The
probing of microscopic environments by hyperpolarized xenon
NMR has spurred investigations in supramolecular chemistry as well
as important biosensing and molecular imaging applications. While
xenon exchange with host structures at micromolar concentrations and
below can be readily detected, a quantitative analysis is limited,
requiring complementary experimentation by different methodologies
and thus lacking completeness and compromising the validity and comparability
of numerical results. Here, a new NMR measurement and data analysis
approach is introduced for the comprehensive characterization of the
host–xenon binding dynamics. The application of chemical exchange
saturation transfer of hyperpolarized 129Xe under parametric
modulation of the saturation RF amplitude and xenon gas saturation
of the solution enables a delineation of exchange mechanisms and,
through modeling, a numerical estimation of the various reaction rate
constants (and thus magnetization exchange rate constants), the xenon
affinity, and the total host molecule concentration. Only the numerical
xenon solubility is additionally required for input, a quantity that
has a low impact on the measurement uncertainty and is derivable from
metrological data collections. Signal calibration by a reference material
may thus be avoided, qualifying the method as calibration-free. For
demonstration a xenon exchange with the host cucurbit[6]uril at low
concentration is investigated, with the numerical results being validated
by standard quantitative NMR data obtained at high concentration.
The readiness to evaluate xenon exchange for the one sample at hand
and in a single experimental attempt by the proposed method may allow
comprehensive quantitative studies in supramolecular chemistry, biomacromolecular
structure and dynamics, and sensing.