Aurélien BornetJonas MilaniBasile VuichoudAngel J. Perez LindeGeoffrey BodenhausenSami Jannin
Hyperpolarization by Dissolution Dynamic Nuclear Polarization is usually achieved by monochromatic microwave irradiation of the ESR spectrum of free radicals embedded in glasses at 1.2 K and 3.35 T. Hovav et al. (2014) have recently shown that by using frequency-modulated (rather than monochromatic) microwave irradiation one can improve DNP at 3.35 T in the temperature range 10-50 K. We show in this Letter that this is also true under Dissolution-DNP conditions at 1.2 K and 6.7 T. We demonstrate the many virtues of using frequency-modulated microwave irradiation: higher polarizations, faster build-up rates, lower radical concentrations, less paramagnetic broadening, more efficient cross-polarization, and less critical frequency adjustments. © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Batel, MichaelDäpp, AlexanderHunkeler, AndreasMeier, Beat HKozerke, SebastianErnst, Matthias
Batel, MichaelDäpp, AlexanderHunkeler, AndreasMeier, Beat HKozerke, SebastianErnst, Matthias
Michael BatelAlexander DäppAndreas HunkelerBeat H. MeierSebastian KozerkeMatthias Ernst
Ashok AjoyRaffi NazaryanKristina LiuXudong LvB. SafvatiGuoqing WangEmanuel DrugaJeffrey A. ReimerDieter SuterChandrasekhar RamanathanCarlos A. MerilesAlexander Pines
Yonatan HovavAkiva FeintuchShimon VegaDaniella Goldfarb