Boron NMR without a background
Blog Post
- Published: Aug 21, 2012
- Author: Steve Down
- Channels: Infrared Spectroscopy / MRI Spectroscopy / NMR Knowledge Base / Atomic / Base Peak / Proteomics / X-ray Spectrometry / UV/Vis Spectroscopy / Raman / Chemometrics & Informatics
Measuring 10B in the NMR spectra of solutions of boron compounds eliminates the troublesome background signals that are associated with 11B, according to Peter Király from the Department of NMR Spectroscopy at the Chemical Research Center of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest, writing in Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry. The effect was illustrated for a range of readily available inorganic and organic compounds and was attributed to the integer spin of 10B compared with the non-integral spin of 11B.
Using 11B DEPTH sequence experiments, efficient suppression of the background signals can be achieved, so there is little advantage in switching to 10B. However, 10B NMR gives better signal-to background ratios when background suppression is needed for relaxation broadened resonances.
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