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Spin phenomenon

The electron-spm echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) phenomenon [37, 38] is of primary interest in pulsed EPR of solids, where anisotropic hyperfme and nuclear quadnipole interactions persist. The effect can be observed as modulations of the echo intensity in two-pulse and three-pulse experiments in which x or J is varied. In liquids the modulations are averaged to zero by rapid molecular tumbling. The physical origin of ESEEM can be understood in tenns of the four-level spin energy diagram for the S = I = model system... [Pg.1578]

Avdievich N I and Forbes M D E 1995 Dynamic effects in spin-correlated radical pair theory J modulation and a new look at the phenomenon of alternating line widths in the EPR spectra of flexible biradicals J. Phys. Chem. 99 9660-7... [Pg.1620]

The Stern-Gerlach experiment demonstrated that electrons have an intrinsic angular momentum in addition to their orbital angular momentum, and the unfortunate term electron spin was coined to describe this pure quantum-mechanical phenomenon. Many nuclei also possess an internal angular momentum, referred to as nuclear spin. As in classical mechanics, there is a relationship between the angular momentum and the magnetic moment. For electrons, we write... [Pg.305]

Since the coiTelation between opposite spins has both intra- and inter-orbital contributions, it will be larger than the correlation between electrons having the same spin. The Pauli principle (or equivalently the antisymmetry of the wave function) has the consequence that there is no intraorbital conelation from electron pairs with the same spin. The opposite spin correlation is sometimes called the Coulomb correlation, while the same spin correlation is called the Fermi correlation, i.e. the Coulomb correlation is the largest contribution. Another way of looking at electron correlation is in terms of the electron density. In the immediate vicinity of an electron, here is a reduced probability of finding another electron. For electrons of opposite spin, this is often referred to as the Coulomb hole, the corresponding phenomenon for electrons of the same spin is the Fermi hole. [Pg.99]

This vanishing of the probability density for rx — r2 and Ci == C2 means that it is unlikely for two electrons having parallel spins to be in the same place (rx = r2). The phenomenon is called the Fermi hole and we note that it is a direct consequence of the Pauli principle for electrons with the same spin. [Pg.218]

Experimental data on nitrogen obtained from spin-lattice relaxation time (Ti) in [71] also show that tj is monotonically reduced with condensation. Furthermore, when a gas turns into a liquid or when a liquid changes to the solid state, no breaks occur (Fig. 1.17). The change in density within the temperature interval under analysis is also shown in Fig. 1.17 for comparison. It cannot be ruled out that condensation of the medium results in increase in rotational relaxation rate primarily due to decrease in free volume. In the rigid sphere model used in [72] for nitrogen, this phenomenon is taken into account by introducing the factor g(ri) into the angular momentum relaxation rate... [Pg.48]

The first reports of the observation of transient emission and enhanced absorption signals in the H-n.m.r. spectra of solutions in which radical reactions were taking place appeared in 1967. The importance of the phenomenon, named Chemically Induced Dynamic Nuclear Spin Polarization (CIDNP), in radical chemistry was quickly recognized. Since that time, an explosive growth in the number of publications on the subject has occurred and CIDNP has been detected in H, C, N, and P as well as H-n.m.r. spectra. Nevertheless, the number of groups engaged in research in this area is comparatively small. This may be a consequence of the apparent complexity of the subject. It is the purpose of this review to describe in a quahtative way the origin of CIDNP and to survey the published applications of the phenomenon in... [Pg.53]

Methods of disturbing the Boltzmann distribution of nuclear spin states were known long before the phenomenon of CIDNP was recognized. All of these involve multiple resonance techniques (e.g. INDOR, the Nuclear Overhauser Effect) and all depend on spin-lattice relaxation processes for the development of polarization. The effect is referred to as dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) (for a review, see Hausser and Stehlik, 1968). The observed changes in the intensity of lines in the n.m.r. spectrum are small, however, reflecting the small changes induced in the Boltzmann distribution. [Pg.55]

A spin-gas microscopic theory has been pursued by Berker et al. [32] to explain the multiplicity of smectic ordering and the re-entrance phenomenon in strongly polar mesogens. They have used a model Hamiltonian of the form... [Pg.216]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.352 , Pg.405 , Pg.406 , Pg.408 , Pg.415 , Pg.421 , Pg.422 ]




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