Welcome to Nanalysis’ benchtop NMR Blog
We love benchtop NMR! In this blog section, you will find all things benchtop NMR. Please contact us if you would like to discuss about your project.
Category
NMR Topics
- 100 MHz NMR
- 11B NMR
- 129Xe NMR
- 13C NMR
- 19F NMR
- 19F NMR Spectroscopy
- 1H NMR
- 207Pb NMR
- 31P NMR
- 3H NMR
- 60 MHz NMR
- APT
- Agrochemicals
- Applications
- Batteries
- Biochemistry
- Biopolymers
- Botanicals
- COSY
- CPMG
- Caffeine Content
- Cannabis
- Chemical Analysis
- Cosmetics
- DEPT
- Dithiazine
- Drug Analysis
- Drug Discovery
- Dyes
- Edible Oils
- Educational NMR
- Energy
- Enzyme
- Exchangeable Protons
- Exchangeable protons
- Flavor and Fragrances
- Flow NMR
- Fluorine-19 NMR
- Food Science
- Food and Beverage
- Forensics
- Forestry
- HETCOR
- HMBC
- HSQC
- Hands-on Learning
- Heteronuclear J-coupling
- Hydrogen sulfide
- Hydroxyl value
- Hyphenated NMR
Settle in and get COSY!
This blog goes into detail of the COSY experiment, a useful 2D homonuclear experiment.
Isolating Isoamyl acetate
In this blog, we analyze both the aqueous and organic layers during the separation step in the synthesis of Isoamyl Acetate to determine whether the product is in a different layer than the starting reagents.
Literature with Benchtop NMR
Are you looking for literature using benchtop NMR? We have compiled a list of reading materials here.
Why 100 MHz Benchtop NMR?
While low-field NMR has extremely favourable accessibility and affordable characteristics, the most common question that we get asked about our family of benchtop NMR spectrometers is with respect to any trade-offs that come from moving to lower-field.
Limits that Matter: How LoD and LoQ Shape Analytical Results
The Limit of Detection (LoD) and Limit of Quantification (LoQ) are analytical benchmarks that define the practical boundaries for identifying and measuring a specific analyte within a given matrix, under particular experimental conditions.
How does the lock work?
Magnets used to manufacture low-field and high-field NMR spectrometers are not perfect and the magnetic field that they generate is prone to drift for a variety of reasons. However, during an NMR experiment it is important to keep the magnetic field as stable as possible to prevent the signals from drifting. This is taken care of by the lock system.
The CPMG filter NMR experiment! What is it? When and why should we use it?
In this blog, we describe the T2-filter experiment, including its description and application.
Origin of Chemical Shifts
It is common to mention the frequency of an NMR instrument instead of its field. When someone says: I have in my laboratory a 100 MHz instrument, it means that a spectrometer where the protons precess with a frequency of 100 MHz (Lamour frequency) is available in the lab…
Gradient-based 2D NMR experiments
In this blog, we discuss why gradient-based 2D NMR experiments enhance both efficiency and data quality and become the preferred choice for many applications.
NMR pulse sequences designed graphically? Umm, YES, please!
In this blog, we introduce our value-added software module, Experiment Designer. A powerful tool which allows advanced NMR users to code NMR pulse sequences through an intuitive graphical interface.