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Zeeman interaction electron-nuclear double resonance

An exception to this rule arises in the ESR spectra of radicals with small hyperfine parameters in solids. In that case the interplay between the Zeeman and anisotropic hyperfine interaction may give rise to satellite peaks for some radical orientations (S. M. Blinder, J. Chem. Phys., 1960, 33, 748 H. Sternlicht,./. Chem. Phys., 1960, 33, 1128). Such effects have been observed in organic free radicals (H. M. McConnell, C. Heller, T. Cole and R. W. Fessenden, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1959, 82, 766) but are assumed to be negligible for the analysis of powder spectra (see Chapter 4) where A is often large or the resolution is insufficient to reveal subtle spectral features. The nuclear Zeeman interaction does, however, play a central role in electron-nuclear double resonance experiments and related methods [Appendix 2 and Section 2.6 (Chapter 2)]. [Pg.6]

Separation of interactions allows for precise measurements of the small interactions of the observed electron spin with remote spins in the presence of line broadening due to larger contributions. Such techniques are therefore most useful for solid materials or soft matter, where ESR spectra are usually poorly resolved. The most selective techniques for isolating one type of interaction from all the others are pulsed double resonance experiments, such as ENDOR and electron-electron double resonance (ELDOR), which are discussed in more detail in Chapter 2. If the hyper-fine couplings are of the same order of magnitude as the nuclear Zeeman frequency, ESEEM techniques may provide higher sensitivity than ENDOR techniques. In particular, the two-dimensional hyperfme sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) experiment provides additional information that aids in the assignment of ESEEM spectra. These experiments are also discussed in Chapter 2. [Pg.19]

ENDOR techniques work rather poorly if the hyperfine interaction and the nuclear Zeeman interaction are of the same order of magnitude. In this situation, electron and nuclear spin states are mixed and formally forbidden transitions, in which both the electron and nuclear spin flip, become partially allowed. Oscillations with the frequency of nuclear transitions then show up in simple electron spin echo experiments. Although such electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) experiments are not strictly double-resonance techniques, they are treated in this chapter (Section 5) because of their close relation and complementarity to ENDOR. The ESEEM experiments allow for extensive manipulations of the nuclear spins and thus for a more detailed separation of interactions. From the multitude of such experiments, we select here combination-peak ESEEM and hyperfine sublevel correlation spectroscopy (HYSCORE), which can separate the anisotropic dipole-dipole part of the hyperfine coupling from the isotropic Fermi contact interaction. [Pg.27]


See other pages where Zeeman interaction electron-nuclear double resonance is mentioned: [Pg.29]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.119]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.40 ]




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Electron Zeeman interaction

Electron-Nuclear Double

Electron-nuclear double resonance

Electronic Zeeman interaction

Electronic interactions

Interacting resonances

Interaction electron-nuclear

Nuclear Zeeman

Nuclear interaction

Resonance interaction

Resonant interaction

Zeeman

Zeeman electronic

Zeeman interaction

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