Hyperpolarization of cis-15N,15N'-azobenzene by parahydrogen at ultralow magnetic fields
Kirill F. Sheberstov, Vitaly P. Kozinenko, Alexey S. Kiryutin,, Hans-Martin Vieth, Herbert Zimmermann, Konstantin L. Ivanov, Alexandra V., Yurkovskaya

TL;DR
This study demonstrates efficient hyperpolarization of cis-15N,15N'-azobenzene using SABRE SHEATH at ultralow magnetic fields, achieving significant signal enhancement for potential MRI contrast agents.
Contribution
It provides detailed experimental insights into hyperpolarizing cis-azobenzene via SABRE SHEATH, highlighting the field dependence and contrast with trans isomer hyperpolarization.
Findings
Hyperpolarization of cis-azobenzene reaches thousands of times for 15N spins.
No hyperpolarization observed in trans-azobenzene.
Field-dependent behavior of hyperpolarization signals was characterized.
Abstract
Development of the methods to exploit nuclear hyperpolarization and search for molecules whose nuclear spins can be efficiently hyperpolarized is an active area in nuclear magnetic resonance. Of particular interest are those molecules that have long nuclear relaxation times, making them to be suitable candidates as contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging. In this work, we present a detailed study of SABRE SHEATH (Signal Amplification By Reversible Exchange in Shield Enabled Alignment Transfer to Heteronuclei) experiments of 15N,15N' azobenzene. In SABRE SHEATH experiments nuclear spins of the target are hyperpolarized by transfer of spin polarization from parahydrogen at ultralow fields during a reversible chemical process. The studied system is complicated, and we are concerned only about a subset of the data, presenting details for the molecules that experience fast chemical…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced NMR Techniques and Applications · Solid-state spectroscopy and crystallography · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
