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ESEEM weak electron-nuclear hyperfine interaction

Electron spin echo spectroscopy (ESE) monitors the spontaneous generation of microwave energy as a function of the timing of a specific excitation scheme, i.e. two or more short resonant microwave pulses. This is illustrated in Fig. 7. In a typical two-pulse excitation, the initial n/2 pulse places the spin system in a coherent state. Subsequently, the spin packets, each characterized by their own Larmor precession frequency m, start to dephase. A second rx-pulse at time r effectively reverses the time evolution of the spin packet magnetizations, i.e. the spin packets start to rephase, and an emission of microwave energy (the primary echo) occurs at time 2r. The echo ampHtude, as a fvmction of r, constitutes the ESE spectrum and relaxation processes lead to an irreversible loss of phase correlation. The characteristic time for the ampHtude decay is called the phase memory time T. This decay is often accompanied by a modulation of the echo amplitude, which is due to weak electron-nuclear hyperfine interactions. The analysis of the modulation frequencies and ampHtudes forms the basis of the electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy (ESEEM). [Pg.310]


See other pages where ESEEM weak electron-nuclear hyperfine interaction is mentioned: [Pg.6498]    [Pg.6497]    [Pg.6497]    [Pg.6496]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.737]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.198]   
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