Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses

<p>Electron–nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy is an EPR technique to detect the nuclear frequency spectra of hyperfine coupled nuclei close to paramagnetic centers, which have interactions that are not resolved in continuous wave EPR spectra and may be fast relaxing on the timescal...

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Main Authors: J. Stropp, N. Wili, N. C. Nielsen, D. Klose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2025-01-01
Series:Magnetic Resonance
Online Access:https://mr.copernicus.org/articles/6/33/2025/mr-6-33-2025.pdf
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author J. Stropp
N. Wili
N. C. Nielsen
D. Klose
author_facet J. Stropp
N. Wili
N. C. Nielsen
D. Klose
author_sort J. Stropp
collection DOAJ
description <p>Electron–nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy is an EPR technique to detect the nuclear frequency spectra of hyperfine coupled nuclei close to paramagnetic centers, which have interactions that are not resolved in continuous wave EPR spectra and may be fast relaxing on the timescale of NMR. For the common case of non-crystalline solids, such as powders or frozen solutions of transition metal complexes, the anisotropy of the hyperfine and nuclear quadrupole interactions renders ENDOR lines often several megahertz (MHz) broad, thus diminishing intensity. With commonly used ENDOR pulse sequences, only a small fraction of the NMR/ENDOR line is excited with a typical radiofrequency (RF) pulse length of several tens of microseconds (<span class="inline-formula">µ</span>s), and this limits the sensitivity in conventional ENDOR experiments. In this work, we show the benefit of chirped RF excitation in frequency-domain ENDOR as a simple yet effective way to significantly improve sensitivity. We demonstrate on a frozen solution of Cu(II)-tetraphenylporphyrin that the intensity of broad copper and nitrogen ENDOR lines increases up to 9-fold compared to single-frequency RF excitation, thus making the detection of metal ENDOR spectra more feasible. The tunable bandwidth of the chirp RF pulses allows the operator to optimize for sensitivity and choose a tradeoff with resolution, opening up options previously inaccessible in ENDOR spectroscopy. Also, chirp pulses help to reduce RF amplifier overtones, since lower RF powers suffice to achieve intensities matching conventional ENDOR. In 2D triple resonance experiments (TRIPLE), the signal increase exceeds 10 times for some lines, thus making chirped 2D TRIPLE experiments feasible even for broad peaks in manageable acquisition times.</p>
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spelling doaj-art-e551aeadcdd445bbb482108465cb90552025-01-24T07:19:09ZengCopernicus PublicationsMagnetic Resonance2699-00162025-01-016334210.5194/mr-6-33-2025Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulsesJ. Stropp0N. Wili1N. C. Nielsen2D. Klose3Institute for Molecular Physical Science, ETH Zurich, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 2, 8093 Zurich, SwitzerlandInterdisciplinary Nanoscience Center and Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University, Gustav Wieds Vej 14, 8000 Aarhus C, DenmarkInterdisciplinary Nanoscience Center and Department of Chemistry, Aarhus University, Gustav Wieds Vej 14, 8000 Aarhus C, DenmarkInstitute for Molecular Physical Science, ETH Zurich, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 2, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland<p>Electron–nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy is an EPR technique to detect the nuclear frequency spectra of hyperfine coupled nuclei close to paramagnetic centers, which have interactions that are not resolved in continuous wave EPR spectra and may be fast relaxing on the timescale of NMR. For the common case of non-crystalline solids, such as powders or frozen solutions of transition metal complexes, the anisotropy of the hyperfine and nuclear quadrupole interactions renders ENDOR lines often several megahertz (MHz) broad, thus diminishing intensity. With commonly used ENDOR pulse sequences, only a small fraction of the NMR/ENDOR line is excited with a typical radiofrequency (RF) pulse length of several tens of microseconds (<span class="inline-formula">µ</span>s), and this limits the sensitivity in conventional ENDOR experiments. In this work, we show the benefit of chirped RF excitation in frequency-domain ENDOR as a simple yet effective way to significantly improve sensitivity. We demonstrate on a frozen solution of Cu(II)-tetraphenylporphyrin that the intensity of broad copper and nitrogen ENDOR lines increases up to 9-fold compared to single-frequency RF excitation, thus making the detection of metal ENDOR spectra more feasible. The tunable bandwidth of the chirp RF pulses allows the operator to optimize for sensitivity and choose a tradeoff with resolution, opening up options previously inaccessible in ENDOR spectroscopy. Also, chirp pulses help to reduce RF amplifier overtones, since lower RF powers suffice to achieve intensities matching conventional ENDOR. In 2D triple resonance experiments (TRIPLE), the signal increase exceeds 10 times for some lines, thus making chirped 2D TRIPLE experiments feasible even for broad peaks in manageable acquisition times.</p>https://mr.copernicus.org/articles/6/33/2025/mr-6-33-2025.pdf
spellingShingle J. Stropp
N. Wili
N. C. Nielsen
D. Klose
Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
Magnetic Resonance
title Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
title_full Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
title_fullStr Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
title_full_unstemmed Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
title_short Increased sensitivity in electron–nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
title_sort increased sensitivity in electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopy with chirped radiofrequency pulses
url https://mr.copernicus.org/articles/6/33/2025/mr-6-33-2025.pdf
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AT ncnielsen increasedsensitivityinelectronnucleardoubleresonancespectroscopywithchirpedradiofrequencypulses
AT dklose increasedsensitivityinelectronnucleardoubleresonancespectroscopywithchirpedradiofrequencypulses