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Welcome to The University of Warwick's Solid State NMR Group

 

The Millburn House Magnetic Resonance Lab contains 11 magnets dedicated to solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), ranging from 2.3 Tesla up to 23.5 Tesla (1H frequency of 100 to 1000 MHz). Capabilities include a large array of probes, with over 30 in active use, ranging from fast magic angle spinning (rotor diameter 0.5 mm, 150 kHz), to specialist probes such as double-rotation (DOR) and static NMR. A 700 MHz solid-state NMR spectrometer is also housed separately in the NMR hall in the Material and Analytical Sciences (also MAS) building.

The multidepartment group has a wide range of solid-state NMR research interests encompassing the development of multinuclear solid-state NMR methodology and pulse-sequences combined with calculations and application to materials science, biological solids and pharmaceuticals and supramolecular chemistry.

News Highlights

Warwick University hosts UK's most powerful Nuclear Magnetic Resonance instrument

1 GHz NMR SpectrometerA consortium led by the University of Warwick has been awarded a £17 million grant from the UKRI Infrastructure Fund to procure a 1.2 GHz Nuclear Magnetic Resonance instrument at 1.2 GHz. The high-field spectrometer will serve the national research community in the physical and life sciences. It adds to the already significant NMR capabilities here which include the existing 850 MHz and 1 GHz high-field solid-state NMR National Research Facilities. Read press release.

You can also see our current research, staff, PhD students and publications.