Setup
Now that you have your sample ready, that meets the sample requirements and is in an NMR tube, you can insert it in the Bruker spinner and adjust the depth using the sample depth gauge as depicted below:
Source: Bruker - BSMS manual
In the present case, d should be at least 15 mm, ideally 20 mm. This corresponds to about 500 µl in a 5 mm tube. Do not hesitate to confirm with the NMR manager that your tube is properly positioned.
Never insert a sample tube without a spinner in the NMR magnet! The tube will break and cause expensive magnet bore and probe clean up!
Sample insertion
There is usually a dust cap on top of the sample bore of the magnet in order to prevent dust and debris from entering the bore. In order to insert your sample along with its spinner, you first need to remove it and put it aside, on the top of the magnet.
Then, in TopSpin, on the control computer, enter the command ej
to
activate the air lift and if it is the case, eject the sample already
present in the magnet. Climb up the stairs and replace the previous
sample in the bore (red touret) with yours. Make sure the air lift is
activate so that your sample does not fall in the bore. The pneumatic
system should be powerful enough to maintain your sample on top.
Come back to the control computer and type ij
in TopSpin to inject
your sample in the bore. Your sample will then slowly lower down into
the core of the magnet and in the NMR
probe.
Setting the temperature
The first thing to do following the insertion of your sample in the
magnet, is to set the temperature, as most chemical shifts are
temperature dependent, including the lock signal. Use the command edte
to open the temperature window in TopSpin. The current temperature is
written in the center of the window (25.0 °C), and is labeled as
corrected (Corr.
)
The temperature set on the computer is slightly different than the actual temperature in the magnet.
Lock
The lock is a separate NMR spectrometer within the spectrometer which is specific to deuterium. In order to produce a high resolution NMR spectrum of a sample, it is key to keep a constant magnetic field strength over the duration of the experiment. This is achieved by "locking" the spectrometer to the frequency of deuterium, ie by centering the deuterium signal to a predefined frequency. This signal is constantly monitored and compensations for the external magnetic field (B~0~) drift are made in order to keep the resonance frequency constant.
Modern NMR magnets do not drift much beyond 4 to 5 Hz per hour. Yet, this would be sufficient to lose spectral resolution (eg J-coupling) over a 1 hour experiment. As a reference, below are the current (as of February 2020) magnet drifts for our NMR spectrometers.
Magnet | Drift, Hz/h |
---|---|
500 MHz | 2.4 |
600 MHz | 0.2 |
700 MHz | 0.2 |