Radio-frequency Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation (RASER) is a promising tool to study nonlinear phenomena or measure NMR parameters with unprecedented precision. Magnetic fields, J-couplings, and chemical shifts can be recorded over long periods of time without the need for radiofrequency excitation and signal averaging. One key feature of RASER NMR spectroscopy is the improvement in precision, which grows with the measurement time Tm3/2 , unlike conventional NMR spectroscopy, where the precision increases with Tm1/2 . However, when detecting NMR signals over minutes to hours, using available NMR magnets (ppb homogeneity), the achieved frequency resolution will eventually be limited by magnetic field fluctuations. Here, we demonstrate that full compensation is possible even for open low-field electromagnets, where magnetic field fluctuations are intrinsically present (in the ppm regime). A prerequisite for compensation is that the spectrum contains at least one isolated RASER line to be used as a reference, and the sample experiences exclusively common magnetic field fluctuations, that is, ones that are equal over the entire sample volume. We discuss the current limits of precision for RASER NMR measurements for two different cases: The single-compartment RASER involving J-coupled modes, and the two-compartment RASER involving chemically shifted species. In the first case, the limit of measurable difference approaches the Cramér-Rao lower bound (CRLB), achieving a measurement precision σf< 10 - 4 Hz. In the second case, the measured chemical shift separation is plagued by independently fluctuating distant dipolar fields (DDF). The measured independent field fluctuation between the two chambers is in the order of tens of mHz. In both cases, new limits of precision are achieved, which paves the way for sub-mHz detection of NMR parameters, rotational rates, and non-linear phenomena such as chaos and synchrony.
CITATION STYLE
Fleischer, S., Lehmkuhl, S., Lohmann, L., & Appelt, S. (2023). Approaching the Ultimate Limit in Measurement Precision with RASER NMR. Applied Magnetic Resonance, 54(11–12), 1241–1270. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00723-023-01597-w
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