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  2. Chemical shift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_shift

    Chemical shift δ is usually expressed in parts per million (ppm) by frequency, because it is calculated from [5] =, where ν sample is the absolute resonance frequency of the sample, and ν ref is the absolute resonance frequency of a standard reference compound, measured in the same applied magnetic field B 0.

  3. Hyperpolarized carbon-13 MRI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperpolarized_carbon-13_MRI

    Hyperpolarized carbon-13 MRI is a functional medical imaging technique for probing perfusion and metabolism using injected substrates. It is enabled by techniques for hyperpolarization of carbon-13 -containing molecules using dynamic nuclear polarization and rapid dissolution to create an injectable solution.

  4. Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon-13_nuclear_magnetic...

    The chemical shift reference standard for 13 C is the carbons in tetramethylsilane (TMS), [4] whose chemical shift is set as 0.0 ppm at every temperature. Typical chemical shifts in 13 C-NMR Coupling constants

  5. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton_nuclear_magnetic...

    The exact value of chemical shift depends on molecular structure and the solvent, temperature, magnetic field in which the spectrum is being recorded and other neighboring functional groups. Hydrogen nuclei are sensitive to the hybridization of the atom to which the hydrogen atom is attached and to electronic effects. Nuclei tend to be ...

  6. Paramagnetic nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paramagnetic_nuclear...

    The difference between the chemical shift of a given nucleus in a diamagnetic vs. a paramagnetic environment is called the hyperfine shift.In solution the isotropic hyperfine chemical shift for nickelocene is −255 ppm, which is the difference between the observed shift (ca. −260 ppm) and the shift observed for a diamagnetic analogue ferrocene (ca. 5 ppm).

  7. Fluorine-19 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorine-19_nuclear...

    19 F NMR chemical shifts in the literature vary strongly, commonly by over 1 ppm, even within the same solvent. [5] Although the reference compound for 19 F NMR spectroscopy, neat CFCl 3 (0 ppm), [6] has been used since the 1950s, [7] clear instructions on how to measure and deploy it in routine measurements were not present until recently. [5]

  8. Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-dimensional_nuclear...

    The two dimensions of a two-dimensional NMR experiment are two frequency axes representing a chemical shift. Each frequency axis is associated with one of the two time variables, which are the length of the evolution period (the evolution time) and the time elapsed during the detection period (the detection time).

  9. Nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shift re-referencing

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_magnetic_resonance...

    In a recent study, [11] a chemical shift re-referencing program (PANAV) was run on a total of 2421 BMRB entries that had a sufficient proportion of (>80%) of assigned chemical shifts to perform a robust chemical shift reference correction. A total of 243 entries were found with 13Cα shifts offset by more than 1.0 ppm, 238 entries with 13Cβ ...