Abstract:
Cross-polarization (CP) method forms the building block in the design of
multi-dimensional experiments in solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
spectroscopy. CP between spin-1/2 systems is a routine experimental method for
sensitivity enhancement of insensitive spins in solid samples. It involves the transfer
of polarization from the highly abundant spins to the less abundant (insensitive) spins.
CP is mediated through heteronuclear dipolar coupling spin interactions by simultaneous
irradiation of radio-frequency (RF) fields on both spins. The polarization transfer
efficiency is maximized when the RF amplitudes on both nuclei are matched, a condition
that is referred to as the Hartmann-Hahn (HH) energy level matching condition for static
or non-rotating solids. While the mechanism of polarization transfer dynamics during CP
process is well understood through various theoretical frameworks for spin-1/2 systems, a
straightforward extension of the CP experiment involving quadrupolar spins (S > 1/2; 2D,
6Li, 14N, 23Na, 35Cl, etc.) remains elusive. This is primarily due to the magnitude of the
quadrupolar interaction (ranging from a few kHz to MHz), which in general is much higher
than the magnitude of other internal spin interactions and the amplitude of the available
RF fields that result in poor polarization transfer efficiency. This has acted as a roadblock
for the optimal implementation of CP-based experimental methods involving quadrupolar
spins and forms the motivation behind the thesis. From a theoretical perspective, the
presence of multiple energy-levels/transitions and non-commuting set of operators in the
interaction Hamiltonian along with the strength of quadrupolar coupling complicate the
unified description of the spin dynamics. Previously, the theoretical descriptions of the CP
were reported either using the average Hamiltonian theory (AHT) or Floquet theory. In
both approaches the doubly rotating frame Hamiltonian is described in the quadrupolar
interaction frame leading to time-dependent Hamiltonians. Depending on the strength of
quadrupolar interaction, the Hamiltonian in the quadrupolar interaction frame requires
perturbation corrections up to several orders of magnitude. Nevertheless, such descriptions
are of limited utility in describing the CP dynamics across all the quadrupolar coupling
regimes both for single crystal (single crystallite orientation with respect to the applied
Zeeman field) as well as powder samples wherein quadrupolar frequencies are distributed
over a wide range of crystallite orientations. In contrast to the existing theoretical
models, in this thesis we attempt to provide an alternate description of the CP dynamics
described using effective Hamiltonians that are derived from rotation operators based on
the “effective-field” approach. Our effective-field approach results in faster convergence
with improved accuracy in comparison to the existing theoretical frameworks. We have
identified all the CP matching conditions in terms of the single-transition operators and
also highlighted their role in deciphering the mechanism of CP transfer dynamics in
non-rotating solids. We have presented a unified description of the CP dynamics involving
quadrupolar spins through a single mathematical framework that is valid both for single
crystal as well as powder samples across all the quadrupolar coupling regimes. The results
emerging from the analytic theory are verified with numerical simulations over a wide range of experimental parameters. We believe that the analytic theory presented in this
thesis would provide necessary impetus for better understanding of the CP experiments
involving quadrupolar spins and could be a guiding tool for designing new experimental
strategies.