Homogeneous line-widths that arise from transverse relaxation tend to be masked by B-0 field inhomogeneity and by multiplets due to homonuclearf-couplings. Besides well-known spin-locking sequences that lead to signals that decay with a rate R-1p without any modulations, alternative experiments allow one to determine the transverse relaxation rates R-2 in systems with scalar-coupled spins. We evaluate three recent strategies by experiment and simulation: (i) moderate-amplitude SITCOM-CPMG sequences (Dittmer and Bodenhausen, 2006 [2]), (ii) multiple-quantum filtered (MQF) sequences (Barrere et al., 2011 [4]) and (iii) PROJECT sequences (Aguilar et al., 2012 [5]). Experiments where the J-evolution is suppressed by spin-locking measure the pure relaxation rate R2(15) of an in-phase component. Experiments based J-refocusing yield a mixture of in-phase rates R-2(I-x) and antiphase rates R-2(2I(y)S(z)), where the latter are usually faster than the former. Moderate-amplitude SITCOM-CPMG and PROJECT methods can be applied to systems with many coupled spins, but applications of MQF sequences are limited to two-spin systems since modulations in larger systems can only partly be suppressed. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
László Forró, Ferenc Simon, Sándor Kollarics, Bence Gábor Márkus
Jann Hinnerk Ungerer, Pasquale Scarlino