| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5406843 | Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2009 | 5 Pages | 
Abstract
												Scalar couplings of the form JI1 · I2 between nuclei impart valuable information about molecular structure to nuclear magnetic-resonance spectra. Here we demonstrate direct detection of J-spectra due to both heteronuclear and homonuclear J-coupling in a zero-field environment where the Zeeman interaction is completely absent. We show that characteristic functional groups exhibit distinct spectra with straightforward interpretation for chemical identification. Detection is performed with a microfabricated optical atomic magnetometer, providing high sensitivity to samples of microliter volumes. We obtain 0.1 Hz linewidths and measure scalar-coupling parameters with 4-mHz statistical uncertainty. We anticipate that the technique described here will provide a new modality for high-precision “J spectroscopy” using small samples on microchip devices for multiplexed screening, assaying, and sample identification in chemistry and biomedicine.
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											Authors
												M.P. Ledbetter, C.W. Crawford, A. Pines, D.E. Wemmer, S. Knappe, J. Kitching, D. Budker, 
											