Double-rotation (DOR) NMR spectroscopy: Progress and perspectives

Solid State Nucl Magn Reson. 2024 Apr:130:101923. doi: 10.1016/j.ssnmr.2024.101923. Epub 2024 Mar 6.

Abstract

Double-rotation (DOR) solid-state NMR spectroscopy is a high-resolution technique developed in the late 1980s. Although multiple-quantum magic-angle spinning (MQMAS) became the most widely used high-resolution method for half-integer spin quadrupoles after 1995, development and application of DOR NMR to a variety of chemical and materials science problems has endured. This Trend article recapitulates the development of DOR NMR, discusses various applications, and describes possible future directions. The main technical limitations specific to DOR NMR are simply related to the size of the double rotor system. The relatively large outer rotor (and thus coil) used for most applications over the past 35 years translates into relatively low rotor spinning frequencies, a low filling factor, and weak radiofrequency powers available for excitation and for proton decoupling. Ongoing developments in NMR instrumentation, including ever-shrinking MAS rotors and spherical NMR rotors, could solve many of these problems and may augur a renaissance for DOR NMR.

Keywords: Double-rotation NMR; High resolution; Quadrupolar nuclei; Rotor; Solid-state NMR.

Publication types

  • Review