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Ideally, an unpaired electron shows a single peak in the EPR spectrum due to the transition between the two spin energy states. However, coupling interactions can occur between the spins of the unpaired electron and any neighboring spin-active nuclei. This hyperfine coupling results in hyperfine splitting, where the EPR signal is split into multiplets. The signals split into 2nI + 1 peaks, where n is the number of equivalent nuclei and I is the nuclear spin. These splitting patterns provide...
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NMR spectrometers consist of a strong magnet, a radiofrequency transmitter, and a detector attached to a computer console for recording spectra of samples containing NMR-active nuclei. In first-generation NMR instruments called continuous-wave spectrometers, the resonance frequencies of the nuclei are determined by frequency-sweep or field-sweep methods. The magnetic field strength is fixed and the rf signal is swept in the former, while the radiofrequency signal is fixed and the magnetic field...
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A pulse is a short burst of radio waves distributed over a range of frequencies that simultaneously excites all the nuclei in the sample. Upon passing a radio frequency pulse along the x-axis, the nuclei absorb energy corresponding to their Larmor frequencies and achieve resonance. This shifts the net magnetization vector from the z-axis toward the transverse plane. This angle of rotation of the magnetization vector, or the flip angle, is proportional to the duration and intensity of the pulse.
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Atomic emission spectroscopy (AES) is an analytical technique used to determine the elemental composition of a sample by analyzing the light emitted from excited atoms. In AES, atoms in a sample are excited to higher energy levels by thermal energy from high-temperature sources, such as plasma, arcs, or sparks. When these excited atoms return to lower energy states, they emit light at specific wavelengths characteristic of each element. The resulting atomic emission spectrum, which consists of...
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Double resonance techniques in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy involve the simultaneous application of two different frequencies or radiofrequency pulses to manipulate and observe two distinct nuclear spins. One important application of double resonance is spin decoupling, which selectively suppresses coupling with one type of nucleus while observing the NMR signal from another nucleus, simplifying the spectrum and enhancing resolution.
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When proton-coupled carbon-13 spectra are simplified by a broadband proton decoupling technique, structural information about the coupled protons is lost. Distortionless enhancement by polarization transfer (DEPT) is a technique that provides information on the number of hydrogens attached to each carbon in a molecule. While the DEPT experiment utilizes complex pulse sequences, the pulse delay and flip angle are specifically manipulated. The resulting signals have different phases depending on...
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Optically stimulated electron paramagnetic resonance: Simplicity, versatility, information content.

V O Kozlov1, A A Fomin1, I I Ryzhov2

  • 1Spin Optics Laboratory, Faculty of Physics, St Petersburg State University, Peterhof, Ul'yanovskaya ul., 1, Saint Petersburg 198504, Russia.

Journal of Magnetic Resonance (San Diego, Calif. : 1997)
|April 23, 2023
PubMed
Summary

A new optically stimulated electron paramagnetic resonance (OSEPR) technique offers versatile insights into rare-earth ions, semiconductors, and atomic cesium. This method allows estimation of both magnetic parameters and optical transition Rabi frequencies.

Keywords:
Atomic vapourLarmor frequencyOptically detected ESRRabi frequencyRare-earth ionsSemiconductors

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Area of Science:

  • Solid State Physics
  • Quantum Optics
  • Spectroscopy

Background:

  • Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) is a powerful technique for studying magnetic properties.
  • Optically Stimulated EPR (OSEPR) enhances EPR by incorporating optical manipulation.
  • Traditional OSEPR methods have limitations in versatility and the types of systems they can analyze.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose and investigate a simple, versatile technique for observing OSEPR.
  • To demonstrate the information content of the new OSEPR technique across diverse systems.
  • To interpret observed spectral features using a theoretical model.

Main Methods:

  • Development of a novel OSEPR observation technique.
  • Experimental application to rare-earth ion crystals (Nd³⁺), doped semiconductors (GaAs), and atomic cesium.
  • Theoretical modeling to interpret experimental results, including spectral line behavior and optical nonlinearities.

Main Results:

  • Demonstrated versatility of the OSEPR technique on challenging systems like Nd³⁺ crystals and GaAs semiconductors.
  • Observed optical nonlinearity in atomic cesium OSEPR spectra, enabling Rabi frequency estimation.
  • Interpreted phenomena such as peak-to-dip switching, light-induced line splitting, and double-Larmor frequency features.

Conclusions:

  • The proposed OSEPR technique is versatile and information-rich.
  • It enables the estimation of magnetic parameters (g-factors, spin relaxation times) and optical Rabi frequencies.
  • This method expands the applicability of OSEPR to a wider range of scientific investigations.