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1.
The origin of frequently observed “negative” (opposite phase) ENDOR lines in the low-frequency region of triplet state ENDOR spectra is explained in terms of microwave hole burning and RF modulation phenomena. From this, a new method of detecting burnt side holes in EPR spectra is derived which is based on cw ENDOR instrumentation. The method uses the modulation satellites that are induced by a longitudinal RF field component and appear around any EPR line, including burnt holes (“negative” lines). The longitudinal RF field was generated by a coil oriented parallel to the external field, but a longitudinal component of the RF field also exists in most conventional ENDOR spectrometers because of slight misalignments of the ENDOR coil generating the transversal RF field. The lines it induces in the low-frequency part of ENDOR spectra are generally considered as artifacts. It is shown, however, that RF induced modulation satellites provide valuable information concerning the lines distant from the spectral position in the EPR spectrum chosen for ENDOR observation. This allows one to record the pattern of side holes burnt by microwave saturation through forbidden transitions that carries information about ENDOR frequencies comparable to what can be extracted from ESEEM experiments. Such comparability is demonstrated for examples of nitrogen ENDOR of photoexcited triplet states of the primary donor in photosynthetic reaction centers and related compounds.  相似文献   

2.
Paramagnetic centers generated by swift heavy ion irradiation of LiF crystals could be identified as electrons trapped at regular anion vacancy sites (F centers). Well-resolved electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectra resulting from the hyperfine interaction with 7Li and 19F nuclei located in six different shells could be recorded. In order to preserve the millimeter-sized crystals, a cavity-free setup was used for the ENDOR experiments at an electronic Larmor frequency of 240 GHz. Apparently even under conditions of extremely high local energy loss in the ion track, the local density of persistent F centers is still sufficiently low to prevent distortions of the ionic crystal. The spread of hyperfine coupling constants was less than 5 %. Neither in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) nor in ENDOR spectra there was evidence for different types of paramagnetic centers. When performing ENDOR by applying the radiofrequency pulse directly after the 3-pulse Mims-type microwave sequence, an anomalous ENDOR effect was observed. The observed “positive” and “negative” ENDOR response can be attributed to efficient hole and anti-hole formation in the inhomogeneously broadened EPR spectrum and can be used to determine the sign of hyperfine coupling constants.  相似文献   

3.
为了满足脉冲式电子顺磁共振谱仪中电子自旋-核自旋双共振模块的需要,利用直接数字合成器设计并制作了射频信号源. 该部件产生的射频脉冲具备对频率、幅度和相位快速精确调制的能力,对原子核自旋有较强操控能力.  相似文献   

4.
Multiple resonance methods are important tools in EPR for revealing the network of hyperfine levels of free radicals and paramagnetic centers. The variations of electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) or electron spin-echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) techniques help to correlate nuclear frequencies with each other. These methods have limited utility when there is extensive overlap or suspected overlap in the EPR spectrum between different species or different orientations. In the ENDOR spectrum, overlap and second-order shifts of lines also leads to ambiguity in assignment and interpretation. A new electron nuclear multiple resonance method is presented here that is based on population transfer ENDOR. It is a quadruple resonance method that correlates ENDOR lines and reveals the network of hyperfine levels in samples with unoriented paramagnetic species and in samples with overlapping EPR or ENDOR lines.  相似文献   

5.
Raman heterodyne detection is a coherent optical-RF double resonance technique where the optical and RF fields induce coherence within a three level system and a resultant Raman field is measured using heterodyne detection. This approach has been used previously to detect NMR and more recently EPR. In this paper the parameters that affect the amplitude and signal to noise ratio of the Raman heterodyne signals are considered. The power levels in relation to the oscillator strength and dephasing times, the amplitude and spectrum of the laser frequency jitter in relation to the optical homogeneous linewidths and holeburning rates, and the sample properties such as absorption strength and optical quality, are all factors that affect the Raman signal. The presentation is focused on the Raman heterodyne detected EPR of the nitrogen-vacancy pair centre in diamond making comparisons with Raman heterodyne detected NMR signals obtained for rare earth ion systems. RF-RF double resonance studies, RF holeburning and ENDOR, which give information about the hyperfine levels are also reported for the nitrogen-vacancy centre. The resonance frequencies are in agreement with those predicted from the spin Hamiltonian. The factors affecting the lineshapes and relative intensities of the double resonance signals are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
This mini-review focuses on various aspects of the application of radio frequency (rf) irradiation in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). The development of the electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) technique is briefly described, and we highlight the use of circularly polarized rf fields and pulse ENDOR methodology in one- and two-dimensional experiments. The capability of pulse ENDOR at Q-band is illustrated with interesting experimental examples. Electron spin echo envelope modulation effects induced by an rf field in liquid samples demonstrate another role which rf fields can play. Technical achievements in the design of ENDOR resonators are illustrated by the example of a bridged loop-gap resonator. Finally, the influence of longitudinal rf fields on the dynamics of EPR transitions is explained using a dressed spin resonance treatment.  相似文献   

7.
A new setup for longitudinal detection (LOD) of EPR signals based on a commercial pulse EPR spectrometer equipped with an ENDOR probehead is presented. The design is suited for pulse LOD EPR and amplitude-modulated cw LOD EPR experiments. The sensitivity is substantially increased compared with earlier designs. Two new pulse schemes that take full advantage of the special properties of the setup are invented. In transient-nutation longitudinally detected EPR (TN-LOD EPR), the nutation of magnetization during a microwave pulse is used to measure the EPR signal. In pulse-train excited longitudinally detected EPR (PT-LOD EPR), a train of microwave pulses that periodically inverts the magnetization is applied. First experimental results on radicals and metal complexes at room temperature are presented.  相似文献   

8.
High resolution pulse EPR methods are usually applied to resolve weak magnetic electron-nuclear or electron-electron interactions that are otherwise unresolved in the EPR spectrum. Complete information regarding different magnetic interactions, namely, principal components and orientation of principal axis system with respect to the molecular frame, can be derived from orientation selective pulsed EPR measurements that are performed at different magnetic field positions within the inhomogeneously broadened EPR spectrum. These experiments are usually carried out consecutively, namely a particular field position is chosen, data are accumulated until the signal to noise ratio is satisfactory, and then the next field position is chosen and data are accumulated. Here we present a new approach for data acquisition of pulsed EPR experiments referred to as parallel acquisition. It is applicable when the spectral width is much broader than the excitation bandwidth of the applied pulse sequence and it is particularly useful for orientation selective pulse EPR experiments. In this approach several pulse EPR measurements are performed within the waiting (repetition) time between consecutive pulse sequences during which spin lattice relaxation takes place. This is achieved by rapidly changing the main magnetic field, B(0), to different values within the EPR spectrum, performing the same experiment on the otherwise idle spins. This scheme represents an efficient utilization of the spectrometer and provides the same spectral information in a shorter time. This approach is demonstrated on W-band orientation selective electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM), electron-electron double resonance (ELDOR)--detected NMR and double electron-electron resonance (DEER) measurements on frozen solutions of nitroxides. We show that a factors of 3-6 reduction in total acquisition time can be obtained, depending on the experiment applied.  相似文献   

9.
This paper discusses time-domain electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) experiments aimed at elucidating the enzymatic mechanism of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), the enzyme responsible for the conversion of ribonucleotides to deoxyribonucleotides. The article begins with a discussion of the current state of the art of instrumentation for high-frequency EPR and ENDOR and some suggestions as to future developments. We then provide an introduction to the chemistry of RNR and a discussion of the high-field EPR and ENDOR spectra of the tyrosyl radical (Y?) in the R2 subunit of class I RNR. Finally, we describe two examples illustrating the use of high-frequency EPR and ENDOR to elucidate the enzymatic mechanism of RNR. EPR and ENDOR have played an important role for these studies since the mechanism involves several different radical intermediates. These intermediates are all present in low concentrations relative to the Y? concentration and they possess similarg-values. Spectral overlap, therefore, has been a problem with X-band EPR. At high frequencies the spectra are resolved to the point that individual powder lineshapes are discernible. In addition, we describe our approach, on the basis of differential relaxation, to suppress the spectrum of the dominant Y?. High-frequency EPR and ENDOR therefore has permitted us to determine the structure of several radical intermediates which in turn have contributed to the understanding of the enzymatic mechanism of RNR.  相似文献   

10.
Angle-selection experiments of a spin soliton in randomly oriented ladder polydiacetylene were carried out by pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) at W-band. EPR measurement using 94 GHz microwaves increased the difference in the resonance field due tog anisotropy of the spin soliton to allow the orientation dependence of transient nutation, electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and spin relaxations to be investigated. The shape of theg anisotropy-resolved nutation spectrum was discussed on the basis of the EPR transition moments and the differences between spin relaxation times. Reliable assignments of hyperfine couplings to the β protons (Hβ) of the alkyl side chains were achieved with the support of W-band ENDOR measurements. No significant orientational dependence in theT 1 andT 2 processes was found in terms of isotropy of the Hβ-hyperfine interaction.  相似文献   

11.
12.
ENDOR experiments on coals recorded using continuous wave (CW) and pulsed techniques appear to give qualitatively different spectra. A matrix proton signal dominates the ENDOR spectrum of coals recorded in the CW ENDOR experiment while both a matrix and local proton ENDOR signals with huperfine couplings of up to 20 MHz are observed in spectra recorded using pulsed excitation techniques. Analysis of these spectra lead to different implications for the structure of the molecules that host the unpaired electron. Using a combination of pulsed EPR (Electron Spin Echo, FID detected hole burning) and pulsed Electron Nuclear Multiple Resonance (Sub-level relaxation, hyperfine selective ENDOR, EPR sub-spectra) experiments, we investigate the electron and nuclear spin dynamics in order to reconcile the different signal amplitudes observed in the CW and pulsed ENDOR spectra. In the CW ENDOR experiment, the results of the FID detected hole burning experiments prove that the low ENDOR signal intensity can not be attributed to spectral diffusion mechanisms competing with ENDOR mechanisms. Instead, we find that an unfavorable ratio of the electron and nuclear spin relaxation rates results in small local ENDOR signals. The matrix line dominates the spectrum because of the large number of matrix protons. In the pulsed ENDOR experiment, the hyperfine contrast selectivity mechanism suppresses the intensity of the matrix ENDOR signal and enhances the amplitudes of the local ENDOR signals. In addition, the ENDOR signal is not a function of the ratio of the electron and nuclear relaxation rates.  相似文献   

13.
It is shown that high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy are excellent tools for the investigation of the electronic properties of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs). The great attractions of these techniques are that, in contrast to optical methods, they allow the identification of the dopants and provide information about the spatial distribution of the electronic wave function. This latter aspect is particularly attractive because it allows for a quantitative measurement of the effect of confinement on the shape and properties of the wave function. In this contribution EPR and ENDOR results are presented on doped ZnO QDs. Shallow donors (SDs), related to interstitial Li and Na and substitutional Al atoms, have been identified in this material by pulsed high-frequency EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy. The shallow character of the wave function of the donors is evidenced by the multitude of ENDOR transitions of the 67Zn nuclear spins and by the hyperfine interaction of the 7Li, 23Na and 27Al nuclear spins that are much smaller than for atomic lithium, sodium and aluminium. The EPR signal of an exchange-coupled pair consisting of a shallow donor and a deep Na-related acceptor has been identified in ZnO nanocrystals with radii smaller than 1.5 nm. From ENDOR experiments it is concluded that the deep Na-related acceptor is located at the interface of the ZnO core and the Zn(OH)2 capping layer, while the shallow donor is in the ZnO core. The spatial distribution of the electronic wave function of a shallow donor in ZnO semiconductor QDs has been determined in the regime of quantum confinement by using the nuclear spins as probes. Hyperfine interactions as monitored by ENDOR spectroscopy quantitatively reveal the transition from semiconductor to molecular properties upon reduction of the size of the nanoparticles. In addition, the effect of confinement on the g-factor of SDs in ZnO as well as in CdS QDs is observed. Finally, it is shown that an almost complete dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) of the 67Zn nuclear spins in the core of ZnO QDs and of the 1H nuclear spins in the Zn(OH)2 capping layer can be obtained. This DNP is achieved by saturating the EPR transition of SDs present in the QDs with resonant high-frequency microwaves at low temperatures. This nuclear polarization manifests itself as a hole and an antihole in the EPR absorption line of the SD in the QDs and a shift of the hole (antihole). The enhancement of the nuclear polarization opens the possibility to study semiconductor nanostructures with nuclear magnetic resonance techniques.  相似文献   

14.
The underlying causes of asymmetric intensities in Davies pulsed ENDOR spectra that are associated with the signs of the hyperfine interaction are reinvestigated. The intensity variations in these asymmetric ENDOR patterns are best described as shifts in an apparent baseline intensity that occurs dynamically following on-resonance ENDOR transitions. We have developed an extremely straightforward multi-sequence protocol that is capable of giving the sign of the hyperfine interaction by probing a single ENDOR transition, without reference to its partner transition. This technique, Pulsed ENDOR Saturation and Recovery (PESTRE) monitors dynamic shifts in the 'baseline' following measurements at a single RF frequency (single ENDOR peak), rather than observing anomalous ENDOR intensity differences between the two branches of an ENDOR response. These baseline shifts, referred to as dynamic reference levels (DRLs), can be directly tied to the electron-spin manifold from which that ENDOR transition arises. The application of this protocol is demonstrated on (57)Fe ENDOR of a 2Fe-2S ferredoxin. We use the (14)N ENDOR transitions of the S = 3/2[Fe(II)NO](2+) center of the non-heme iron enzyme, anthranilate dioxygenase (AntDO) to examine the details of the relaxation model using PESTRE.  相似文献   

15.
The design and performance of the first commercial 94 GHz continuous-wave (CW-)/Fourier transform (FT-) EPR and ENDOR spectrometer are described. The spectrometer design is based on a heterodyne microwave bridge using an X-band intermediate frequency (IF), a hybrid magnet system, a variable-temperature, top-loading TeraFlex probehead with a TE011 cavity as well as the ELEXSYS-line digital electronics and the Xepr software package. The W-band bridge can be driven by a CW- or pulse-IF unit and delivers a microwave power of 5 mW at 94 GHz. In pulse mode the power is sufficient for a π/2 pulse of 100 ns at a resonatorQ-value of 3000. The magnet system consists of a 6 T split-coil superconducting magnet and a water-cooled room-temperature coil. The main coil can be swept over the full range from 0 to 6 T. The room-temperature coil has a 800 G sweep range around the persistent field of the main magnet. The ENDOR probe features a tuned circuit for1H nuclei allowing an RF π-pulse of 8 μs with a 200 W amplifier. A broad-band setup is used for other nuclei. The E680 FT-EPR system utilizes the PatternJet pulse programmer and the SpecJet high-speed transient signal averager. The concerted action of these two devices results in a pulse EPR sensitivity equal or higher than in CW-EPR. Selected examples indicating the performance of the 94 GHz CW/FT-EPR and ENDOR systems are shown.  相似文献   

16.
Although nearly 100 paramagnetic defects have been catalogued in diamond by spin Hamiltonian parameters measured by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), very few of these have been unambiguously associated with an atomic model. It has been necessary to use electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) to obtain enough information to make proper assignment of such models. The reason for the limitation of EPR, and the way in which ENDOR overcomes these limitations are discussed. The interpretation of hyperfine structure in terms of unpaired electrons in molecular orbitals, and of quadrupole interactions in terms of all electrons, paired and unpaired, as a source of information about molecular structure in diamond, is evaluated by reference to some well documented examples. The measurements so far made by ENDOR on defects in diamond are reviewed, and the salient contribution for the assignment of a model for each defect is explained. The details revealed by ENDOR considerably increase knowledge about defects, particularly those involving substitutional nitrogen atoms. This in turn helps in understanding the complex electron and atom, migration processes which go on under appropriate conditions of temperature and pressure, or optical excitation. The possibilities are discussed for using ENDOR to increase the number of well characterized centres.  相似文献   

17.
The local structure of titanium pair centers in SrF2: Ti crystals is investigated using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy. It is found that titanium pair centers with spin moment S=2 and tetragonal symmetry of the magnetic properties are formed in SrF2: Ti cubic crystals under certain growth conditions and during annealing. The tensor components of the fine and ligand hyperfine structures in the EPR and ENDOR spectra are determined. A model of the Ti+-Ti3+ paramagnetic dimer is proposed. This model provides an adequate interpretation of both the ferromagnetic nature of the exchange interaction and the observed displacements of four ligands in the first coordination sphere of titanium impurity ions in directions perpendicular to the impurity ion-ligand bonds.  相似文献   

18.
In this minireview, modern multifrequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, in particular, at high magnetic fields, is shown to provide detailed information about structure, motional dynamics and spin chemistry of transient radicals and radical pairs occurring in photochemical reactions. Examples discussed comprise spin-polarized radicals and radical pairs in disordered systems, such as ultraviolet-irradiated quinone and ketone compounds in fluid alcohol solutions, green-light initiated electron transfer in biomimetic porphyrin?Cquinone donor?Cacceptor model systems in frozen solution, aiming at artificial photosynthesis, and red-light initiated electron transfer in natural photosynthetic reaction-center protein complexes. The transient paramagnetic states exhibit characteristic electron polarization (CIDEP) effects originating from a triplet mechanism, a radical-pair mechanism or a correlated coupled radical-pair mechanism. They contain valuable information about structure and dynamics of the short-lived reaction intermediates. Moreover, the CIDEP effects can be exploited for signal enhancement. Continuous-wave and pulsed versions of time-resolved high-field EPR spectroscopy, such as transient EPR and electron spin-echo experiments, are compared with respect to their advantages and limitations for the specific photoreaction under study. Furthermore, orientation resolving W-band pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR) experiments on the spin-correlated coupled radical pair $ {\text{P}}_{865}^{ \cdot + } $ $ {\text{Q}}_{\text{A}}^{ \cdot - } $ in frozen solution reaction centers from the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rb. sphaeroides reveal details of distance and orientation of the pair partners in their charge-separated transient state. The results are compared with those of the ground-state P865QA. In conjunction with Q-band proton electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) experiments the W-band PELDOR results provide decisive evidence that the local structure of the QA binding site does not change under photoreduction of the quinone??in agreement with earlier FTIR studies. The examples given demonstrate that multifrequency EPR experiments on disordered systems add heavily to the capabilities of ??classical?? spectroscopic and diffraction techniques for determining structure?Cdynamics?Cfunction relations of biochemical processes, since short-lived intermediates can be observed in real time while staying in their working states at biologically relevant time scales.  相似文献   

19.
We describe a new triply tuned (e(-), (1)H, and (13)C) resonance structure operating at an electron Larmor frequency of 139.5 GHz for dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) and electron nuclear double-resonance (ENDOR) experiments. In contrast to conventional double-resonance structures, the body of the microwave cavity simultaneously acts as a NMR coil, allowing for increased efficiency of radiofrequency irradiation while maintaining a high quality factor for microwave irradiation. The resonator design is ideal for low-gamma-nuclei ENDOR, where sensitivity is limited by the fact that electron spin relaxation times are on the order of the RF pulse lengths. The performance is demonstrated with (2)H ENDOR on a standard perdeuterated bis-diphenylene-phenyl-allyl stable radical. In DNP experiments, we show that the use of this resonator, combined with a low microwave power setup (17 mW), leads to significantly higher (1)H signal enhancement (epsilon approximately 400 +/- 50) than previously achieved at 5-T fields. The results emphasize the importance of optimizing the microwave B(1) field by improving either the quality factor of the microwave resonator or the microwave power level.  相似文献   

20.
We describe a frequency tunable Q-band cavity (34 GHz) designed for CW and pulse Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) as well as Electron Nuclear Double Resonance (ENDOR) and Electron Electron Double Resonance (ELDOR) experiments. The TE(011) cylindrical resonator is machined either from brass or from graphite (which is subsequently gold plated), to improve the penetration of the 100 kHz field modulation signal. The (self-supporting) ENDOR coil consists of four 0.8mm silver posts at 2.67 mm distance from the cavity center axis, penetrating through the plunger heads. It is very robust and immune to mechanical vibrations. The coil is electrically shielded to enable CW ENDOR experiments with high RF power (500 W). The top plunger of the cavity is movable and allows a frequency tuning of ±2 GHz. In our setup the standard operation frequency is 34.0 GHz. The microwaves are coupled into the resonator through an iris in the cylinder wall and matching is accomplished by a sliding short in the coupling waveguide. Optical excitation of the sample is enabled through slits in the cavity wall (transmission ~60%). The resonator accepts 3mm o.d. sample tubes. This leads to a favorable sensitivity especially for pulse EPR experiments of low concentration biological samples. The probehead dimensions are compatible with that of Bruker flexline Q-band resonators and it fits perfectly into an Oxford CF935 Helium flow cryostat (4-300 K). It is demonstrated that, due to the relatively large active sample volume (20-30 μl), the described resonator has superior concentration sensitivity as compared to commercial pulse Q-band resonators. The quality factor (Q(L)) of the resonator can be varied between 2600 (critical coupling) and 1300 (over-coupling). The shortest achieved π/2-pulse durations are 20 ns using a 3 W microwave amplifier. ENDOR (RF) π-pulses of 20 μs ((1)H @ 51 MHz) were obtained for a 300 W amplifier and 7 μs using a 2500 W amplifier. Selected applications of the resonator are presented.  相似文献   

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