4.2 Article

A comparison of non-uniform sampling and model-based analysis of NMR spectra for reaction monitoring

Journal

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN CHEMISTRY
Volume 59, Issue 3, Pages 221-236

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mrc.5095

Keywords

Bayesian analysis; benchtop NMR; model-based quantification; non-uniform sampling; quantitative NMR spectroscopy; reaction monitoring

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [310714510]
  2. Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment [UOCX1502]
  3. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE) [UOCX1502] Funding Source: New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE)

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This study introduces two NMR methods, 2D non-uniform sampling and model-based fitting approach, to overcome challenges of low resolution and overlapping peaks in NMR spectra. By applying these methods to analyze complex reaction mixtures, comparable results to high-field data can be obtained.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is widely used for applications in the field of reaction and process monitoring. When complex reaction mixtures are studied, NMR spectra often suffer from low resolution and overlapping peaks, which places high demands on the method used to acquire or to analyse the NMR spectra. This work presents two NMR methods that help overcome these challenges: 2D non-uniform sampling (NUS) and a recently proposed model-based fitting approach for the analysis of 1D NMR spectra. We use the reaction of glycerol with acetic acid as it produces five reaction products that are all chemically similar and, hence, challenging to distinguish. The reaction was measured on a high-field 400 MHz NMR spectrometer with a 2D NUS-heteronuclear single quantum coherence (HSQC) and a conventional 1D(1)H NMR sequence. We show that comparable results can be obtained using both 2D and 1D methods, if the 2D volume integrals of the 2D NUS-HSQC NMR spectra are calibrated. Further, we monitor the same reaction on a low-field 43 MHz benchtop NMR spectrometer and analyse the acquired 1D(1)H NMR spectra with the model-based approach and with partial least-squares regression (PLS-R), both trained using a single, calibrated data set. Both methods achieve results that are in good quantitative agreement with the high-field data. However, the model-based method was found to be less sensitive to the training data set used than PLS-R and, hence, was more robust when the reaction conditions differed from that of the training data.

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