4.8 Article

Pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy powered by a free-electron laser

Journal

NATURE
Volume 489, Issue 7416, Pages 409-413

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature11437

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [CHE-0821589, DMR-0520481, DMR-0703925]
  2. W. M. Keck Foundation
  3. Division Of Chemistry
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0821589] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy interrogates unpaired electron spins in solids and liquids to reveal local structure and dynamics; for example, EPR has elucidated parts of the structure of protein complexes that other techniques in structural biology have not been able to reveal(1-4). EPR can also probe the interplay of light and electricity in organic solar cells(5-7) and light-emitting diodes(8), and the origin of decoherence in condensed matter, which is of fundamental importance to the development of quantum information processors(9-13). Like nuclear magnetic resonance, EPR spectroscopy becomes more powerful at high magnetic fields and frequencies, and with excitation by coherent pulses rather than continuous waves. However, the difficulty of generating sequences of powerful pulses at frequencies above 100 gigahertz has, until now, confined high-power pulsed EPR to magnetic fields of 3.5 teslas and below. Here we demonstrate that one-kilowatt pulses from a free-electron laser can power a pulsed EPR spectrometer at 240 gigahertz (8.5 teslas), providing transformative enhancements over the alternative, a state-of-the-art similar to 30-milliwatt solid-state source. Our spectrometer can rotate spin-1/2 electrons through pi/2 in only 6 nanoseconds (compared to 300 nanoseconds with the solid-state source). Fourier-transform EPR on nitrogen impurities in diamond demonstrates excitation and detection of EPR lines separated by about 200 megahertz. We measured decoherence times as short as 63 nanoseconds, in a frozen solution of nitroxide free-radicals at temperatures as high as 190 kelvin. Both free-electron lasers and the quasi-optical technology developed for the spectrometer are scalable to frequencies well in excess of one terahertz, opening the way to high-power pulsed EPR spectroscopy up to the highest static magnetic fields currently available.

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