P. Hautle
Paul Scherrer Institute
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Featured researches published by P. Hautle.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Paul R. Vasos; Riddhiman Sarkar; Puneet Ahuja; Sami Jannin; J. P. Ansermet; J. A. Konter; P. Hautle; B. van den Brandt; Geoffrey Bodenhausen
Major breakthroughs have recently been reported that can help overcome two inherent drawbacks of NMR: the lack of sensitivity and the limited memory of longitudinal magnetization. Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) couples nuclear spins to the large reservoir of electrons, thus making it possible to detect dilute endogenous substances in magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We have designed a method to preserve enhanced (“hyperpolarized”) magnetization by conversion into long-lived states (LLS). It is shown that these enhanced long-lived states can be generated for proton spins, which afford sensitive detection. Even in complex molecules such as peptides, long-lived proton states can be sustained effectively over time intervals on the order of tens of seconds, thus allowing hyperpolarized substrates to reach target areas and affording access to slow metabolic pathways. The natural abundance carbon-13 polarization has been enhanced ex situ by almost four orders of magnitude in the dipeptide Ala-Gly. The sample was transferred by the dissolution process to a high-resolution magnet where the carbon-13 polarization was converted into a long-lived state associated with a pair of protons. In Ala-Gly, the lifetime TLLS associated with the two nonequivalent Hα glycine protons, sustained by suitable radio-frequency irradiation, was found to be seven times longer than their spin-lattice relaxation time constant (TLLS/T1 = 7). At desired intervals, small fractions of the populations of long-lived states were converted into observable magnetization. This opens the way to observing slow chemical reactions and slow transport phenomena such as diffusion by enhanced magnetic resonance.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008
Sami Jannin; F. Kurdzesau; J. A. Konter; P. Hautle; B. van den Brandt; J. J. van der Klink
Apart from their very classical use to build polarized targets for particle physics, the methods of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) have more recently found application for sensitivity enhancement in high-resolution NMR, both in the solid and in the liquid state. It is often thought that the possible signal enhancement in such applications deteriorates when the DNP is performed at higher fields. We show that for a dissolution-DNP method that uses conventional (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine 1-oxyl) radicals as the paramagnetic agent, this is not the case for fields up to 5 T.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2008
J. Rentsch; F. Kurdzesau; Sami Jannin; Kai Uffmann; R.B. van Heeswijk; P. Hautle; J. A. Konter; B. van den Brandt; J. J. van der Klink
New low-temperature inserts compatible with an existing hyperpolarizer were developed to dynamically polarize nuclei in large samples. The performance of the system was tested on 8 ml glassy frozen solutions containing 13C-labeled molecules and doped with nitroxyl free radicals. The obtained 13C low-temperature polarization was comparable to the one measured on 20 times smaller sample volume with only 3-4 times higher microwave power. By using a dissolution insert that fits to the new design, it was possible to obtain about 120 ml of room-temperature hyperpolarized solution. The polarization as well as the molecule concentration was comparable to the values obtained in standard size hyperpolarized samples. Such large samples are interesting for future studies on larger animals and possibly for potential clinical applications.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1995
B. van den Brandt; E.I. Bunyatova; P. Hautle; J. A. Konter; S. Mango
Abstract First results of DNP at 2.5 T and below 0.3 K in thin polymer foils and tubes with the chemical composition (CX 2 ) n , [ X = 1 H, 2 D, 19 F ], doped with TEMPO, are presented. Appreciable polarization of protons, deuterons, and 19 F-nuclei were obtained. The samples can be handled at room temperature for several hours, and therefore they are suitable for new applications.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000
B. van den Brandt; E.I. Bunyatova; P. Hautle; J. A. Konter; S. Mango
Abstract The hydrogen nuclei in an organic scintillator have been polarized to more than 80% and the deuterons in its fully deuterated version to 24%. The scintillator, doped with TEMPO, has been polarized dynamically in a field of 2.5 T in a vertical dilution refrigerator in which a plastic lightguide transports the scintillation light from the sample in the mixing chamber to a photomultiplier outside the cryostat. Sizeable solid samples with acceptable optical properties and light output have been prepared and successfully operated as “live” polarized targets in nuclear physics experiments.
Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2007
B. van den Brandt; H. Glattli; P. Hautle; Joachim Kohlbrecher; J. A. Konter; Andreas Michels; Heinrich Stuhrmann; O. Zimmer
Low-resolution small-angle neutron scattering measurements can benefit from polarized protons to generate scattering contrast profiles. In a recently developed technique, time-resolved polarized SANS tries to make use of spatial polarization gradients created around paramagnetic centres at the onset of dynamic nuclear polarization. The time constants which describe the build-up of polarization around the paramagnetic centre and the subsequent diffusion of polarization in the solvent were determined by analysing the temporal evolution of the nuclear polarization. The possible use and the limitations of this technique as a spectroscopic tool are discussed.
Physics Letters B | 1995
R. Bilger; H. Clement; A. Denig; K Föhl; P. Hautle; W. Kluge; J. A. Konter; G Kurz; S. Mango; D Schapler; F Schönleber; U Siodlaczek; B. van den Brandt; G.J. Wagner; R. Wieser
Abstract The KARMEN collaboration has reported the possible observation of a hitherto unknown neutral and weakly interacting particle x, which is produced in the decay π+ → μ+x with a mass mx = 33.9 MeV. We have searched for this hypothetical decay branch by studying muons from pion decay in flight with the LEPS spectrometer at the πE3 channel at PSI and find branching ratios BR(π − → μ − x ) −7 and BR(π+ → μ+x)
Molecular Physics | 2014
T.R. Eichhorn; B. van den Brandt; P. Hautle; A. Henstra; W.Th. Wenckebach
In dynamic nuclear polarisation (DNP), also called hyperpolarisation, a small amount of unpaired electron spins is added to the sample containing the nuclear spins, and the polarisation of these unpaired electron spins is transferred to the nuclear spins by means of a microwave field. Traditional DNP polarises the electron spin of stable paramagnetic centres by cooling down to low temperature and applying a strong magnetic field. Then weak continuous wave microwave fields are used to induce the polarisation transfer. Complicated cryogenic equipment and strong magnets can be avoided using short-lived photo-excited triplet states that are strongly aligned in the optical excitation process. However, a much faster transfer of the electron spin polarisation is needed and pulsed DNP methods like nuclear orientation via electron spin locking (NOVEL) and the integrated solid effect (ISE) are used. To describe the polarisation transfer with the strong microwave fields in NOVEL and ISE, the usual perturbation methods cannot be used anymore. In the previous paper, we presented a theoretical approach to calculate the polarisation transfer in ISE. In the present paper, the theory is applied to the system naphthalene-h8 doped with pentacene-d14 yielding the photo-excited triplet states and compared with experimental results.
Physics Letters B | 2004
R. Meier; M. Cröni; R. Bilger; B. van den Brandt; J. Breitschopf; H. Clement; H. Denz; A. Erhardt; K. Föhl; E. Friedman; J. Gräter; P. Hautle; G.J. Hofman; J. A. Konter; S. Mango; J. Pätzold; M.M. Pavan; G.J. Wagner; F. von Wrochem
Analyzing powers of pion-proton elastic scattering have been measured at PSI with the Low Energy Pion Spectrometer LEPS as well as a novel polarized scintillator target. Angular distributions between 40 and 120 deg (c.m.) were taken at 45.2, 51.2, 57.2, 68.5, 77.2, and 87.2 MeV incoming pion kinetic energy for � + p scattering,
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2013
T.R. Eichhorn; M. Haag; B. van den Brandt; P. Hautle; W.Th. Wenckebach; Sami Jannin; J. J. van der Klink
In standard Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) electron spins are polarized at low temperatures in a strong magnetic field and this polarization is transferred to the nuclear spins by means of a microwave field. To obtain high nuclear polarizations cryogenic equipment reaching temperatures of 1 K or below and superconducting magnets delivering several Tesla are required. This equipment strongly limits applications in nuclear and particle physics where beams of particles interact with the polarized nuclei, as well as in neutron scattering science. The problem can be solved using short-lived optically excited triplet states delivering the electron spin. The spin is polarized in the optical excitation process and both the cryogenic equipment and magnet can be simplified significantly. A versatile apparatus is described that allows to perform pulsed dynamic nuclear polarization experiments at X-band using short-lived optically excited triplet sates. The efficient (4)He flow cryostat that cools the sample to temperatures between 4 K and 300 K has an optical access with a coupling stage for a fiber transporting the light from a dedicated laser system. It is further designed to be operated on a neutron beam. A combined pulse ESR/DNP spectrometer has been developed to observe and characterize the triplet states and to perform pulse DNP experiments. The ESR probe is based on a dielectric ring resonator of 7 mm inner diameter that can accommodate cubic samples of 5mm length needed for neutron experiments. NMR measurements can be performed during DNP with a coil integrated in the cavity. With the presented apparatus a proton polarization of 0.5 has been achieved at 0.3 T.