Evaluation of the quantitative reliability of the 13C CP/MAS technique for the analysis of coals and related materials
β Scribed by Robert L. Dudley; Colin A. Fyfe
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 868 KB
- Volume
- 61
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0016-2361
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β¦ Synopsis
The percentages of aromatic carbon in three representative solid coal samples and one pitch sample have been determined by three different n.m.r. techniques. The first two involve the use of cross polarization/magic-anglespinning (CP/MAS) and in one case, the magnetization curves werefitted to a theoretical expression and the fit parameters used to calculate the percentage of aromatic carbon. In the second case, the percentage of aromatic carbons was obtained from a choice of contact time in the crosspolarization pulse sequence which gave maximum signal intensity. The third technique used MAS together with a simple 90"carbon pulse sequence with a 5 x T, (for the carbon-l 3 nuclei) recycle time and was assumed to give the absolute quantitative values. It was found that the results obtained using cross-polarization techniques could be substantially different from those obtained using 90" pulses and that caution must be exercised in the application of these techniques to the quantitative analysis of solid carbonaceous fuels.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
than the initial fraction, which contains more aliphatic and hydroaromatic material. Proton n.m.r. data are consistent with these aromaticity results. ## Conclusions The initial results reported here from tests in the FDU using both coal-derived distillate and residuum show that the unit is basic
956, Buenos Aires (1 113), Argentina I3C CP/MAS NMR spectra of nitrogen-containing compounds often show complex signals when recorded at low field strengths. This effect is due to the 13C, '"N residual dipolar coupling which is not averaged to zero by magic-angle spinning. Solidstate 13C NMR spectra
High-field, high-resolution 13C cross-polarization and magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance experiments are reported on Yallourn brown coal and on products obtained from the coal by heat treatment. The spectral resolution at 75 MHz is much improved over that previously reported for lower