• Report on Benchtop NMR Spectrometer Use for Research and Teaching at Durham University

Mass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy

Report on Benchtop NMR Spectrometer Use for Research and Teaching at Durham University

Dr Alan Kenwright is Reader in Spectroscopy and Manager of the solution-state NMR facility in the Chemistry Department at Durham University. His personal research is focussed on developing and using NMR techniques to solve a range of chemical problems.

In choosing to use Magritek's Spinsolve, Dr Kenwright anticipates it will allow the extension of his work in various areas in ways that he could not otherwise. Spinsolve is not a replacement for the existing NMR equipment but is seen rather as a complement to these facilities extending the scope of what the group can do. Dr Kenwright has plans to use the equipment initially in three areas. He described these:

“The first application is in looking at lanthanide complexes of the sort used as contrast agents for MRI. The details of the NMR characteristics of such agents are still not completely understood, which makes designing new, ‘functional contrast agents’ a challenge. By ‘functional contrast agent’, I mean an agent that would respond selectively to some marker in the body, possibly highlighting the site of an abnormality. One key to this is to understand the behaviour of the agents as a function of the strength of the applied magnetic field, so being able to do measurements in the relatively low magnetic field (43 MHz) used by Magritek's Spinsolve is a big advantage for us, particularly as the field it uses it not very different to the field actually used in many hospital MRI scanners. These measurements using the Spinsolve are just starting to appear in the literature.”

“The second is looking at real time reaction monitoring using flow-through NMR techniques. This is not a new idea, but has previously been limited by the requirement to bring the reaction close to a large (static) and expensive NMR spectrometer. The small size of the Spinsolve means that we can mount it on a trolley with an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) and move it around the department. Working with partners in industry, we are evaluating this in parallel with small footprint Mass Spectrometry to see what relevance this approach might have not just in the University laboratory but also in pilot plants and possibly even at production scale.”

“Thirdly, we are planning to use the equipment in our first year teaching labs to allow students to go through the whole process of preparing and running an NMR spectrum for themselves. As many process become more automated, the opportunities for students to get involved ‘hands-on’ become less, so exposing them to a robust, simple instrument they can use themselves is a big plus.”


Digital Edition

Lab Asia 31.6 Dec 2024

December 2024

Chromatography Articles - Sustainable chromatography: Embracing software for greener methods Mass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy Articles - Solving industry challenges for phosphorus containi...

View all digital editions

Events

Smart Factory Expo 2025

Jan 22 2025 Tokyo, Japan

Instrumentation Live

Jan 22 2025 Birmingham, UK

SLAS 2025

Jan 25 2025 San Diego, CA, USA

Arab Health

Jan 27 2025 Dubai, UAE

Nano Tech 2025

Jan 29 2025 Tokyo, Japan

View all events