Abstract

Free electron laser-powered pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance experiments performed at 240 GHz/8.56 T on the crystalline organic radical 1,3-bisdiphenylene-2-phenylallyl reveal a tip-angle dependent resonant frequency. Frequency shifts as large as 11MHz (45ppm) are observed during a single Rabi oscillation. We attribute the frequency shifts to a "dressing" of the nutation by spin-spin interactions. A nonlinear semiclassical model which includes a temperature- and sample-geometry-dependent demagnetizing field reproduces experimental results. Because experiments are performed without a cavity, radiation damping, the most common nonlinear interaction in magnetic resonance, is negligible in our experiments.

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