Additionally, the partnership will combine X-ray crystallography and
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, two complementary techniques used for determining the structure and dynamics of proteins.
One Resonance Sensors (www.detect-ors.com) develops advanced instrumentation using
nuclear magnetic resonance technology to provide rapid, atom-level analysis and detection for security and industrial applications.
This involves the combination of core technologies in areas such as low temperature, high magnetic field and ultra-high vacuum environments,
nuclear magnetic resonance, X-ray, electron and optical-based metrology, and advanced growth, deposition and etching.
The system also has applications in the food sector, and Oxford sees it as a complement to MQC
nuclear magnetic resonance systems.
He completed his master of science course in biotechnology in October 2007 with a defense of the development and application of a new
nuclear magnetic resonance methodology.
Because the sensor has a passive optical design and a non-metallic construction, it can be employed as part of such applications as magnetic resonance imaging,
nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and industrial processes that involve very large electromagnetic fields.
Noninvasive imaging technologies such as MRI, Magnetic Resonance Microscopy (MRM) and
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR), are all increasingly in demand by researchers in many biological disciplines (Robinson et al.
Saudi Aramco's EXPEC Advanced Research Centre (EXPEC ARC) has successfully developed and tested the industry's first small-hole Logging-While-Drilling
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance tool (LWD NMR).
Chapters describe studies of protein-protein interactions using near-infrared fluorescence,
nuclear magnetic resonance, and mass spectrometry; protein-ligand interactions using mass spectrometry, surface plasmon resonance,
nuclear magnetic resonance, and isotope-coded affinity tag labeling; and structural proteomics using nuclear-magnetic resonance, x-ray crystallography, and electron paramagnetic resonance.
The phenomenon, called
nuclear magnetic resonance, was adapted some thirty years ago to provide a novel method of looking at living tissue such as bones and internal organs.