Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Overview
NMR is the most versatile spectroscopic tool in science today. The Mag Lab's NMR program supports state-of-the-art facilities and unique capabilities that are available to users pursuing research in solution and solid state NMR, MRI and in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Wiring from the 900 MHz magnet. Its 105 mm bore makes this the world's largest NMR magnet.
This program is a joint effort between Mag Lab sites in Tallahassee and Gainesville through collaboration with the Advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Spectroscopy (AMRIS) program in the McKnight Brain Institute at the University of Florida. The program has a mission to develop technology, methodology and applications at the highest magnetic fields through both in-house and external user activities. This is a very broad mission in solution and solid-state NMR spectroscopy as well as imaging and diffusion measurements. Both locations have experienced staff, including research faculty, engineers, and technicians spanning these disciplines who are available to facilitate user activities on a wide range of unique instrumentation and to develop novel experiments and new instrumentation.
The Magnet Lab also has a Condensed Matter NMR program that investigates, among other things, field-driven phenomena and phase transitions.
For more information visit the NMR Program Web site, or contact NMR program director Tim Cross at cross@magnet.fsu.edu or (850) 644-0917.