Multi-Microcoil Probes for Capillary NMR Detection
Project Number5R44RR016387-04
Former Number5R44RR016387-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderPECK, TIMOTHY L
Awardee OrganizationPROTASIS CORPORATION
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant):
The overall goal of this SBIR effort is to commercialize a new family of capillary-scale, high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy flowprobes that employ multiple detection cells in a single probe for high throughput. NMR is utilized extensively by the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, but remains one of few analytical methods in which parallel data acquisition has not been applied to increase the number of samples that can be simultaneously evaluated. The reasons behind this are the intrinsically related to the hardware involved in data acquisition. Poor throughput (i.e. relatively long time required for NMR analysis) remains a formidable challenge in drug discovery and development. The company submitting this proposal has a demonstrated track record of using SBIR funding to commercialize novel microcoil (capillary-based) NMR probe technologies. This proposal builds upon the speed and throughput advantages that have been achieved in capillary scale NMR to further advance high throughput screening through multi-sample analysis using a single probe. Technical aspects of both probe design and sample management is addressed. The long-term implications of this technological advance to health and health-related companies, particularly pharmaceutical companies, are significant. The ability to coordinate sample entry, sample exit, and NMR data acquisition for multiple samples in a single magnet/spectrometer/probe system pushes the boundaries of NMR and holds potential to dramatically change the way in which NMR is performed in the future.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
bioengineering /biomedical engineeringbiomedical equipment developmenthigh throughput technologynuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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