S. Grzesiek et A. Bax, INTERFERENCE BETWEEN DIPOLAR AND QUADRUPOLAR INTERACTIONS IN THE SLOWTUMBLING LIMIT - A SOURCE OF LINE SHIFT AND RELAXATION IN H-2-LABELEDCOMPOUNDS, Journal of the American Chemical Society, 116(22), 1994, pp. 10196-10201
Using Redfield's theory of relaxation, it is demonstrated that interfe
rence of the dipolar and quadrupolar interactions between a spin-1/2 a
nd a spin-1 nucleus causes a frequency shift of the spin-1/2 transitio
n coupled to the m = 0 state of the spin-1 nucleus relative to the tra
nsitions coupled to the m=+/-1 states. This frequency shift depends on
the rotational correlation time: it vanishes in the fast tumbling lim
it and reaches a constant in the slow motion limit which coincides wit
h the results for static powder samples. For a C-13 nucleus which is J
-coupled to a directly bonded H-2, this results in an asymmetric tripl
et pattern for molecular motions slower than at the T-1 minimum of the
spin-1 nucleus. The center component of the triplet is shifted downfi
eld by an amount which depends inversely on the static magnetic field
strength. Although rapid longitudinal relaxation of the spin-1 nucleus
collapses both the J multiplet and the interference-induced splitting
, the interference contribution to the line width of the spin-1/2 nucl
eus can only be removed in part by high-power decoupling of the spin-1
nucleus. Experimental results are demonstrated for the C-13 spectrum
of perdeuterated glycerol, where the rotational correlation time is va
ried with temperature. Application of the theory to other nuclei indic
ates that dipolar/quadrupolar interference also results in additional
line broadening for proteins in solution that are enriched in H-2, and
for amide protons attached to N-14.