Permanent Magnet with Very Low Field Gradient (0.1G/mm) for NMR Spectroscopy
ORAL
Abstract
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) is a powerful analytical tool for obtaining chemical, physical and structural information. To produce the uniform fields required, NMR experiments typically employ large, expensive electromagnets and shimming coils. We have developed a small permanent magnet with an iron yoke that produces a field of $\sim $10 kG with gradient $<$ 0.1G/mm across a 6 mm region for a total field homogeneity of 10 ppm. The system consists of two parallel cylindrical NdFe permanent magnets, 50mm in diameter and 25mm thick, separated by 4mm. The magnets are surrounded by hollow low-carbon steel cylinders with steel caps on each end of the yoke. By adjusting the distance between the yoke caps and the magnet we cancel first-order field strength variations, as shown in simulations. This design is an important innovation for low cost, benchtop NMR systems. *Supported by the NCI MIT-Harvard CCNE.
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Authors
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Ognjen Ilic
Harvard College Student
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David Issadore
Research Assistant in the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard DEAS, Harvard University
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Tom Hunt
Research Assistant in Physics, Harvard Physics, Harvard University
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Robert M. Westervelt
Dept of Physics and Div of Engineering \& Applied Sciences, Harvard Univ, Dept of Physics and Div of Eng and App Sci, Harvard Univ, Harvard University, Mallinckrodt Professor of Applied Physics and of Physics, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, Harvard DEAS, Department of Physics