Role of Internal Motions and Molecular Geometry on the NMR Relaxation of Hydrocarbons
Philip M. Singer, Dilip Asthagiri, Zeliang Chen, Arjun Valiya, Parambathu, George J. Hirasaki, and Walter G. Chapman

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how internal motions and molecular shape influence NMR relaxation times in hydrocarbons, revealing the effects of symmetry, chain length, and internal flexibility.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulation-based insights into the impact of internal motions and molecular geometry on NMR relaxation in hydrocarbons, including site-specific variations and the role of molecular symmetry.
Findings
Molecules with higher symmetry match hard-sphere models better.
Internal motions shorten correlation times and lengthen relaxation times.
Cross-relaxation averages out site-specific variations in long-chain alkanes.
Abstract
The role of internal motions and molecular geometry on H NMR relaxation times in hydrocarbons is investigated using MD (molecular dynamics) simulations of the autocorrelation functions for in{\it tra}molecular and in{\it ter}molecular H-H dipole-dipole interactions arising from rotational () and translational () diffusion, respectively. We show that molecules with increased molecular symmetry such as neopentane, benzene, and isooctane show better agreement with traditional hard-sphere models than their corresponding straight-chain -alkane, and furthermore that spherically-symmetric neopentane agrees well with the Stokes-Einstein theory. The influence of internal motions on the dynamics and relaxation of -alkanes are investigated by simulating rigid -alkanes and comparing with flexible (i.e. non-rigid) -alkanes. Internal…
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