Research by an interdisciplinary team including chemists, physicists and engineers from the University of Southampton has found that water molecules react differently to electric fields, which could provide a new way to study spin isomers at the single-molecule level and offer new insights to the phenomenon of magnetic resonance.
Parting water: â??Electric prismâ?? separates water's nuclear spin states - R & D Magazine
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Parting water: â??Electric prismâ?? separates water's nuclear spin states
R & D Magazine
A method known as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy reconstructs protein structures from the relative orientation of the nuclear spins of hydrogen and other atoms. â??Para hydrogen has successfully been used to enhance the sensitivity of the ...
Parting water: â??Electric prismâ?? separates water's nuclear spin states - R & D Magazine
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09-09-2014 09:29 AM
Researchers separate the nuclear spin states of water - Nanowerk
<img alt="" height="1" width="1" />
Researchers separate the nuclear spin states of water
Nanowerk
A method known as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy reconstructs protein structures from the relative orientation of the nuclear spins of hydrogen and other atoms. â??Para hydrogen has successfully been used to enhance the sensitivity of the ...
and more »
Researchers separate the nuclear spin states of water - Nanowerk
More...
[NMR paper] Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backbone 15N spin relaxation rates
From Mendeley Biomolecular NMR group:
Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backbone 15N spin relaxation rates
Journal of Magnetic Resonance (2011). Volume: 213, Issue: 1. Pages: 151-157. Kang Chen, Nico Tjandra et al.
Published using Mendeley: The library management tool for researchers
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11-22-2012 11:49 AM
[NMR paper] Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backbone 15N spin relaxation rates
From Mendeley Biomolecular NMR group:
Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backbone 15N spin relaxation rates
Journal of Magnetic Resonance (2011). Volume: 213, Issue: 1. Pages: 151-157. Kang Chen, Nico Tjandra et al.
Published using Mendeley: The reference manager for researchers
nmrlearner
Journal club
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10-12-2012 09:58 AM
[NMR paper] Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backbone 15N spin relaxation rates
From Mendeley Biomolecular NMR group:
Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backbone 15N spin relaxation rates
Journal of Magnetic Resonance (2011). Volume: 213, Issue: 1. Pages: 151-157. Kang Chen, Nico Tjandra et al.
Published using Mendeley: The digital library for researchers
nmrlearner
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08-24-2012 08:01 PM
Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backboneN spin relaxation rates
Water proton spin saturation affects measured protein backboneN spin relaxation rates
Publication year: 2011
Source: Journal of Magnetic Resonance, Available online 1 October 2011</br>
Kang*Chen, Nico*Tjandra</br>
Protein backboneN NMR spin relaxation rates are useful in characterizing the protein dynamics and structures. To observe the protein nuclear-spin resonances a pulse sequence has to include a water suppression scheme. There are two commonly employed methods, saturating or dephasing the water spins with pulse field gradients and keeping them unperturbed with flip-back pulses....