Motivated by the lack of efficient detection techniques for metal-free
trinitrotoluene (TNT) containing landmines, 1H-14N
cross-relaxation experiments on TNT have been performed using field-cycling
spectroscopy in an electronically switchable volume coil. Using 1H NMR
detection (indirect method), the 14N quadrupole spectra in several small
(about 0.5 g) TNT samples of different producers are determined. The
experiment is considered as a step toward a double resonance TNT landmine
detection scheme using surface coils.
A general theoretical description of polarization transfer processes in multi-spin systems
containing dipole as well as quadrupole spins is formulated on the background of
the Liouville–von Neumann equation. The density operator formalism is used to
describe the evolution of an arbitrary spin system due to quadrupole, Zeeman and
dipole–dipole interactions. This approach is applied to interpret previously published
1H–14N
cross-relaxation NMR experiments for measuring the
14N
quadrupole coupling constants of paranitrotoluene (PNT) and trinitrotoluene (TNT)
(Nolte et al 2002 J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 35 939) and new experiments on urea and urotropine.
It is demonstrated that according to the complexity of the analysed spin system an
appropriate number of spins has to be taken into consideration for a correct description of
the cross-relaxation spectra. The work is a part of an extended project aiming for a method
which should permit detection of TNT explosive in anti-personnel landmines.
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