. New ultrahigh-spin clusters are investigated with respect to their NMR relaxation properties. As their molecular size and therefore motional correlation times as well as their electronic properties differ significantly from those of conventional contrast agents, questions about a comprehensive characterization arise. The relaxivity was studied by field-dependent longitudinal and transverse NMR relaxometry of aqueous solutions containing Fe(III)(10)Dy(III)(10) ultrahigh-spin clusters (spin ground state 100/2). The high-field limit was extended to 32.9 T by using a 24 MW resistive magnet and an ultrahigh-frequency NMR setup. Interesting relaxation dispersions were observed; the relaxivities increase up to the highest available fields, which indicates a complex interplay of electronic and molecular correlation times.
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