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Jean Jeener

Jean Louis Charles Jeener (31 July 1931 – 10 June 2023) was a Belgian physical chemist and physicist, well known for his experimental and theoretical contributions to spin thermodynamics in solids and for his invention of Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. He was born in Brussels on 31 July 1931, son of biologist Raymond Jeener and Hélène Massar. He was married to Françoise Henin. Jenner died on 10 June 2023, at the age of 91.

Jeener was born in Brussels on July 31, 1931, to parents with a scientific background; his father, Raymond Jeener, was a biologist, and his mother was Hélène Massar. Jean pursued his academic interests in science at the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), where he completed degrees in chemistry and physics in the early 1950s. His academic path included studying under Nobel laureate Ilya Prigogine, known for his work on thermodynamics, and further expanded through a postdoctoral stint with NMR pioneer Nicolay Bloembergen, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics for laser spectroscopy.

Returning to ULB as a professor in 1960, he embarked on groundbreaking research in spin thermodynamics. His work led to the development of the Jeener-Broekaert sequence, an innovative method to create and observe dipolar order in solids. This formative phase of his career helped establish Jeener as a visionary in the field of NMR, paving the way for his later advancements, including his seminal work on two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy.

Jeener was professor in Physics at Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB) from 1960 until he retired in 1996.

At ULB, Jeener researched spin thermodynamics and spin dynamics in solids. He introduced the “Jeener-Broekaert sequence” for creating observable quantities of dipolar order in solids.

Jeener is best known for introducing two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy (2DNMR). In a lecture at the AMPERE Summer School in Basko Polje, Yugoslavia, September 1971, he proposed a novel technique, later known as Correlation Spectroscopy (COSY), in which the response of the nuclear spins to two radio frequency pulses is treated by a double Fourier transformation with respect to the delay between the pulses, and the delay after the second pulse. This technique gives detailed information about the molecular links between atoms, inaccessible with previous techniques.

The first experimental demonstration of this technique was carried out by Richard R. Ernst (Nobel prize 1991).

Later, Jeener introduced a variant of 2DNMR, today known as Nuclear Overhauser Effect Spectroscopy (NOESY), that gives detailed information about the spin-lattice relaxation matrix[clarification needed], and about the spatial relation between atoms in complex molecules.

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Belgian scientist
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