Mechanism of spontaneous polarization transfer in high-field SABRE experiments

Published: Monday, 05 March 2018 - 16:00 UTC

Author:

Knecht, S., et al., Mechanism of spontaneous polarization transfer in high-field SABRE experiments. Journal of Magnetic Resonance, 2018. 287: p. 74-81.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2017.12.018

We propose an explanation of the previously reported SABRE (Signal Amplification By Reversible Exchange) effect at high magnetic fields, observed in the absence of RF-excitation and relying only on “spontaneous” polarization transfer from parahydrogen (pH2, the H2 molecule in its nuclear singlet spin state) to a SABRE substrate. We propose a detailed mechanism for spontaneous polarization transfer and show that it is comprised of three steps: (i) Generation of the anti-phase Î1zÎ2z spin order of catalyst-bound H2; (ii) spin order conversion Î1zÎ2z→(Î1z+Î2z) due to cross-correlated relaxation, leading to net polarization of H2; (iii) polarization transfer to the SABRE substrate, occurring due to NOE. Formation of anti-phase polarization is due to singlet-to-T0 mixing in the catalyst-bound form of H2, while cross-correlated relaxation originates from fluctuations of dipole–dipole interactions and chemical shift anisotropy. The proposed mechanism is supported by a theoretical treatment, magnetic field-dependent studies and high-field NMR measurements with both pH2 and thermally polarized H2.