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KU Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Laboratory

800 lab during instrument installation

The Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Laboratory is responsible for maintaining the high field NMR spectrometers, training users, providing spectra on a service basis, and assisting users with design, execution, and interpretation of NMR experiments. Our capabilities extend from small molecules to isotopically enriched proteins, solids, and flow samples. We are part of the Molecular Structures Group (MSG) at KU, a campuswide facility encompassing NMR, MS, X-ray Crystallography, Biochemical Service, and Molecular Graphics and Modeling Laboratories.  We manage six shared NMR instruments:

Structural Biology Center and 800 MHz NMR. The NMR Lab received an 800 MHz instrument in September 2004 (and equipped it with a TCI cryoprobe in September 2005), housed in a specialized laboratory in room 100 of the new Structural Biology Center (SBC). We share this building with the Protein Structure Lab (a new MSG unit devoted to protein X-ray crystallography), a satellite Molecular Graphics and Modeling Lab, and the Analytical Proteomics Lab (a joint venture of the Mass Spectrometry and Biochemical Research Service Labs), in a second phase of the SBC which opened in December 2004. In addition to the 800, we also have an Avance 400 in 104 SBC with an H/C/P/N QNP gradient probe.  For more information about the Structural Biology Center and our scientific goals for this new facility, click here.  Pictures from the 800 MHz installation are here.

We have another Bruker Avance 400 in room 5 of the LSRL building at 15th and Wakarusa. This instrument, part of KU's NIH-funded center of excellence in Chemical Methodology and Library Development is equipped with a 24 position NMR-CASE sample changer for conventional NMR tubes. It has BBO, BBI, and FI gradient probes, and a flow injection BEST system.  We have also implemented the ERETIC experiment under automation with this system, for automated determination of absolute solution concentration with the sample changer.

A third Bruker DRX-400 with a H/C/P/F QNP gradient probe in 3002 Malott Hall is managed principally for self-service rapid turnaround of routine samples. Most graduate students whose projects involve synthesis or chemical characterization are trained to use one or more of the 400 instruments early in their studies. Accessibility of these instruments is excellent (ordinarily the same day the sample is prepared). In addition to the host workstations on the instruments, the lab also houses two PC's running Bruker's NMR Suite, plus other Linux, Silicon Graphics and Sun workstations used for TopSpin, VnmrJ and nmrPipe processing and plotting of NMR data from the instruments.   We also manage one instrument in this lab that isn't an NMR, a Jasco J-715 CD spectropolarimeter.  The 3002 lab also contains a walkup GC-MS instrument with an autosampler, managed by the Mass Spectrometry Laboratory. 

In B042 Malott, we have a Bruker DRX 500 with a dual carbon/proton (CPDUL) cryoprobe and an NMR-CASE sample changer. This instrument is used primarly under ICON-NMR automation and PDF plot files and binary data can be emailed directly to the requestor as soon as the experiments are finished. Our 800 and three cold probes gives us one of the best-equipped and most modern NMR facilites in the region.  All six of the spectrometer host workstations have been recently upgraded to RedHat Enterprise Linux 4.  The Bruker instruments run TopSpin 1.3.

A four-channel Varian Inova 600 MHz system suitable for nD experiments on proteins is located in room 102 of the Multidisciplinary Research Building. It has triple resonance XYZ gradient and broadband Z gradient probes. We received a triple resonance PFG cold probe for this instrument in July 2005. The data system was updated to VnmrJ LX 2.1B/Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.

Information of interest to local users, such as training guides, sample submission forms, and lab policies, can be found on our user pages at http://kunmr7.chem.ku.edu.


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Please send questions or comments concerning this website to David VanderVelde.

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Last modified: December 13, 2006

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