A train of short rotor-synchronized pulses in the manner of Delays Alternating with Nutations for Tailored Excitation (DANTE) applied to nitrogen-14 nuclei (I = 1) in samples spinning at the magic angle at high frequencies (typically nu(rot) = 62.5 kHz so that tau(rot) = 16 mu s) allows one to achieve uniform excitation of a great number of spinning sidebands that arise from large first-order quadrupole interactions, as occur for aromatic nitrogen-14 nuclei in histidine. With routine rf amplitudes omega(1)(N-14)/(2 pi) = 60 kHz and very short pulses of a typical duration 0.5 < tau(p) < 2 mu s, efficient excitation can be achieved with 13 rotor-synchronized pulses in 13 tau(rot) = 208 mu s. Alternatively, with 'overtone' DANTE sequences using 2, 4, or 8 pulses per rotor period one can achieve efficient broadband excitation in fewer rotor periods, typically 2-4 tau(rot). These principles can be combined with the indirect detection of N-14 nuclei via spy nuclei with S = 1/2 such as H-1 or C-13 in the manner of Dipolar Heteronuclear Multiple-Quantum Correlation (D-HMQC). (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
David Lyndon Emsley, Geoffrey Bodenhausen, Aurélien Bornet, Sami Jannin, Basile Vuichoud, Pierrick Berruyer, Mathieu Baudin, David Benjamin Roger Antoine Gajan, David Baudouin, Matthieu Cavaillès
David Lyndon Emsley, Gabriele Stevanato, Pinelopi Moutzouri, Bruno Simões de Almeida