T. M. Barbosaab,
R. Rittnera,
C. F. Tormenaa,
G. A. Morrisb and
M. Nilsson*b
aChemistry Institute, University of Campinas – UNICAMP, P. O. Box: 6154, 13083-970-Campinas, SP, Brazil
bSchool of Chemistry, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK. E-mail: mathias.nilsson@manchester.ac.uk
First published on 26th September 2016
Temperature gradients in liquid-state NMR samples are unavoidable, but undesirable: they lead to sample convection, and consequently to signal attenuation in experiments that use field gradients. This paper illustrates how widely the dependence of sample convection velocity on the temperature at which the sample is maintained can differ between different probes and different spectrometers, including the first such results for cryoprobe systems, and highlights the importance of understanding this dependence if the effects of sample convection are to be kept to an acceptable minimum. It is sometimes thought that efficient sample temperature control should suffice to avoid convection: alas, this is not true, and rapid sample convection can occur even with the best hardware. Previous experiments have shown that the effects of convection can sometimes be avoided by setting the sample temperature regulation to one particular temperature; here it is shown that no such temperature exists in some probes. The issue of convection is all too often swept under the carpet; these results confirm that it is a more general problem than is commonly realized.
In many commercial probes available nowadays, the sample temperature is regulated by flowing temperature-controlled gas upwards past the sample. Since the base of the NMR tube is the first part to feel the gas flow, the temperature gradient is expected to be both vertical and positive (bottom colder than the top) whenever the temperature of the gas flow is below the quiescent temperature, TQ, of the sample (the temperature of the sample in the absence of any gas flow, typically, but not always, near to room temperature), and vertical and negative when the gas temperature is above TQ. This would be true if the probe geometry and the incoming gas flow were perfectly cylindrical, but previous studies have shown that in fact convection is found at temperatures both above and below TQ,1 indicating the presence of horizontal temperature gradients. Cold probes/cryoprobes present particular problems because of the extreme temperature gradients present close to the sample; in such probes TQ is normally well below 0 °C, and it is essential to maintain gas flow past the sample at all times.
All liquid state NMR experiments suffer from convection effects to a greater or lesser extent, but pulse sequences that use field gradient pulses, whether to select coherence transfer pathways, to encode spatial position, or to enable diffusion measurement, are those most likely to exhibit anomalies due to convection. When a sample convects, drastic effects on the time evolution of nuclear magnetization during the pulse sequence can sometimes be observed, resulting e.g. in spectra containing signals with incorrect phases and amplitudes.1,2,5 Signal loss due to convection is unwelcome in any NMR experiment, given the inherently low sensitivity of NMR spectroscopy, but is a particular problem in experiments for the measurement of diffusion. Convection leads to overestimation of the diffusion coefficient, since the coherent convective motion and the random diffusion both contribute to the signal attenuation observed.2,3 Even small values of convection velocity (0.05 mm s−1) can lead to significant errors in measured diffusion coefficient values.1
Various strategies may be used to minimize the effects of convection on NMR experiments. As already noted, choice of solvent is critical; at room temperature, chloroform convects 20 times more readily than D2O.1 Sample geometry is also critical; convection in a standard 3 mm OD NMR tube is more than an order of magnitude slower than in a standard 5 mm OD tube.1 In many experiments the effects of mild convection can be refocused using convection-compensated pulse sequences (it should be noted that in many circumstances it is preferable to suppress convection by using a smaller diameter tube rather than to use a compensated pulse sequence, since the latter normally sacrifices half of the available signal by including a second stimulated echo).1,2,6–13 Thermal gradients in probes will also be affected by external sources of heat flow such as shim coils or decoupling, and by the use of air in conventional probes, and water in high gradient probes, to control the probe body (as opposed to sample) temperature. Temperature gradients can if necessary be measured directly, rather than inferred from measurements of convection, by using sensors in situ1 or by imaging the chemical shift of a species with a very temperature-sensitive resonance.3
Convection-compensated pulse sequences12,13 for diffusion measurement can be adapted to measure the rate of convection in a sample; here this approach is used to compare convection behavior across a range of instrumental configurations. The convection-compensated diffusion measurement pulse sequence of Fig. 1 with ΔΔ = 0 divides the diffusion weighting component of the sequence into two equal halves separated by a 180° pulse, thus refocusing the effects of constant-velocity flow while retaining those of diffusion. If the durations of the two halves of the sequence are deliberately unbalanced to an extent ΔΔ, measurements of the extra signal attenuation as a function of ΔΔ allow the form and width of the sample z velocity spectrum to be determined.1 Experimental signal attenuation data as a function of ΔΔ are typically well approximated by a sinc function, corresponding to a rectangular velocity spectrum, so fitting to a sinc function is a simple and effective way to estimate the magnitude of the peak z convection velocity in an NMR sample.
Spectrometer | Probes | Gas flow rates (l h−1) | NMR tube geometries |
---|---|---|---|
Bruker AVANCE III 400 MHz | BBI S1 | 670 | 5 mm; 5 mm with insert; 3 mm |
Bruker AVANCE III 500 MHz | BBO S2 | 400 | 5 mm; 5 mm with insert; 3 mm |
Bruker Ascend AVANCE III 600 MHz | TBI S3 | 400 | 5 mm; 5 mm with insert; 3 mm |
TBO S3 | 400 | 5 mm; 3 mm | |
Bruker Ascend 500 MHz | CPPBBO BB | 400 | 5 mm; 3 mm |
Bruker Ascend AVANCE III 800 MHz | CPTCI | 400 | 5 mm; 3 mm |
The 400 MHz spectrometer was equipped with a BBI probe (double resonance broadband probe with inner coil optimized for 1H observation), and for 500 MHz spectrometers a BBO probe (double resonance broadband probe with the inner coil tunable over the frequency range from 31P to 15N) and a CPPBBO BB probe (“Prodigy” nitrogen-cooled BBO) were used.
For the 600 MHz instrument two different probes were evaluated, TBO (triple resonance broad band probe with the outer coil tuned for 1H observation or decoupling) and TBI (triple resonance broad band probe with the inner coil tuned for 1H observation or decoupling), while the 800 MHz spectrometer was equipped with CPTCI probe (proton-optimized triple resonance NMR (TCI) inverse “cryoprobe”/“cold probe” with helium cooling). Three different NMR tube geometries were studied, standard thin-walled 5 mm and 3 mm OD NMR tubes and a standard 5 mm OD NMR tube with a 2 mm OD insert.
At each temperature a stabilization delay of 15 min was allowed after the nominal temperature was registered by the temperature controller unit, in order to ensure that the sample was fully equilibrated with its surroundings in the probe. Experimental data were processed in TOPSPIN 3.1 and MATLAB, using a set of AU programs and MATLAB macros (see Fig. S2†).
F(ΔΔ) = S0sin(γδGAGvmaxΔΔ)/(γδGAGvmaxΔΔ) | (1) |
The first thing that is immediately apparent from the graphs in Fig. 2 is that all combinations of spectrometer and probe using 5 mm NMR tubes, with or without the 2 mm OD insert, show convection both above and below TQ (Fig. 2a–i). In a previous investigation by Swan et al.1 of a range of older instruments, all of the systems studied showed a similar pattern of variation of convection velocity with temperature, a “V” shaped curve approximately centred on the quiescent temperature TQ, at which the convection velocity was very low. In the more modern instruments investigated here this was not always the case, with some quite different behaviours (Fig. 2b–d, f and i) observed.
The second obvious conclusion is that even in systems showing florid convection in 5 mm tubes, very little convection was observed in 3 mm samples under the experimental conditions used. This reflects both the effect of the confined sample geometry, reducing the rate of convection caused by a given temperature gradient, and the improved freedom of circulation of air around the sample, reducing the magnitudes of the sample temperature gradients. It should however be noted that convection velocities several orders of magnitude smaller than those measured here can be measured if minor changes to the experimental method are made. The most important of these is to use a reporter molecule with a low diffusion coefficient, since diffusional attenuation competes with the signal attenuation caused by convection.
The highest convection velocities recorded (approximately 4 mm s−1) were for the 5 mm tube, in the room temperature BBI S1 probe at 400 MHz (Fig. 2a), at the top end of the temperature range studied; conversely, close to its TQ of about 21 °C this combination showed some of the slowest convection measured for a 5 mm tube. As expected, the nitrogen-cooled (“Prodigy”) and helium-cooled cryoprobes (Fig. 2c and f) showed severe convection in 5 mm tubes over the full range of nominal temperatures studied. No minimum was seen in the curves of vmax versus T, since TQ in such probes is, as noted earlier, typically below 0 °C. Even these probes, however, showed vmax less than 0.1 mm s−1 in the 3 mm NMR tube. In ref. 1, all of the probe/spectrometer combinations tested showed a clear minimum in vmax at some temperature. It is not surprising that such a minimum is not seen for the cold probes of Fig. 2c and f studied here, but it is unexpected that some of the room temperature probes (Fig. 2b and d) failed to show any deep minimum in vmax over the temperature range studied.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra23427e |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |