Accessing Long-lived Nuclear Spin States in Chemically Equivalent Spin Systems: Theory, Simulation, Experiment and Implication for Hyperpolarization

dc.contributor.advisor

Warren, Warren S

dc.contributor.author

Feng, Yesu

dc.date.accessioned

2014-08-27T15:22:00Z

dc.date.available

2015-02-23T05:30:05Z

dc.date.issued

2014

dc.department

Chemistry

dc.description.abstract

Recent work has shown that hyperpolarized magnetic resonance spectroscopy (HP-MRS) can trace in vivo metabolism of biomolecules and is therefore extremely promising for diagnostic imaging. The most severe challenge this technique faces is the short signal lifetime for hyperpolarization, which is dictated by the spin-lattice (T1) relaxation. In this thesis we show with theory, simulation and experiment that the long-lived nuclear spin states in chemically equivalent or near equivalent spin systems offer a solution to this problem. Spin polarization that has lifetime much longer than T1 (up to 70-fold) has been demonstrated with pulse sequence techniques that are compatible with clinical imaging settings. Multiple classes of molecules have been demonstrated to sustain such long-lived hyperpolarization.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/9085

dc.subject

Chemistry

dc.subject

Hyperpolarization

dc.subject

long-lived state

dc.subject

MRI

dc.subject

NMR

dc.title

Accessing Long-lived Nuclear Spin States in Chemically Equivalent Spin Systems: Theory, Simulation, Experiment and Implication for Hyperpolarization

dc.type

Dissertation

duke.embargo.months

6

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Feng_duke_0066D_12596.pdf
Size:
2.07 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

Collections