Litcius/Paper detail

Multi-axis fields boost SABRE hyperpolarization

Jacob R. Lindale, L. L. Smith, Mathew W. Mammen, Shannon L. Eriksson, Lucas M. Everhart, Warren S. Warren

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The inherently low signal-to-noise ratio of NMR and MRI is now being addressed by hyperpolarization methods. For example, iridium-based catalysts that reversibly bind both parahydrogen and ligands in solution can hyperpolarize protons (SABRE) or heteronuclei (X-SABRE) on a wide variety of ligands, using a complex interplay of spin dynamics and chemical exchange processes, with common signal enhancements between 10 3 and 10 4 . This does not approach obvious theoretical limits, and further enhancement would be valuable in many applications (such as imaging mM concentration species in vivo). Most SABRE/X-SABRE implementations require far lower fields (μT-mT) than standard magnetic resonance (>1T), and this gives an additional degree of freedom: the ability to fully modulate fields in three dimensions. However, this has been underexplored because the standard simplifying theoretical assumptions in magnetic resonance need to be revisited. Here, we take a different approach, an evolutionary strategy algorithm for numerical optimization, multi-axis computer-aided heteronuclear transfer enhancement for SABRE (MACHETE-SABRE). We find nonintuitive but highly efficient multiaxial pulse sequences which experimentally can produce a sevenfold improvement in polarization over continuous excitation. This approach optimizes polarization differently than traditional methods, thus gaining extra efficiency.

Topics & Concepts

Hyperpolarization (physics)Spin isomers of hydrogenHeteronuclear moleculePolarization (electrochemistry)Induced polarizationNuclear magnetic resonanceExcitationPhysicsMagnetic fieldChemistryChemical physicsNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyPhysical chemistryElectrical resistivity and conductivityQuantum mechanicsHydrogenAdvanced NMR Techniques and ApplicationsSolid-state spectroscopy and crystallographyElectron Spin Resonance Studies