Portable NMR combining a permanent magnet and a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit has recently emerged to offer the long desired online, on-demand, or in situ NMR analysis of small… Click to show full abstract
Portable NMR combining a permanent magnet and a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit has recently emerged to offer the long desired online, on-demand, or in situ NMR analysis of small molecules for chemistry and biology. Here we take this cutting-edge technology to the next level by introducing parallelism to a state-of-the-art portable NMR platform to accelerate its experimental throughput, where NMR is notorious for inherently low throughput. With multiple (N) samples inside a single magnet, we perform simultaneous NMR analyses using a single silicon electronic chip, going beyond the traditional single-sample-per-magnet paradigm. We execute the parallel analyses via either time-interleaving or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In the time-interleaving method, the N samples occupy N separate NMR coils: we connect these N NMR coils to the single silicon chip one after another and repeat these sequential NMR scans. This time-interleaving is an effective parallelization, given a long recovery time of a single NMR scan. To demonstrate this time-interleaved parallelism, we use N = 2 for high-resolution multidimensional spectroscopy such as J-coupling resolved free induction decay spectroscopy and correlation spectroscopy (COSY) with the field homogeneity carefully optimized (<0.16 ppm) and N = 4 for multidimensional relaxometry such as diffusion-edited T2 mapping and T1-T2 correlation mapping, expediting the throughput by 2-4 times. In the MRI technique, the N samples (N = 18 in our demonstration) share 1 NMR coil connected to the single silicon chip and are imaged all at once multiple times, which reveals the relaxation time of all N samples simultaneously. This imaging-based approach accelerates the relaxation time measurement by 4.5 times, and it could be by 18 times if the signal-to-noise were not limited. Overall, this work demonstrates the first portable high-resolution multidimensional NMR with throughput-accelerating parallelism.
               
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