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Non-Uniform Sampling for All: More Spectral Quality, Less Measurement Time
Published
Author(s)
Frank Delaglio, Gregory S. Walker, Kathleen A. Farley, Raman Sharma, Jeffrey C. Hoch, Luke Arbogast, Robert Brinson, John Marino
Abstract
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is an indispensable tool in pharmaceutical science, with uses in drug discovery, development, and manufacturing. Non-Uniform Sampling (NUS) is an acquisition method for NMR experiments with two or more dimensions that skips some fraction of data that would usually be measured. NUS can reduce acquisition times by a factor of two or more, allowing routine measurements that would usually be deferred for overnight collection to be delivered on the same day instead, and making it possible to resolve signals that would not be practical to see otherwise, for faster, more effective structure elucidation. We illustrate an application of NUS to an example small molecule.
Delaglio, F.
, Walker, G.
, Farley, K.
, Sharma, R.
, Hoch, J.
, Arbogast, L.
, Brinson, R.
and Marino, J.
(2017),
Non-Uniform Sampling for All: More Spectral Quality, Less Measurement Time, American Pharmaceutical Review
(Accessed October 10, 2025)