Recoupled polarization-transfer methods for solid-state (1)H--(13)C heteronuclear correlation in the limit of fast MAS

J Magn Reson. 2001 Feb;148(2):398-418. doi: 10.1006/jmre.2000.2259.

Abstract

An in-depth account of the effects of homonuclear couplings and multiple heteronuclear couplings is given for a recently published technique for (1)H--(13)C dipolar correlation in solids under very fast MAS, where the heteronuclear dipolar coupling is recoupled by means of REDOR pi-pulse trains. The method bears similarities to well-known solution-state NMR techniques, which form the framework of a heteronuclear multiple-quantum experiment. The so-called recoupled polarization-transfer (REPT) technique is versatile in that rotor-synchronized (1)H--(13)C shift correlation spectra can be recorded. In addition, weak heteronuclear dipolar coupling constants can be extracted by means of spinning sideband analysis in the indirect dimension of the experiment. These sidebands are generated by rotor encoding of the reconversion Hamiltonian. We present generalized variants of the initially described heteronuclear multiple-quantum correlation (HMQC) experiment, which are better suited for certain applications. Using these techniques, measurements on model compounds with (13)C in natural abundance, as well as simulations, confirm the very weak effect of (1)H--(1)H homonuclear couplings on the spectra recorded with spinning frequencies of 25--30 kHz. The effect of remote heteronuclear couplings on the spinning-sideband patterns of CH(n) groups is discussed, and (13)C spectral editing of rigid organic solids is shown to be practicable with these techniques.