Spin Hyperpolarization in Modern Magnetic Resonance

James Eills, Dmitry Budker, Silvia Cavagnero, Eduard Y. Chekmenev, Stuart J. Elliott, Sami Jannin, Anne Lesage, Jörg Matysik, Thomas Meersmann, Thomas Prisner, Jeffrey A. Reimer, Hanming Yang, Igor V. Koptyug

Research output: Journal PublicationReview articlepeer-review

127 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Magnetic resonance techniques are successfully utilized in a broad range of scientific disciplines and in various practical applications, with medical magnetic resonance imaging being the most widely known example. Currently, both fundamental and applied magnetic resonance are enjoying a major boost owing to the rapidly developing field of spin hyperpolarization. Hyperpolarization techniques are able to enhance signal intensities in magnetic resonance by several orders of magnitude, and thus to largely overcome its major disadvantage of relatively low sensitivity. This provides new impetus for existing applications of magnetic resonance and opens the gates to exciting new possibilities. In this review, we provide a unified picture of the many methods and techniques that fall under the umbrella term “hyperpolarization” but are currently seldom perceived as integral parts of the same field. Specifically, before delving into the individual techniques, we provide a detailed analysis of the underlying principles of spin hyperpolarization. We attempt to uncover and classify the origins of hyperpolarization, to establish its sources and the specific mechanisms that enable the flow of polarization from a source to the target spins. We then give a more detailed analysis of individual hyperpolarization techniques: the mechanisms by which they work, fundamental and technical requirements, characteristic applications, unresolved issues, and possible future directions. We are seeing a continuous growth of activity in the field of spin hyperpolarization, and we expect the field to flourish as new and improved hyperpolarization techniques are implemented. Some key areas for development are in prolonging polarization lifetimes, making hyperpolarization techniques more generally applicable to chemical/biological systems, reducing the technical and equipment requirements, and creating more efficient excitation and detection schemes. We hope this review will facilitate the sharing of knowledge between subfields within the broad topic of hyperpolarization, to help overcome existing challenges in magnetic resonance and enable novel applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1417-1551
Number of pages135
JournalChemical Reviews
Volume123
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Chemistry

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