## FIG. 4. Shown are 180Β°inversion pulses corresponding to s Ο 0 (solid line), s Ο 0.5 (dashed line), and s Ο 1.0 (dot-dashed line). All three waveforms give precisely the same inversion profile.
Adjustable, Broadband, Selective Excitation with Uniform Phase
β Scribed by Kristin E. Cano; Mari A. Smith; A.J. Shaka
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 191 KB
- Volume
- 155
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1090-7807
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
An advance in the problem of achieving broadband, selective, and uniform-phase excitation in NMR spectroscopy of liquids is outlined. Broadband means that, neglecting relaxation, any frequency bandwidth may be excited even when the available radiofrequency (RF) field strength is strictly limited. Selective means that sharp transition edges can be created between pure-phase excitation and no excitation at all. Uniform phase means that, neglecting spinspin coupling, all resonance lines have nearly the same phase. Conventional uniform-phase excitation pulses (e.g., E-BURP), mostly based on amplitude modulation of the RF field, are not broadband: they have an achievable bandwidth that is strictly limited by the peak power available. Other compensated pulses based on adiabatic half-passage, like BIR-4, are not selective. By contrast, inversion pulses based on adiabatic fast passage can be broadband (and selective) in the sense above. The advance outlined is a way to reformulate these frequency modulated (FM) pulses for excitation, rather than just inversion.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Chemical shift imaging benefits from signalβtoβnoise ratio (SNR) and chemical shift dispersion increases at stronger main field such as 7 Tesla, but the associated shorter radiofrequency (RF) wavelengths encountered require B mitigation over both the spatial field of view (FOV) and a sp