Coherent Averaging Effects in Magnetic Resonance

U. Haeberlen and J. S. Waugh
Phys. Rev. 175, 453 – Published 10 November 1968
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Abstract

A theory is developed to describe the slow component of the transient decay of transverse spin magnetization, and the central component of the slow-passage absorption spectrum, of a system of spins which is subjected to a periodic and cyclic perturbation. The theory is used to analyze and compare various schemes for high-resolution NMR of solids, including the spinning of the sample about an axis oriented at the "magic angle," the rotating-frame magic-angle experiment of Lee and Goldburg, pulsed versions of the latter, and a number of new pulsed-NMR experiments recently developed in this laboratory. Attention is focused on the factors, both theoretical and practical, which are important in obtaining optimal suppression of static dipole-dipole interactions and quadrupole splittings, and retention of chemical and Knight shifts and scalar spin-spin interactions. Several new experiments are proposed.

  • Received 22 April 1968

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.175.453

©1968 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

U. Haeberlen* and J. S. Waugh

  • Department of Chemistry and Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

  • *Stipendiat of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.

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Issue

Vol. 175, Iss. 2 — November 1968

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