3D Spin Noise Imaging with Enhanced Sensitivity

  • Bechmann, M. (Speaker)
  • Stephan Ginthör (Speaker)
  • Victor Rodin (Speaker)
  • Judith Schlagnitweit (Speaker)
  • Alexej Jerschow (Speaker)
  • Müller, N. (Speaker)

Activity: Talk or presentationPoster presentationscience-to-science

Description

The work presented here demonstrates the extension of nuclear spin-noise-detected imaging [1] to 3D imaging. Spin noise detection provides a high potential for application at nano-sized samples, is implicitly free of rf-related artifacts and allows for fast recycling times owed to the independence from longitudinal magnetization recovery. Also no rf-related power restrictions need to be considered. Applying the enhancements and insights of over 10 years of spin noise research [2] the realization of this intrinsically insensitive experiment has become possible. The advancements include sliding window processing [3] of the continuously recorded time-domain data, avoiding T/R switching related “transient effects” [4], and optimal tuning of the probe tuning for spin noise detection [5]. With these improvements in the experimental setup and advanced data processing, it is now possible to record 3D nuclear spin-noise-detected images in a reasonable time frame using a state-of-the-art high resolution spectrometer. When recording conventional (rf-pulse excitation based) NMR experiments there is a trade-off between the resolution and the S/N ratio (which is determined mostly by the number of scans), which needs to be decided before starting the experiment. For spin-noise-detected experiments this trade-off can be adjusted as part of the data processing after the recording is complete. This involves novel iterative image reconstruction techniques based on the algebraic reconstruction algorithm [6]. Even molecular imaging (spatially resolved spectroscopy) becomes feasible that way.
Period03 Jul 2018
Event titleEUROMAR 2018
Event typeConference
LocationFranceShow on map

Fields of science

  • 104021 Structural chemistry
  • 104 Chemistry
  • 106041 Structural biology
  • 104017 Physical chemistry
  • 301305 Medical chemistry
  • 106002 Biochemistry
  • 104026 Spectroscopy
  • 104015 Organic chemistry

JKU Focus areas

  • Nano-, Bio- and Polymer-Systems: From Structure to Function
  • Engineering and Natural Sciences (in general)