Microtesla nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) has been demonstrated. In conventional NMR, a several-tesla magnetic field is used to orient atomic nuclei in the sample. The polarized nuclei can resonantly absorb a burst of radio waves, and precess around the imposed field. The spectral “chemical shift” information from reemitted radio waves is then used to identify molecules. NMR also lies at the heart of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Now, a team of scientists led by John Clarke and Alexander Pines (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California, Berkeley) have exploited an often overlooked fact: For a homogeneous field, the NMR linewidth scales linearly with the field strength. Thus, a 1000-fold reduction in field strength produces a line both narrower and taller by that same factor. The researchers placed a small liquid sample of methanol and phosphoric acid in a polarizing field of only 1 mT and a much weaker...
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1 May 2002
May 01 2002
Citation
Philip F. Schewe; Microtesla nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Physics Today 1 May 2002; 55 (5): 9. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4796742
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