Abstract

Monte Carlo simulations of the effects of weak magnetic fields on the recombination of interacting radical pairs undergoing free diffusion in solution have been performed, with the aim of determining the influence on the low field effect of the magnetic dipolar coupling between the radicals. The suppression of singlet-triplet interconversion in the radical pair by the dipolar interaction is found to be pronounced at magnetic field strengths comparable to the hyperfine interactions in the radicals, to the extent that the low field effect is completely abolished. The averaging of the dipolar coupling by the translational diffusion of the radicals around one another is relatively efficient in the presence of strong magnetic fields but becomes ineffective in weak applied fields where the strength of the dipolar interaction is independent of the orientation of the inter-radical vector. Low field effects are only likely to be observed if the motion of the radical pair is restricted in some way so as to increase the likelihood that, having separated to the large distance required for the dipolar interaction to have a negligible effect, the radicals subsequently encounter and have the opportunity to recombine.

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