scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

Gang Wu

Bio: Gang Wu is an academic researcher from Queen's University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coordination complex. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 1 citations.

Papers
More filters
Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2021
TL;DR: In this article, a review of recent advances in the field of solid-state 17O NMR studies of organic and biological molecules is presented, grouped into the following categories: (1) organic compounds, (2) metal organic frameworks, (3) hydrogen-bonded systems, (4) paramagnetic coordination compounds, peptides and proteins, and (5) dynamic nuclear polarization.
Abstract: This chapter reviews recent advances (published since 2014 in the literature) in the field of solid-state 17O NMR studies of organic and biological molecules. New results are grouped into the following categories: (1) organic compounds, (2) metal organic frameworks, (3) hydrogen-bonded systems, (4) paramagnetic coordination compounds, (5) peptides and proteins, and (6) dynamic nuclear polarization.

3 citations


Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors report synthesis and solid-state 17O NMR characterization of α-d-glucose for which all six oxygen atoms are site-specifically 17O-labeled.
Abstract: We report synthesis and solid-state 17O NMR characterization of α-d-glucose for which all six oxygen atoms are site-specifically 17O-labeled. Solid-state 17O NMR spectra were recorded for α-d-glucose/NaCl/H2O (2/1/1) cocrystals under static and magic-angle-spinning (MAS) conditions at five moderate, high, and ultrahigh magnetic fields: 14.1, 16.4, 18.8, 21.1, and 35.2 T. Complete 17O chemical shift (CS) and quadrupolar coupling (QC) tensors were determined for each of the six oxygen-containing functional groups in α-d-glucose. Paramagnetic Cu(ii) doping was found to significantly shorten the spin–lattice relaxation times for both 1H and 17O nuclei in these compounds. A combination of the paramagnetic Cu(ii) doping, new CPMAS CryoProbe technology, and apodization weighted sampling led to a sensitivity boost for solid-state 17O NMR by a factor of 6–8, which made it possible to acquire high-quality 2D 17O multiple-quantum (MQ) MAS spectra for carbohydrate compounds. The unprecedented spectral resolution offered by 2D 17O MQMAS spectra permitted detection of a key structural difference for a single hydrogen bond between two types of crystallographically distinct α-d-glucose molecules. This work represents the first case where all oxygen-containing functional groups in a carbohydrate molecule are site-specifically 17O-labeled and fully characterized by solid-state 17O NMR. Gauge Including Projector Augmented Waves (GIPAW) DFT calculations were performed to aid 17O and 13C NMR signal assignments for a complex crystal structure where there are six crystallographically distinct α-d-glucose molecules in the asymmetric unit.

10 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, two-and three-dimensional (2D and 3D) 13C-17O heteronuclear correlation solid-state NMR experiments under magic-angle spinning (MAS) conditions were reported.
Abstract: We report two- and three-dimensional (2D and 3D) 13C-17O heteronuclear correlation solid-state NMR experiments under magic-angle spinning (MAS) conditions. These experiments utilize the D-RINEPT (Dipolar-mediated Refocused Insensitive Nuclei Enhanced by Polarization Transfer) scheme with symmetry-based SR412 recoupling blocks for coherence transfer between 13C and 17O nuclei. First, a 2D 17O → 13C correlation experiment was performed for the [1-13C,17O]-Gly/Gly·HCl cocrystal and [U-13C, 1-17O]-α/β-d-glucose samples. Second, a 2D 17O → 13C MQ-D-RINEPT correlation experiment where the indirect dimension incorporates the multiple-quantum MAS (MQMAS) scheme was tested for obtaining isotropic 17O resolution with [U-13C, 1-17O]-α/β-d-glucose. Third, a new 3D 17O → 13C → 13C correlation experiment was demonstrated where 17O → 13C and 13C → 13C correlations are achieved by D-RINEPT and DARR (Dipolar Assisted Rotational Resonance) sequences, respectively (thus termed as a 3D D-RINEPT/DARR OCC experiment). This new 3D 17O NMR experiment is implemented with the aim for site-resolved solid-state 17O NMR studies.

5 citations