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Expanding current applications and permitting the analysis of larger intact samples by means of a 7 mm CMP-NMR probe.

Authors :
Ning P
Lane D
Ghosh Biswas R
Jenne A
Bastawrous M
Soong R
Schmidig D
Frei T
De Castro P
Kovacevic I
Graf S
Wegner S
Bermel W
Busse F
Kuehn T
Kuemmerle R
Struppe J
Fey M
Stronks HJ
Monette M
Simpson MJ
Simpson AJ
Source :
The Analyst [Analyst] 2021 Jul 12; Vol. 146 (14), pp. 4461-4472.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Comprehensive multiphase NMR combines the ability to study and differentiate all phases (solids, gels, and liquids) using a single NMR probe. The general goal of CMP-NMR is to study intact environmental and biological samples to better understand conformation, organization, association, and transfer between and across phases/interfaces that may be lost with conventional sample preparation such as drying or solubilization. To date, all CMP-NMR studies have used 4 mm probes and rotors. Here, a larger 7 mm probehead is introduced which provides ∼3 times the volume and ∼2.4 times the signal over a 4 mm version. This offers two main advantages: (1) the additional biomass reduces experiment time, making 13C detection at natural abundance more feasible; (2) it allows the analysis of larger samples that cannot fit within a 4 mm rotor. Chicken heart tissue and Hyalella azteca (freshwater shrimp) are used to demonstrate that phase-based spectral editing works with 7 mm rotors and that the additional biomass from the larger volumes allows detection with 13C at natural abundance. Additionally, a whole pomegranate seed berry (aril) and an intact softgel capsule of hydroxyzine hydrochloride are used to demonstrate the analysis of samples too large to fit inside a conventional 4 mm CMP probe. The 7 mm version introduced here extends the range of applications and sample types that can be studied and is recommended when 4 mm CMP probes cannot provide adequate signal-to-noise (S/N), or intact samples are simply too big for 4 mm rotors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1364-5528
Volume :
146
Issue :
14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Analyst
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34136891
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1an00809a