Abstract

The objective of spectral analysis is to resolve and extract relevant features from experimental data in an optimal fashion. In continuous-wave (cw) electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy, both values of a paramagnetic center and hyperfine splitting caused by its interaction with neighboring magnetic nuclei in a molecule provide important structural and electronic information. However, in the presence of - and/or -anisotropy and/or large number of resonance lines, spectral analysis becomes highly challenging. Either high-resolution experimental techniques are employed to resolve the spectra in those cases or a range of suitable ESR frequencies are used in combination with simulations to identify the corresponding and values. In this work, we present a wavelet transform technique in resolving both simulated and experimental cW-ESR spectra by separating the hyperfine and super-hyperfine components. We exploit the multiresolution property of wavelet transforms that allow the separation of distinct features of a spectrum based on simultaneous analysis of spectrum and its varying frequency. We retain the wavelet components that stored the hyperfine and/or super-hyperfine features, while eliminating the wavelet components representing the remaining spectrum. We tested the method on simulated cases of metal-ligand adducts at L-, S-, and X-band frequencies, and showed that extracted values, hyperfine and super-hyperfine coupling constants from simulated spectra, were in excellent agreement with the values of those parameters used in the simulations. For the experimental case of a copper(II) complex with distorted octahedral geometry, the method was able to extract and hyperfine coupling constant values, and revealed features that were buried in the overlapped spectra.

Highlights

  • Continuous-wave electron spin resonance spectra of molecules with many interacting nuclei are often poorly resolved due to both line broadening and line splitting effects [1]

  • Wavelet transform can decompose a cw-electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra in the magnetic field-signal frequency domain, where different spectral features are stored in distinct wavelet components

  • We presented a wavelet transform technique for hyperfine pseudo-decoupling of Continuous-wave electron spin resonance (cw-ESR) spectra at X-band and lower frequencies

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Summary

Introduction

Continuous-wave electron spin resonance (cw-ESR) spectra of molecules with many interacting nuclei are often poorly resolved due to both line broadening and line splitting effects [1]. High resolution techniques, such as electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy, have been developed to resolve hyperfine interactions [1,12–17]. We present a wavelet transform technique [18] to decompose a cw-ESR spectrum into its hyperfine and super-hyperfine components or perform a pseudo-decoupling of the spectrum. We call it pseudo-decoupling because it does not decouple selected hyperfine interactions in a system in true sense, but it probes the spectra at various resolutions, enabling the separation of distinct features based on simultaneous analysis of magnetic field and its signal frequency at different resolutions.

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