Abstract

ENDOR experiments on coals recorded using continuous wave (CW) and pulsed techniques appear to give qualitatively different spectra. A matrix proton signal dominates the ENDOR spectrum of coals recorded in the CW ENDOR experiment while both a matrix and local proton ENDOR signals with huperfine couplings of up to 20 MHz are observed in spectra recorded using pulsed excitation techniques. Analysis of these spectra lead to different implications for the structure of the molecules that host the unpaired electron. Using a combination of pulsed EPR (Electron Spin Echo, FID detected hole burning) and pulsed Electron Nuclear Multiple Resonance (Sub-level relaxation, hyperfine selective ENDOR, EPR sub-spectra) experiments, we investigate the electron and nuclear spin dynamics in order to reconcile the different signal amplitudes observed in the CW and pulsed ENDOR spectra. In the CW ENDOR experiment, the results of the FID detected hole burning experiments prove that the low ENDOR signal intensity can not be attributed to spectral diffusion mechanisms competing with ENDOR mechanisms. Instead, we find that an unfavorable ratio of the electron and nuclear spin relaxation rates results in small local ENDOR signals. The matrix line dominates the spectrum because of the large number of matrix protons. In the pulsed ENDOR experiment, the hyperfine contrast selectivity mechanism suppresses the intensity of the matrix ENDOR signal and enhances the amplitudes of the local ENDOR signals. In addition, the ENDOR signal is not a function of the ratio of the electron and nuclear relaxation rates.

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