Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.107, No.41, 8467-8475, 2003
Relaxivity studies on dinitroxide and polynitroxyl functionalized dendrimers: Effect of electron exchange and structure on paramagnetic relaxation enhancement
The H-1 NMR relaxivity of o- and p-dinitroxide-substituted phthalate esters and a series of nitroxyl-functionalized poly(propylene imine) dendrimers has been measured in acetonitrile and methanol. Studies of dinitroxide relaxivity indicate that the electron exchange rate has only a small effect on relaxivity. Outer-sphere relaxivity has been measured using benzene as a probe molecule. In studies on dendritic polynitroxides, the per-nitroxide-based outer-sphere relaxivity nearly doubles for the generation 5 nitroxyl-functionalized dendrimer as compared to a mononitroxide model. This relaxivity enhancement may be due to crowding of dendrimer surface groups in higher generation dendrimers. Water relaxivity has been measured for these polynitroxides as well, and a significant inner-sphere contribution to relaxivity is found. Dendritic polynitroxides exhibit higher per-nitroxide-based water relaxivity as compared to a mononitroxide model. This relaxivity enhancement is attributed to an increase in rotational correlation time (tau(c)) for the dendritic polynitroxides.