The residual broadening observed in H-1 spectra of rigid organic solids at natural abundance under 111 kHz magic angle spinning (MAS) is typically a few hundred Hertz. Here we show that refocusable and non-refocusable interactions contribute roughly equally to this residual at high-fields (21.14 T), and suggest that the removal of the non-refocusable part will produce significant increase in spectral resolution. To this end, we demonstrate an experiment for the indirect acquisition of constant-time experiments at ultra-fast MAS (CT-MAS) which verifies this hypothesis. The combination of this experiment with the two-dimensional one pulse (TOP) transformation reduces the experimental time to a fraction of the original cost while retaining the narrowing effects. Results obtained with TOP-CT-MAS at 111 kHz MAS on a sample of beta-AspAla yield up to 30% higher resolution spectra than the equivalent one-pulse experiment, in less than 10 min. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc.
Jürgen Brugger, Giovanni Boero, Marco Grisi, Gaurasundar Marc Conley, Kyle Joel Rodriguez, Lukas Egli, Erika Riva
Majed Chergui, Andre Al Haddad, Lars-Hendrik Mewes, Rebecca Ann Ingle