Quantification of water transport in plants with NMR imaging

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Abstract

A new nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (NMRi) method is described to calculate the characteristics of water transport in plant stems. Here, dynamic NMRi is used as a non-invasive technique to record the distribution of displacements of protons for each pixel in the NMR image. Using the NMR-signal of the stationary water in a reference tube for calibration, the following characteristics can be calculated per pixel without advance knowledge of the flow-profile in that pixel: the amount of stationary water, the amount of flowing water, the cross-sectional area of flow, the average linear flow velocity of the flowing water, and the volume flow. The accuracy of the method is demonstrated with a stem segment of a chrysanthemum flower by comparing the volume flow, measured with NMR, with the actual volumetric uptake, measured with a balance. NMR measurements corresponded to the balance uptake measurements with arms error of 0.11 mg s-1 in a range of 0 to 1.8 mg s-1. Local changes in flow characteristics of individual voxels of a sample (e.g. intact plant) can be studied as a function of time and of any conceivable changes the sample experiences on a time-scale, longer than the measurement time of a complete set of pixel-propagators (17 min).

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Scheenen, T. W. J., Van Dusschoten, D., De Jager, P. A., & Van As, H. (2000). Quantification of water transport in plants with NMR imaging. Journal of Experimental Botany, 51(351), 1751–1759. https://doi.org/10.1093/jexbot/51.351.1751

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