1. G. Engelhardt, H. Koller, Stuttgart, FRG: 29Si NMR of Inorganic Solids 2. H. Pfeifer, Leizpig, FRG: NMR of Solid Surfaces 3. A. Sebald, Bayreuth, FRG: MAS and CP/MAS NMR of Less Common Spin-1/2 Nuclei 4. C. J{ger, Mainz, FRG: Satellite Transition Spectroscopy of Quadrupolar Nuclei 5. D. Brinkmann, M. Mali, Z}rich, CH: NMR-NQR Studies of High-Temperature Superconductors
1. G. Engelhardt, H. Koller, Stuttgart, FRG: 29Si NMR of Inorganic Solids 2. H. Pfeifer, Leizpig, FRG: NMR of Solid Surfaces 3. A. Sebald, Bayreuth, F...
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which has evolved only within the last 20 years, has become one of the very important tools in chemistry and physics. The literature on its theory and application has grown immensely and a comprehensive and adequate treatment of all branches by one author, or even by several, becomes increasingly difficult. This series is planned to present articles written by experts working in various fields of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and will contain review articles as well as progress reports and original work, its main aim, however, is to fill a...
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which has evolved only within the last 20 years, has become one of the very important tools in chemistry and ...
Although it was shown very early 1] that the isotope 29Si is very valuable for NMR research, severe technical difficulties had to be overcome before silicon spectra could be recorded. This was due to the low sensitivity of the isotope resulting from its low gyro magnetic ratio, its low abundance and the rather long relaxation times. The introduction of the Fourier-Transform-Technique (FT-NMR) helped to surmount most of these problems, with the result, that more and more papers concerning silicon NMR appear. Thus, it seems now that most of the salient features of 29Si-NMR are known today....
Although it was shown very early 1] that the isotope 29Si is very valuable for NMR research, severe technical difficulties had to be overcome before ...
After the proton and carbon, nitrogen is, with oxygen, the most impor tant atom in organic and especially bioorganic molecules. However, the development of nitrogen spectroscopy is indeed very recent. This is due to the fact that nitrogen-14, which is the naturally abundant iso tope, suffers, for structural studies, from the disadvantages inherent in nuclei with a quadrupolar moment (Table 1.1). Actually, indirect 15N measurements were reported in the early days of double resonance spectroscopy and the first direct detection of 15N resonance signals at the natural abundance level was realized...
After the proton and carbon, nitrogen is, with oxygen, the most impor tant atom in organic and especially bioorganic molecules. However, the developme...