Abstract

We present an orientation-selective ESEEM (electron spin echo envelope modulation) technique. From a measurement of the variation of the amplitudes of modulation components at 14N pure quadrupole frequencies as a function of irradiation position within an EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) powder pattern, we determine the orientation of the principal axes of the quadrupole coupling tensor relative to the principal axes of the tensor which governs the dispersion of the EPR spectrum in an orientationally disordered sample. The pure quadrupole frequencies appear when the EPR frequency is selected such that the nuclear Zeeman and the hyperfine interaction are approximately equal in magnitude. We have applied the method to a mercaptoethanol complex of myoglobin in which the pure quadrupole frequencies originate from 14N in the proximal imidazole ring. Our results enable us to validate the assignment of the quadrupole modulations to the metal-coordinated nitrogen of the imidazole ring, to correlate the principal axes with the principal values of the quadrupole coupling tensor, and to determine the orientation of the imidazole ring relative to the principal axes of the (low-spin) Fe(III) g matrix. These findings are discussed and compared with results of previous studies.

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