Publications by authors named "John C Hoefler"

Article Synopsis
  • HRMAS (high-resolution magic angle spinning) NMR spectroscopy improves the resolution of H and C NMR spectra in low-density polyethylene (LDPE) by allowing better visibility of molecular signals through swelling the polymer with solvents.* -
  • The technique reduces anisotropic interactions that typically broaden signals, enabling a clearer understanding of the polymer's swelling behavior and the effectiveness of various solvents.* -
  • HRMAS also demonstrates that the metallocene nickelocene can penetrate and disperse within the LDPE network without altering its structure, which aids future research into catalytic polymer degradation.*
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Trialkyl- and triarylphosphines readily adsorb onto the surface of porous activated carbon (AC) even in the absence of solvents through van der Waals interactions between the lone electron pair and the AC surface. This process has been proven by solid-state NMR techniques. Subsequently, it is demonstrated that the AC enables the fast and selective oxidation of adsorbed phosphines to phosphine oxides at ambient temperature in air.

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Ferrocene and nickelocene do not react with each other in solution; however, the large impact of the paramagnetic component on the ferrocene H NMR signal linewidth and relaxation times has been quantified. Co-crystallization of ferrocene and nickelocene at any ratio from a solvent can be explained with both pure substances crystallizing in the same space group 2/. As a new phenomenon, when a ferrocene single crystal is exposed to polycrystalline nickelocene in the absence of a solvent, the nickelocene migrates into the ferrocene crystal lattice and a mixed crystal is formed that retains its macroscopic shape.

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When grinding nickelocene with silica in the absence of a solvent at room temperature, it adsorbs on the surface within the pores. This has also been demonstrated visually by adsorbing green nickelocene in the pores of a large colorless silica gel specimen. While this dry adsorption and translational mobility of nickelocene within the pores is proven visually, the site-to-site mobility of the nickelocene molecules and their orientation toward the surface are not yet understood.

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Fluorine-19 MRI is increasingly being considered as a tool for biomolecular imaging, but the very poor sensitivity of this technique has limited most applications. Previous studies have long established that increasing the sensitivity of F molecular probes requires increasing the number of fluorine nuclei per probe as well as decreasing their longitudinal relaxation time. The latter is easily achieved by positioning the fluorine atoms in close proximity to a paramagnetic metal ion such as a lanthanide(III).

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