3 research outputs found
Structural and Dynamical Properties of Water Molecules Confined within Clay Sediments Probed by Deuterium NMR Spectroscopy, Multiquanta Relaxometry, and Two-Time Stimulated Echo Attenuation
The structure and multiscale dynamics
of water molecules confined
within dense clay sediments are investigated by deuterium (<sup>2</sup>H) NMR spectroscopy, relaxometry, and two-time correlation measurements.
The splitting of the <sup>2</sup>H NMR resonance line quantifies the
specific ordering of water molecules confined within the clay interlamellar
space. The angular distribution of clay aggregates within the sediment
is evaluated from variation of the transverse <sup>2</sup>H NMR relaxation
rates as a function of orientation of the clay film within the static
magnetic field. The average residence time of the water molecules
within clay aggregates is determined by multiquanta spin-locking relaxometry.
Finally, water exchange between different aggregates is extracted
from the attenuation of <sup>2</sup>H two-time stimulated echo. These
simultaneous NMR dynamical investigations cover a broad range of characteristic
times (between 10 Ī¼s and 100 ms) appropriate to investigate
the multiscale dynamical behavior of water molecules confined within
heterogeneous porous networks
Long-Time Dynamics of Confined Water Molecules Probed by <sup>2</sup>H NMR Multiquanta Relaxometry: An Application to Dense Clay Sediments
The structural and dynamical properties of water molecules
confined within dense clay sediment are investigated by <sup>2</sup>H NMR spectroscopy and multiquanta relaxometry. The relative contribution
of both quadrupolar and paramagnetic NMR relaxation mechanisms is
evaluated by carefully analyzing the variation of <sup>2</sup>H multiquanta
NMR relaxation rates as a function of the orientation of the clay
sediment within the static magnetic field. The same analysis is successfully
applied to <sup>2</sup>H multiquanta NMR spin-locking relaxation measurements,
significantly increasing the probed dynamical range. That procedure
leads to an accurate determination of the average residence time of
the water molecule confined within the interlamellar space of the
clay lamellae
Influence of Strong Confinement on the Structure and Dynamics of Liquids: a Study of the Clay/Water Interface Exploiting <sup>2</sup>H NMR Spectroscopy and Spin-Locking Relaxometry
<sup>2</sup>H NMR spectroscopy, multiquanta relaxation, and spin-locking
relaxometry are used to investigate the structural and dynamical properties
of water molecules confined within dense sediments of synthetic fluorohectorite.
As shown by the large residual splitting of the <sup>2</sup>H NMR
resonance line, water molecules confined in the interlamellar space
of the clay are strongly oriented to contact with the fluorinated
basal surface of the clay. Multiquanta relaxation measurements are
used to identify and quantify the contributions of the quadrupolar
and heteronuclear dipolar couplings by monitoring the NMR relaxation
of the confined water molecules. Finally, the average residence time
of the water molecules confined within the interlamellar space of
the clay platelets is quantified by detailed analysis of <sup>2</sup>H spin-locking relaxometry measurements. Thanks to the significant
contributions of both quadripolar and heteronuclear dipolar relaxation
mechanisms, <sup>2</sup>H spin-locking relaxation measurements probe
a broad dynamical range, by sampling angular velocities ranging between
10<sup>2</sup> and 3 Ć 10<sup>5</sup> rad/s