UNUSUAL LINES OBSERVED IN LOW-FREQUENCY CW ENDOR OF PHOTOEXCITED TRIPLET-STATE MOLECULES - THE PRIMARY DONOR TRIPLET IN PHOTOSYNTHETIC REACTION CENTERS AS AN EXAMPLE

Citation
Aa. Dubinskii et al., UNUSUAL LINES OBSERVED IN LOW-FREQUENCY CW ENDOR OF PHOTOEXCITED TRIPLET-STATE MOLECULES - THE PRIMARY DONOR TRIPLET IN PHOTOSYNTHETIC REACTION CENTERS AS AN EXAMPLE, Applied magnetic resonance, 9(2), 1995, pp. 229-250
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Spectroscopy,"Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
Journal title
ISSN journal
09379347
Volume
9
Issue
2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
229 - 250
Database
ISI
SICI code
0937-9347(1995)9:2<229:ULOILC>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
The origin of frequently observed ''negative'' (opposite phase) ENDOR lines in the low-frequency region of triplet state ENDOR spectra is ex plained in terms of microwave hole burning and RF modulation phenomena . From this, a new method of detecting burnt side holes in EPR spectra is derived which is based on cw ENDOR instrumentation. The method use s the modulation satellites that are induced by a longitudinal RF fiel d component and appear around any EPR line, including burnt holes (''n egative'' lines). The longitudinal RF field was generated by a coil or iented parallel to the external field, but a longitudinal component of the RF field also exists in most conventional ENDOR spectrometers bec ause of slight misalignments of the ENDOR coil generating the transver sal RF field. The lines it induces in the low-frequency part of ENDOR spectra are generally considered as artifacts. It is shown, however, t hat RF induced modulation satellites provide valuable information conc erning the lines distant from the spectral position in the EPR spectru m chosen for ENDOR observation. This allows one to record the pattern of side holes burnt by microwave saturation through forbidden transiti ons that carries information about ENDOR frequencies comparable to wha t can be extracted from ESEEM experiments. Such comparability is demon strated for examples of nitrogen ENDOR of photoexcited triplet states of the primary donor in photosynthetic reaction centers and related co mpounds.