nuclear magnetic resonance analysis

  • 1Nuclear magnetic resonance — This article is about the physical phenomenon. For its use as a method in spectroscopy, see Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. NMR redirects here. For other uses, see NMR (disambiguation). First 1 GHz NMR Spectrometer (1000 MHz,… …

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  • 2Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of proteins — (usually abbreviated protein NMR) is a field of structural biology in which NMR spectroscopy is used to obtain information about the structure and dynamics of proteins. The field was pioneered by Richard R. Ernst and Kurt Wüthrich[1], among… …

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  • 3nuclear magnetic resonance — n 1) the magnetic resonance of an atomic nucleus 2) chemical analysis that uses nuclear magnetic resonance esp. to study molecular structure abbr. NMR see MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING * * * a measure, by means of applying an external magnetic field …

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  • 4Nuclear magnetic resonance crystallography — (NMR crystallography) is a method which utilizes primarily NMR spectroscopy to determine the structure of solid materials on the atomic scale. Thus, solid state NMR spectroscopy would be used primarily, possibly supplemented by quantum chemistry… …

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  • 5Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy — A 900MHz NMR instrument with a 21.2 T magnet at HWB NMR, Birmingham, UK Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, most commonly known as NMR spectroscopy, is a research technique that exploits the magnetic properties of certain atomic nuclei… …

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  • 6Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of carbohydrates — Carbohydrate NMR Spectroscopy is the application of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to structural and conformational analysis of carbohydrates. This tool allows the carbohydrate chemist to determine the structure of monosaccharides… …

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  • 7nuclear magnetic resonance — noun Date: 1942 the magnetic resonance of an atomic nucleus; also chemical analysis that uses such resonance especially to study molecular structure …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 8Protein nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy — (usually abbreviated protein NMR) is a field of structural biology in which NMR spectroscopy is used to obtain information about the structure and dynamics of proteins. The field was pioneered by, among others, Kurt Wüthrich, who shared the Nobel …

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  • 9Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance — (NMR) spectroscopy, characterized by the presence of anisotropic (directionally dependent) interactions.IntroductionBasic conceptsA spin interacts with a magnetic or an electric field. Spatial proximity and/or a chemical bond between two atoms… …

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  • 10Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy — (2D NMR) is a set of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) methods which give data plotted in a space defined by two frequency axes rather than one. Types of 2D NMR include correlation spectroscopy (COSY), J spectroscopy, exchange… …

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