9780198539445
Principles Of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Microscopy - Paul T. Callaghan
Clarendon Press (1991)
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#7981

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Magnetic resonance imaging, Microscopy, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

Nuclear magnetic resonance is best known for its spectacular utility in medical tomography. However, the method has potential applications in biology, materials science, and chemical physics, some of which are now being realized as laboratory NMR spectrometers are adapted to enable small scale imaging. NMR microscopy has available a rich variety of contrast including molecular specificity and sensitivity to molecular dynamics. In NMR imaging, the signal is acquired in k-space, a dimension which bears a Fourier relationship with the positions of nuclear spins. A dynamic analogue of k-space imaging is the Pulsed Gradient Spin Echo (PGSE) experiment in which the signal is acquired in q-space, conjugate to the distances moved by the spins over a well-defined time interval. Q-space microscopy provides images of the nuclear self-correlation function with a resolution some two orders of magnitude better than is possible in imaging the nuclear density. As well as revealing the spectrum of molecular motion, PGSE NMR can be used to study morphology in porous systems through the influence of motional boundaries. This book explores principles and common themes underlying these two variants of NMR Microscopy, providing many examples of their use. The methods discussed here are of importance in fundamental biological and physical research, as well as having applications in a wide variety of industries, including those concerned with petrochemicals, polymers, biotechnology, food processing, and natural product processing.

Product Details
LoC Classification QP519.9.N83 .C35 1991
Dewey 538/.362
No. of Pages 492
Height x Width 240 x 164 mm