Lithium deuteride is isotopically labeled analogue of Lithium hydride.
Application
Deuterium chloride solution has been used to study:
The kinetics of chitosan reacetylation using acetic anhydride and acetic acid.[1]
Regioselective terminal group activation of chitosan by thioacetylation.[2]
The complex formation between cyclodextrin and captopril in aqueous solution using NMR spectroscopy.[3]
Lithium deuteride can act as semiconductor at 30GPa and room temperature. It is used as the polarized deuteron target material for the measurement of proton and neutron structure
Hydrogen-Deuterium eXchange coupled to Mass Spectrometry (HDX-MS) is now common practice in structural biology. However, it is most of the time applied to rather small oligomeric complexes. Here, we report on the use of HDX-MS to investigate conformational differences between
Kinetics and efficiency of chitosan reacetylation.
Lavertu M, et al.
Carbohydrate Polymers, 87(2), 1192-1198 (2012)
Inclusion complex formation of captopril with $\alpha$-and $\beta$-cyclodextrins in aqueous solution: NMR spectroscopic and molecular dynamic studies.
Ikeda Y, et al.
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 91(11), 2390-2398 (2002)
Regioselective chitosan end-group activation: the triskelion approach
Pickenhahn VD, et al.
Royal Society of Chemistry Advances, 7(30), 18628-18638 (2017)
Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) allows the analysis of biochemical processes non-invasively and in vivo. Still, its application in clinical diagnostics is rare. Routine MRS is limited to spatial, chemical and temporal resolutions of cubic centimetres, mM and minutes. In fact
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