Nuclear Magnetic Dipole—Dipole Relaxation Along the Static and Rotating Magnetic Fields: Application to Gypsum
- 15 April 1966
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 44 (8), 2995-3000
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1727169
Abstract
General formulas are derived for the spin—lattice relaxation times along the static magnetic field (T 1) and the rotating field (T 1 r ) due to magnetic dipole—dipole interactions. First‐order perturbation theory is used in the calculation, and it is assumed that the spin system can be described by a temperature. The correlation functions that appear in these formulas are evaluated for the case of a spin system in which each spin has just two possible equilibrium positions. The results are used to improve Holcomb and Pedersen's calculation of dipole—dipole spin—lattice relaxation due to the motion of spin pairs that execute 180° rotational flips about their perpendicular bisecting axes. Applying the results to gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) yields T 1=43.4 msec at the minimum of the T 1‐vs‐temperature curve for a static‐field strength B 0=2348 G. The experimental value is 47±4 msec. Similarly, the calculated minimum of the T 1 r ‐vs‐temperature curve is T 1 r =1.86 msec for a rotating‐magnetic‐field strength B 1=20.2 G. The experimental value is T 1 r =1.9±0.2 msec.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Proton Spin—Lattice Relaxation in Barium Chlorate MonohydrateThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1964
- Radio-Frequency Bridge for Pulsed Nuclear Magnetic ResonanceReview of Scientific Instruments, 1963
- Interpair Nuclear Magnetic Relaxation in Hydrated CrystalsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1962
- Quantum-Mechanical and Semiclassical Forms of the Density Operator Theory of RelaxationReviews of Modern Physics, 1961
- Nuclear Spin Relaxation in Normal and Superconducting AluminumPhysical Review B, 1959
- Neutron Diffraction Study of Gypsum, CaSO42H2OThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1958
- A General Theory of Magnetic Resonance SaturationProgress of Theoretical Physics, 1958
- Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Saturation and Rotary Saturation in SolidsPhysical Review B, 1955