Journal of Magnetic Resonance Open (Jun 2022)
Dynamic nuclear polarization enhancement of 13C in glucose using electrical discharge induced radicals as polarizing agents
Abstract
The creation of radicals via electrical discharge is a unique approach capable of facilitating dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) in solids without the need to co-dissolve them with exogenous polarization agents. This method has previously been shown to generate high proton polarization in a variety of organic and inorganic solid compounds. In this work, we extend the scope of applicability for these so-called electrical discharge-induced radicals (EDIRs), by showing their use in DNP of 13C nuclei of glucose. We achieved significant NMR signal enhancement in low temperature solid-state DNP experiments. This enhancement was further improved by the use of a frequency modulated microwave pump instead of conventional DNP with single-frequency microwaves. We demonstrated successful dissolution DNP experiments with such hyperpolarized solid glucose, achieving 13C polarization levels of up to ∼0.6% in the resulting solution (∼0.95% at the exit of the polarizer). This is to be compared with the ∼6% polarization levels achieved with a trityl radical mixed with glucose in a frozen aqueous solution using the same DNP setup and experimental conditions. It is concluded that the use of EDIRs can serve as a suitable polarizing approach for metabolic MRI using glucose, avoiding the need to employ diluted solutions and eliminating the filtration stage of the polarizing agents.