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Magnetic-Field-Dependent Electronic Relaxation of Gd3+ in Aqueous Solutions of the Complexes [Gd(H2O)8]3+, [Gd(propane-1,3-diamine-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetate)(H2O)2]−, and [Gd(N,N′-bis[(N-methylcarbamoyl)methyl]-3-azapentane-1,5-diamine-3,N,N′-triacetate)(H2O)] of interest in magnetic-resonance imaging

✍ Scribed by D. Hugh Powell; André E. Merbach; Gabriel González; Ernö Brücher; Károly Micskei; M. Francesca Ottaviani; Klaus Köhler; Alex Von Zelewsky; Oleg Ya. Grinberg; Yakob S. Lebedev


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
German
Weight
823 KB
Volume
76
Category
Article
ISSN
0018-019X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

EPR Spectra have been measured for aqueous solutions of a series of Gd^3+^ complexes at variable temperature and a range of magnetic fields; S‐band (0.14 T), X‐band (0.34 T), Q‐band (1.2 T), and 2‐mm‐band (5.0 T). The major contribution to the observed line widths is magnetic‐field‐dependent and is interpreted as being due to the modulation of the zero‐field splitting produced by distortion of the complexes from perfect symmetry. The transverse and longitudinal relaxation matrices for an ^8^S ion with such an interaction have been calculated using Redfield theory with vector‐coupling methods, and diagonalised numerically to obtain relaxation rates and intensities for the degenerate transitions which contribute to the multiplet. The observed line width, which is inversely proportional to the magnetic field at low temperatures, is best described by the intensity‐weighted mean transverse relaxation time for the four transitions with non‐zero intensity. A least‐squares fit of the data yields the square of the zero‐field splitting tensor, Δ^2^, and a correlation time, τ~v~, with activation energy, E~v~. The physical significance of these parameters and the extent of validity of the theoretical approach are considered. The parameters are used to predict the magnetic‐field dependence of the longitudinal and transverse electronic relaxation times, which are discussed in the context of their relevance to ^1^H‐NMR relaxivity.