In recent years, there has been increasing interest in applying Fast Field Cycling (FFC) NMR relaxometry to material science, supported by a growing body of scientific literature. FFC-NMR is a non-destructive and highly versatile technique… Read more
In the last decade, there has been a growing interest in applying the Fast Field Cycling (FFC) NMR method to food science and several scientific papers have been published. FFC is a non-destructive technique which… Read more
FFC NMR relaxometry can offer a range of solutions in healthcare, pharmaceutical, cosmetic and preclinical and clinical research applications, in particular in biomedical detection with clinical MR imaging contrast agents. Please contact Stelar if you… Read more
FFC NMR relaxometry is mostly used for proton-based analyses (1H nucleus), as detailed in the other applications pages. It is however possible to study dispersion curves or simpler decay curves of T1 for other nuclei, such as deuterium (2H), fluorine (19F), lithium (7Li), compounds enriched in carbon-13 (13C) and more.
Environmental sustainability is the modern scientific-field key word. For this reason, new and environmentally sustainable analytical techniques have been (and still are) produced. The main focus of these techniques is not only the use of… Read more
In addition to conventional relaxation dispersion studies, Fast Field Cycling NMR extends its capabilities to advanced analytical approaches that further broaden its range of applications. Among these, Overhauser Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) and FFC-based diffusion… Read more