Chemical Reaction Monitoring Using Zero-Field Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Enables Study of Heterogeneous Samples in Metal Containers

23 April 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

We demonstrate that heterogeneous/biphasic chemical reactions can be monitored with high spectroscopic resolution using zero-field nuclear magnetic resonance. This is possible because magnetic susceptibility broadening is insignificant at ultralow magnetic fields. We show the two-step hydrogenation of dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate with para-enriched hydrogen gas in conventional glass NMR tubes, as well as in a titanium tube. The low frequency zero-field NMR signals ensure that there is no significant signal attenuation due to shielding by the electrically conductive sample container. This method paves the way for in situ monitoring of reactions in complex heterogeneous multiphase systems and in reactors made from conductive materials without magnetic susceptibility induced line broadening.

Keywords

NMR Spectroscopy
hyperpolarization lifetimes
hyperpolarization
Catalysis
Zero Field
NMR Techniques
hyperpolarized NMR spectroscopy

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
ZULF-RM SI
Description
Actions

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