Abstract

Three multiple-pulse spin-echo experiments that have been used to enhance the sensitivity of broad powder patterns obtained from NMR spectra of spin-1/2 and half-integer quadrupolar nuclei in polycrystalline solids are examined. Specifically, the Carr-Purcell Meiboom-Gill (CPMG), the Mansfield-Waugh (MW-4), and a modified version of the CPMG experiment (modified-CPMG) are described and compared. Use of these pulse sequences results in transforming the broad powder lineshapes into a series of narrow spikelets whose overall envelope mimics that obtained from the normal Hahn-echo experiment. The CPMG and modified-CPMG methods can result in a considerable saving in experiment time and are particularly powerful in studying the central transition of half-integer spin quadrupolar nuclei. Artifacts generated by the MW-4 sequence or caused by imperfections in the π pulses in the CPMG sequences are explained using a product operator analysis. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Concepts Magn Reson Part A 26A: 62–77, 2005

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