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Pulse EPR Methods for Studying Chemical and Biological Samples Containing Transition Metals
Authors:Carlos Calle  Anandaram Sreekanth  Matvey&#x;V Fedin  Jrg Forrer  Ins Garcia‐Rubio  Igor&#x;A Gromov  Dariush Hinderberger  Besnik Kasumaj  Patrick Lger  Bruno Mancosu  George Mitrikas  Maria&#x;Grazia Santangelo  Stefan Stoll  Arthur Schweiger  Ren Tschaggelar  Jeffrey Harmer
Institution:Carlos Calle,Anandaram Sreekanth,Matvey V. Fedin,Jörg Forrer,Inés Garcia‐Rubio,Igor A. Gromov,Dariush Hinderberger,Besnik Kasumaj,Patrick Léger,Bruno Mancosu,George Mitrikas,Maria Grazia Santangelo,Stefan Stoll,Arthur Schweiger,René Tschaggelar,Jeffrey Harmer
Abstract:This review discusses the application of pulse EPR to the characterization of disordered systems, with an emphasis on samples containing transition metals. Electron nuclear double‐resonance (ENDOR), electron‐spin‐echo envelope‐modulation (ESEEM), and double electron–electron resonance (DEER) methodologies are outlined. The theory of field modulation is outlined, and its application is illustrated with DEER experiments. The simulation of powder spectra in EPR is discussed, and strategies for optimization are given. The implementation of this armory of techniques is demonstrated on a rich variety of chemical systems: several porphyrin derivatives that are found in proteins and used as model systems, otherwise highly reactive aminyl radicals stabilized with electron‐rich transition metals, and nitroxide–copper–nitroxide clusters. These examples show that multi‐frequency continuous‐wave (CW) and pulse EPR provides detailed information about disordered systems.
Keywords:Pulse EPR spectroscopy  EPR Spectroscopy  Electron nuclear double‐resonance (ENDOR)  Electron‐spin‐echo envelope modulation (ESEEM)  Double electron–  electron resonance (DEER)  Nitroxide–  copper–  nitroxide clusters
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