Anmelden

Near absolute zero temperatures, in the presence of a magnetic field, the majority of nuclei prefer the lower energy spin-up state to the higher energy spin-down state. As temperatures increase, the energy from thermal collisions distributes the spins more equally between the two states. The Boltzmann distribution equation gives the ratio of the number of spins predicted in the spin −½ (N) and spin +½ (N+) states.

Figure1

Here, ΔE is the energy difference between the states, k is the Boltzmann constant (1.38 × 10−23 J·K−1), and T is the absolute temperature measured in kelvins. The energy difference can be expressed as hν, where h is Planck’s constant (6.626 × 10−34 J·s) and ν is the operating frequency of the NMR instrument.

Figure2

For example, in an instrument operating at 60 MHz at 298 K, the ratio is slightly less than 1 (0.999991), implying that the lower energy state has approximately 9 to 10 excess nuclei in a total population of about 2,000,000 nuclei. The excess population is small but significant, as these spins are responsible for the net magnetization that produces the NMR signal. Using a higher operating frequency increases the energy gap between the spin states and the excess population.

Tags

Atomic NucleiNuclear SpinSpin State PopulationMagnetic FieldThermal CollisionsBoltzmann DistributionEnergy DifferenceBoltzmann ConstantAbsolute TemperaturePlanck s ConstantNMR InstrumentExcess NucleiNet MagnetizationOperating Frequency

Aus Kapitel 7:

article

Now Playing

7.5 : Atomic Nuclei: Nuclear Spin State Population Distribution

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

879 Ansichten

article

7.1 : Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR): Overview

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

1.7K Ansichten

article

7.2 : Atomic Nuclei: Nuclear Spin

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

1.4K Ansichten

article

7.3 : Atomic Nuclei: Nuclear Magnetic Moment

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

973 Ansichten

article

7.4 : Atomic Nuclei: Nuclear Spin State Overview

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

783 Ansichten

article

7.6 : Atomic Nuclei: Larmor Precession Frequency

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

956 Ansichten

article

7.7 : Atomic Nuclei: Magnetic Resonance

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

583 Ansichten

article

7.8 : Atomic Nuclei: Nuclear Relaxation Processes

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

574 Ansichten

article

7.9 : Atomic Nuclei: Types of Nuclear Relaxation

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

213 Ansichten

article

7.10 : NMR Spectrometers: Overview

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

920 Ansichten

article

7.11 : NMR Spectrometers: Radiofrequency Pulses and Pulse Sequences

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

671 Ansichten

article

7.12 : NMR Spectrometers: Resolution and Error Correction

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

585 Ansichten

article

7.13 : Diamagnetic Shielding of Nuclei: Local Diamagnetic Current

Principles of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

775 Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten