## Abstract An approach is described which allows remote tuning of a probe via a length of transmission line, while retaining nearly ideal efficiency relative to the equivalent locally tuned coil. This preservation of efficiency is accomplished through the principle of βpartial local matching.β In
Remote Tuning of NMR Probe Circuits
β Scribed by Vikram D Kodibagkar; Mark S Conradi
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 85 KB
- Volume
- 144
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1090-7807
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β¦ Synopsis
There are many circumstances in which the probe tuning adjustments cannot be located near the rf NMR coil. These may occur in high-temperature NMR, low-temperature NMR, and in the use of magnets with small diameter access bores. We address here circuitry for connecting a fixed-tuned probe circuit by a transmission line to a remotely located tuning network. In particular, the bandwidth over which the probe may be remotely tuned while keeping the losses in the transmission line acceptably low is considered. The results show that for all resonant circuit geometries (series, parallel, series-parallel), overcoupling of the line to the tuned circuit is key to obtaining a large tuning bandwidth. At equivalent extents of overcoupling, all resonant circuit geometries have nearly equal remote tuning bandwidths. Particularly for the case of low-loss transmission line, the tuning bandwidth can be many times the tuned circuit's bandwidth, f o /Q.
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